Stevens Transport Aviary . . cont'
Discussion in 'Stevens' started by Dryver, Jun 4, 2013.
Page 267 of 292
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It is an interesting aspect of our industry that can't be conveyed in a classroom or on an internet forum. Because of family I am now regional (500mile radius) but I am like KMac, I am drawn to OTR, just you, your truck, the highway and never knowing where you will be next week. Good luck with whatever comes next and take care of that license, it took dedication to get it.
KMac Thanks this. -
Greetings,
First time visitor to this site. I found it through some extensive research into Stevens Transport. I'm interested in OTR trucking, retiring from current job. I'm 49 years old and would like to start something new before I get old. I've been a teacher for 27 years. It's a good time to try the road and see the sites!! I'm not married, have no children of my own and don't have frequent obligations to "go home" though I do speak to my family often (weekly). I'm very task oriented and highly self-motivated. I have some questions that are important to my decision and would like to get some input from inside the industry. It appears that many of the posters here are long time employees and speak from variable and extensive experience. Could someone advise me on what might be my best course for getting some ideas about the timing of my interest and options, whether that be advice to seek responses here and directly through the company?? -
bayoudreamn Thanks this.
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I am a former driver, and some of the details have changed, but the general life style questions, and the no home obligations are why I did OTR for many years.bayoudreamn Thanks this. -
First off, i would check around for local community college driver training programs. They are less expensive but usually are of a longer duration.
By having your CDL prior to looking for a company to sign on with, you will not be obligated to said company for a specified period of time to repay any training expense. And company training will usually end up costing more in the long run.Corporal_Clegg, bayoudreamn, fieldchaser and 1 other person Thank this. -
Thanks for reading my posts and agreeing to be my sounding board!! I'm in Houston, Texas. Stevens has a deal here with Lone Star College I believe so school is here when and if I'm ready. Here's a bucket list of questions:
1. I'll find out for sure in early June, but I believe I'm six years from retirement so I would be 56 at the latest when I'm ready to do this. It may be that I actually can retire in 3 years, though. Starting at 56 with the goal of being on the road 10 years sound reasonable? I'm in good health now, no meds and only see my doctor 1-2 times per year on average.....not currently dealing with any long-term conditions that may affect work.
2. I saw something about where to park the truck. I'm assuming I can leave the truck on a Stevens yard and commute to it for work?
3. If I pay for school myself and pay for CDL myself, etc......are there heavy work related costs otherwise?
4. My family (parents,siblings) live in north Louisiana, am I understanding that the way trip planning goes I might be able to plan some of my trips to end in different areas so I may be able to work in a short visit between on road times and such in an area close to home?
5. Just in general terms, because truck driving means your sitting in a truck I'm assuming close to 8-10 hours a day almost straight through? What advice should I heed relative to maintaining good health as I transition and then long-term thereafter?
6. Personality wise; I'm outgoing in that I'm a good communicator, speak to people and build casual relationships with relative ease, and I'm quite comfortable at the same time with hours or even days of scarce to no real contact with people. In other words, I'm good when people are around and I'm just as good when they are not. Quite comfortable either way. Probably a good way to clarify that would be to say that as a teacher, I'm used to heavy social interaction many hours a day at work. But then being unmarried and having no kids, I'm alone often on weekends and through holidays and the summer and I like that time. So I can do both. I'm thinking this lonely long road job shouldn't be a tough transition for me as far as that is concerned?
7. I'm thinking that if my goal is to work 10-15 years and I know that age my limit my effectiveness as a driver late in that period, that I should say that up front through recruitment phase and assure company is mindful that I want to start on the road and as is fitting over the years transition of the road when my optimum usefulness and safety may be more fitting? Maybe then in some logistical function in an office, etc??
**For now, let's start with these questions, and let the conversation take it from there??Last edited: Apr 3, 2015
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Other times you may set and talk with a total stranger for a couple of hours over a meal, and then both go your separate ways.
bayoudreamn Thanks this. -
super responses TLeaHart! amazing to have feedback to help me. I plan to speak to you guys for a while and then once I get a good balance of information I'll start chatting some with the company to see how it compares.
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On my first week solo and still loving it.. This was a great career choice for me.
drake3d Thanks this.
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
Page 267 of 292