So, dispatch sent me a 2-pick load of onions from New Mexico going to North Carolina. Can I just say I friggin hate gosh darn onions! It's too #### hot to be dealing with this crap.
Am I the only one who thinks onions should go on reefer trailers where they belong? I don't think they should be anywhere near a flatbed...
Onions...
Discussion in 'Flatbed Trucking Forum' started by fragicide, Jul 23, 2020.
Page 1 of 6
-
shooter19802003, Brettj3876, Sirscrapntruckalot and 2 others Thank this.
-
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
-
I never hauled em before but ive heard nothing but bad things about them. It should definatly be in the back of a reefer
skellr, truckdriver31 and JonJon78 Thank this. -
They definitely don't pay enough for the amount of work they require. But I guess it's guaranteed freight out west...Sirscrapntruckalot, truckdriver31 and D.Tibbitt Thank this. -
truckdriver31 and D.Tibbitt Thank this.
-
But they pay so well......
Sirscrapntruckalot, truckdriver31 and D.Tibbitt Thank this. -
truckdriver31, Cat sdp and D.Tibbitt Thank this.
-
I didn't even know onions came out of New Mexico... Figured it was the same places most potatoes come from of Washington, Oregon, Idaho, and California...
650cat425, Sirscrapntruckalot, truckdriver31 and 1 other person Thank this. -
truckdriver31 and JonJon78 Thank this.
-
truckdriver31, D.Tibbitt and JonJon78 Thank this.
-
Then comes the tarp job. Gotta throw the tarp over the top, but leave the sides and ends open unless it rains. Then you gotta close it up so they don't get wet. It's a ton of work... Something about airflow is why they prefer flatbeds I guess.truckdriver31, Cat sdp, JonJon78 and 1 other person Thank this.
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
Page 1 of 6