Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Home

Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Home

We got home last night at 11:30. I was a very long and hard trip. The roads were extremely bad through Oregon, Idaho, Utah, and Wyoming. Through Wyoming the winds were 60+ MPH and we saw lots of trucks blown over (Bad Driver), sometimes 3 or 4 in a row. The blowing snow made visibility almost none existing. In Utah there were more wrecks that you could count. It had snowed, then rained, and then snowed again and got cold and frozen. It made the roads covered with several inches of ice. After getting to the east side of Wyoming we ran out of the snow so we headed south and went through Colorado and Kansas to the terminal in Joplin Missouri. In Joplin I went to safety to settle for expenses for getting home. All that they would obligate themselves for was the cost of a bus ticket to get the driver home. Since the buses were not running (they started running Monday after I had reached Joplin) they agreed to pay the hotel cost as well. For your own knowledge they canceled everything as soon as I had my accident, my health insurance, the flex spending card, my access card. All money left on my flex spending card I lost even thought they had deducted it from my pay. I I didn’t get a ticket but CFI fired me anyway. I don’t have any hard feeling against CFI (the low life SOBs – kidding). I understand the system but it sucks and I choose not to be a part of it. Also because I was fired I don’t qualify for unemployment benefits.

I had chained but the roads had cleared. It had warmed up and the sun was shinning. We had driven for an hour on dry roads but it changed quickly. I suddenly found myself in an unfortunate combination of circumstances. I do believe that it could have happened to any driver. I am 60 years old and have been driving since I was 16 (not trucks) but about everything else and had never had an accident. It isn’t because I hadn’t earned one. I rode bikes for years and when I was young I also never took off from a stop on both wheels. I have had luck on my side as well as a lot of you that haven’t had an accident. A lot can happen very quickly. Just before we stopped for the night in Utah we passed a wreck involving a Semi and a car. I saw no damage on the semi but the car was off the road on its top. While eating the waitress said that it was a local girl in the accident and they didn’t expect her to make it. Who do you think is going to be at fault? This is what I don’t want to be involved with. It is a serious responsibility to be a driver.

We finally were able to make good time and get home. Over all we had 2500 miles to drive and it took us over a week to get home. We are glad to be home and into warmer weather. I don’t know what I am going to do. I really don’t want to go back to engineering.

Friday, December 26, 2008

We got a Car

Friday, December 26, 2008

We got a Car

I got a ride to Boise with a guest at the hotel where we were staying. I got the car and drove back to La Grande to get Shelly and our stuff. We left this morning and headed toward home. The roads have been bad. I-84 was closed at the I-86 junction so we went North on I-86 and then down I-15 to Ogden, Utah where we are spending the night. The roads here are horrible. We didn’t make very good progress today. Weather reports and the road condition for tomorrow are not good.

Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Christmas Eve

Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Christmas Eve

I haven’t blogged for awhile. A lot has happened. December has been a slow month. We had not gotten a week of over 1700 miles. In a two week period we had 5 restarts. We had made it down to Laredo where we were 106 on the board ant it took us 3 days to get a 700 mile load to Savanna, Ga. We then went to Spartanburg, SC, and then we went to the GM in Lake Orion, Michigan with a load of tires. Again we got stuck at the Taylor Terminal in cold weather and finally got a load out of less than 400 miles to Indiana. Then we went to Huston. After getting a load of 780 mile from Huston that we picked up on Thursday to be delivered in St. Joe, Missouri on Monday I called my dispatch and complained. He said to drop the load in Joplin and get a different load. We got a load in Joplin to take to Seattle, Washington. We had 1990 miles to do in 3 days bad weather. This is where the trouble started.

