Considering I have to FLY home to Alaska, Im not worrying about going home regularly. I'd prefer to stay OTR 2-3 month and then take a week or 2 home then go back.
Who keeps you working most?
If you dont want to go home every week or month...
Discussion in 'Experienced Truckers' Advice' started by Squirel, Mar 27, 2012.
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Why not become a IRT? That seems ideal for your demands, unless you don't want to drive on ice.
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HAHAHA I do drive on ICE, all winter long here. In my POV and commercial. At minus 20 below and much colder, Im just tired of it.
Typhoid36 Thanks this. -
There isn't a Walmart DC up there you can get a job with?
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No Sequoia theres not. Its not that I need a job here. I got plenty of work HERE. I can make up to $10k a month here. But its mostly seasonal, 3-6 months. Then winter work comes and same thing 3-6 months. Thats for construction.
Most frieght trucking is done thru Lynden or Carlisle or OO leased on for contract work.
Its not a problem getting work here, but Im tired of driving 24/7 6-8 months yr on iced roads. Its literally ICE. No blacktop. Drive the winter here, you'd understand.
Having to chain, unchain at least once ,DAILY is very tiring. Ive worked my butt off these yrs in AK and look forward to driving mid winter where you guys are complaining due to some light drifts of snow and its only neg 2 degrees out LOL
I love AK but am choosing to OTR in lower 48. Visit and hunt here, keep my residence here etc. but drive & work down there. -
Sounds like bedbugging should be your game. Longest I have stayed out was 7 months. For instance I start a load next week, And will probly stay out till september. Thats not saying I wont get home during that time, But since I already live in the lower 48, I am bound to drive by the home for a night or two every now and then. Is that a long time out? Sure it is. However I just took January, February and March off at home.
Squirel Thanks this. -
I was just thinking that myself. I got to do a little bed bugging and car hauling before moving to AK.
Bed buggn would really be pretty cool, but there was always money problems. I was with an O/O too.
Company bedbuggn might be different huh? -
I am an O/O, What years did you try it? 10 years ago the money was terrific. But had been droping steadily 8 years. We are talking from a 80k take home high for me to a 20k (was a bad year with repairs on top) low. In 08/09/10 the only reason I survived was I did not have a truck payment.
While I am a firm believer in the grass is not greener on the other side, some agents/vanlines do have there advantages and disadvantages. It used to be military jobs, but these days its more pack and loads, atleast for me. It also depends on how you drive to. June/July/Augest you gota work hard, Since your looking at ~60 percent of your income in those 3 months alone. No summer vacations.
I defenatly do not suggest company drivers. -
It was in 1997-1998
military contracts also.
We really never lifted a thing except a clip board and a roll of stickers.
Always got lumpers to load & unload.
I enjoyed it.
So no company bedbuggers huh? I cant afford my own truck. lol -
The problem with highering lumpers to do all the loading and unloading is it costs you in the end. I am not saying you dont use them, you have to since you cannot do all the work yourself. Its that xtra man you have to have costs you. Lets say you hual 4 jobs per load every two weeks. 1 xtra man @ 120 per load and anouther at unload per job means Thats almost $2,000 in a months period.
Also having somone else do the acual loading part means they are not as inclined to maximize your cubes, So instead of averaging 28k lbs per load you might only get 25k lbs per load. And that last portion of the wieght you get on is your biggest profit margin. Not to mention claims. you have a much higher incentive to load everything so nothing gets damaged since if you damage it you pay for it. Where else if they damage it you pay for it.
I prefer to load everything myself. I still go in and smooze with the shipper so they like me. and I still go in and do the inventory (on larger jobs if possible I like to go in the day before and inventory and prep). And while I am doing this I have my lumpers padding and preping so when I finish the inventory I can hop on the truck and everything is ready to load quickly. Granted it does not always work out perfectly And somtimes you have to have a guy load for you as time permits.
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