So... I am on my very first fresh produce load and am amazed that there are drivers that actually do this regularly, and maybe even exclusively.
How in the heck does a driver make any freaking money when you're waiting all freaking day for these produce people to do anything?!
Had an 1130 appointment this morning. Arrived 1/2 hour before appointment. Shipper tells me to come back at 1800. I'm like, what?! Yeah.... come back at 1800 and we'll get you a door.
So... I arrive back here at 1800 and was pretty excited when I was able to check-in. Problem is that I've been sitting here for one hour and am hearing that some drivers have been sitting here waiting on their door for four hours.
I realize that this is minimal, considering that I have heard horror stories on Road Dog Trucking regarding fresh produce loads taking days to get loaded.
Who does this produce regularly? How do you put up with it? How do you survive?
Just wanted to vent for a minute.
Produce Loads
Discussion in 'Refrigerated Trucking Forum' started by AchioteCoyote, May 10, 2013.
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think about WHAT you are picking up...
Fresh produce. You know, the stuff that GROWS in fields...
It's NOT able to just be stored indefinitely in a warehouse like a machine. During the DAY, they are PICKING your load most times. At best, it might have sat in a cooler overnight.
If they are telling you to come back at 1800, it's because they are still in the field harvesting it.Veteran driver, D.Tibbitt, Farmerbob1 and 6 others Thank this. -
High rates and aggressive detention is how u survive.......just saying on my way to deliver pork and pu tomatos sun and mon
AchioteCoyote and buddyvuk Thank this. -
Thats why you get 4.00 a mile then wait till you get to billy bob produce back east and they reject it for quality and you wait 3-4 hours to find out you noe need to take it to joses produce and they bought it at 1/3 the org cost then sell it back to billy bobs produce for 1/2 of it org price...
Last edited: May 10, 2013
slow.rider, Orange713, D.Tibbitt and 6 others Thank this. -
^ that happens with the food grade tanker work I do sometimes...
slow.rider Thanks this. -
It's not just that they are picking, but if the commodity is in short supply, and you are not going to a target customer, then you might get laid over. Picking up strawberries... Shortest fruit in us right now
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All been addressed b4--search thru reefer forum--YOU WILL get most of the answers--but to address just one here--there is NO SUCH THING as a p/u appt w/produce--not now not b4 not ever--that is a broker/dispatch myth
slow.rider, Metallica88 and TruckerSue Thank this. -
Yeah, I sat over 24 hrs at driscolls before during strawberry season. It was a truck stop just about, waiting your turn.RustyChops41 and Farmerbob1 Thank this.
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most produce goes to retailers and as trend retailers are starting to measure truck turn around - reasonable turn around is considered a positive. The days of waiting 24hrs during strawberry or grape season are going away for the quality shippers and quality receivers... for the crappy shippers and receivers- its going to get worse. If you picking up for Costco, WM, Kroger - you will see yourselves being loaded faster... going to Supervalu, Foodlion and the likes... your going to get loaded slower. Its a definite trend in produce.
Farmerbob1, buddyvuk and Bayle Thank this. -
Produce hauling is for the birds. I pick it up every now and then. But picking it up weekly no thank you. Especially if you have E logs.
Farmerbob1 and buddyvuk Thank this.
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