As some of you know Shelly and I were in an accident with the semi. We are in La Grande, Oregon. It is a very rural area located in northern Oregon near Washington State in some very serious mountains. We met a weather front that came in through Seattle, Washington and Portland, Oregon area. The news channels are billing this as the worse storm in Seattle in 40 years and Portland since the 1939. The truck is not drivable and we have no transportation. The closest car rental is in Boise, Idaho, a 170 mile away through mountainous snow covered roads. The bus lines are shut down, we have no trucks coming this way that I can get a ride with. We have even tried cab services and have tried to get an insurance adjuster to take me to Boise but the roads are near impassable and are closed in some areas. We have found no one to get us out of here. Heavy snows are predicted everyday through Sunday. When we do finally get to Boise and get a car we have 2200 miles to drive to get home. We have Oregon, Idaho, Utah, Wyoming, Nebraska, Iowa, Missouri, Indiana, Kentucky, and Tennessee. This is to give you some prospective of how far we have to drive. Most of this area is under some serious snow and winter advisory. We have had -6 degrees weather with 50+ MPH winds with blowing snow with white out conditions several times. I can’t express how upsetting all this is. I am not looking forward to driving on these roads especially after wrecking on slick roads. I am having problems sleeping as I keep recalling the accident. It had to be one of the longest occurring accidents that anyone has ever had.

The accident

I had been driving all day. We had started at 4:30 in the morning trying to get some miles in, in some very adverse conditions. I had driven on snow covered roads most of the day. I had stopped and chained the truck, which is a difficult job in these conditions, but had removed. The snowing had stopped and the sun was shining and the temperature had got up to 28 – 30 degrees. A lot of road crews were out clearing the roads and the roads had greatly improved. We had not made any miles and we were finally able to make up some time. Right after reaching la Grande, Oregon we started into another high elevation pass and the roads deteriorated quickly. The traffic was slowed because of a jackknifed truck carrying radio active material. After getting by this we started down a long grade. It took us awhile to get past that and we started down a long hill that didn’t look too bad and the traffic was light from the jackknifed truck delay. I had passed it about a half mile and had got my speed up to about 45 when I started sliding. I was on a long downgrade with a large drop off (200- 300 ft.) to my right and I was in a curve turning left. I was in the slow lane with the tractor turned sideways facing the center barrier but I continued to slide in a forward motion. Shelly was in the bunk so I woke her up to let her know that we were going to wreck. She started to getup to get Sweet Pea when the truck got traction and slammed us straight into the center barrier hard. I had no control over the direction. When we hit, everything in the back came crashing forward and something hit Shelly in the head and knocked her out for a minute. We were jammed into the barrier with the trailer blocking the road in a curve on a downgrade with very slick road conditions and I knew that there were a lot of trucks behind us getting cleared pass the last wreck. I got on the CB to get them stopped. I was afraid that trucks would come running into us. After the traffic stopped I was able to back up and get it out of the jackknife and clear a lane. The truck is in pretty bad shape and could not be driven. We slide for at least a half a mile so I had plenty of time to know that we were going to crash. It was in slow motion and it took some time for it all to transpire but nothing I tried made any difference in the direction I was headed. Sliding sideways down a mountain in curves on ice wasn’t going to lead to very good results. We are very thankful that we were able to walk away from it and that no one else was involved.

Driving a truck is one of the most difficult jobs that you can do. It is rated as the 4th most dangerous job in America. The hours are horrendous. You drive, pickup and deliver at all hours, deal with all types of weather, traffic, road construction and conditions, DOT, and then the people at the stops. You have inadequate places to park, eat, and bathe. But without truck drivers doing their job you would be hungry and naked. If trucks shutdown, in three day you would have no food in the stores, no gas for your cars, and no materials for your job. The country would come to a stand still and people would panic.

We are ready to go home and leave all this to others, but even this is proving to be a real challenge. I am not sure what I will be doing but I have had enough of this.

Thursday, December 4, 2008

Memphis to Laredo

Thursday, December 04, 2008

Memphis to Laredo

After making our delivery in Saltillo we (7 CFI trucks) went back to truck stop and waited for our next load. A couple of trucks got loads during the day but the rest of us waited this Tuesday when we got dispatch about 59 miles Bruce, Mississippi to drop our trailers and then bobtail 118 miles to the Memphis terminal where we waited another day to get a load. I went to Laredo where I am now 58 on the board here. Bottom line is freight is slow. I hope to get of here tomorrow.