Showing posts with label truck stops. Show all posts
Showing posts with label truck stops. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

February 10, 2010-Part One

     Today's addition to My Road Trip is in two parts because it's been so long since I've posted and I have a lot to say--also, today is my best friend, Candi's birthday. Candi lives in a very small town in Missouri where she's a nurse at a doctor's office. Candi and I have known one another for about five or six years now. We met because of a gigantic dog named Brutus, who was in the dog pound and about to be put down. Candi volunteered at the pound to try and find the animals homes before they were put down and ran ads in the newspaper. I answered one of those ads and adopted Brutus. Candi and I became friends and worked together to provide homes for animals from two different pounds, as well as encouraging people to have their animals spayed and neutered. Candi is like a sister to me and I love her so much!

HAPPY BIRTHDAY, CANDI!


I promised to post pics of the truck so everyone can see how we live on the road. There are many misconceptions about living on a truck so I'm going to try and clear them up.

Isn't it expensive to live on the road?
No, it's not. We have everything we need on board, plus some things you might not think of!

Don't you have to pay for motels every night?
Not at all. Most trucks are equipped with two beds.

How do you take showers?
Nearly every truck stop has showers, which are free to drivers when they purchase fuel. Trucks usually fuel once a day and can hold from one hundred to three hundred gallons of diesel. We fuel at the Love's Truck Stop where we have unlimited free showers and coffee.

What about laundry?
Most truck stops have a laundry room with washers and dryers like the ones at your local laundromat.

What about food? Do you eat at restaurants every day?
Some truckers do, but that's expensive. We have a refrigerator/freezer and microwave on board, as well as plenty of storage. We shop at Wal-Mart and buy groceries not only for meals on the road, but also in the event we run into bad weather and wind up stuck on a road due to accidents or road closures.

Any other questions? Please leave them in your comments and I'll answer as I can!







We drive a 2006 Freightliner Columbia class with a Detroit engine and a fully automatic transmission (our first auto).
















This is the tractor, or Bobtail when driven without a trailer attached.









We pull a 53' reefer that carries refrigerated and frozen items. The max weight allowed on any truck is 80,000 pounds. A reefer can take approx. 45,000 pounds cargo weight and still scale under 80k. Weights are calculated per axle. The steer axle can weigh at 12,000 pounds, the drive axle and tandems can weigh as much as 34,000 pounds.









On the scales weighing a load to make sure all axles are legal.










Trucks can carry as much as 400 gallons of fuel and have a fuel tank on each side. There are pumps on both sides so tanks are filled simultaneously.


Log books are required by the DOT for all drivers. They have specific rules for driving, loading, unloading, and off time that must be logged every day. A calculator and loose leaf log book is a drivers best friend!
The reefer trailer has a refrigerator unit at the front, thicker walls, and a fuel tank to operate the reefer, which adds extra weight and causes the cargo loads to be less than those a dry van can carry.




Sonya and Harley run things. Seriously!










                                                Command central.







TV & DVD Player
Above this shelf are more shelves I use for clothes.







Sonya on our bed. She's usually under the blankets, tunneling like a gopher!

The entire bed opens up and there is a ton of storage beneath. Above our bed is a bunk that has had the mattress removed and hinged lids added for more storage space.




                                        Microwave on top of fridge.















Bedside control panel for lights, AC/Heat, stereo, and 12 Volt plug.
                                                      
The "pantry" above microwave. As you can see, we store food, paper towels, and dishes here.















The doggies food and water next to our closet. The closet is below the TV/DVD shelf.


Friday, February 5, 2010

February 5, 2010



After picking up a load in Kansas City, MO we crossed Missouri, Illinois, Indiana, and spent the night in Ohio. Continuing across Ohio, Pennsylvania, and New York, we spent the second night in Massachusetts, eleven miles from the receiver in Hatfield, a small town north of Springfield, MA. As of this writing, we are in New York once again on our way to Baldwinsville, just northeast of Syracuse, NY, to pick up a load going to Lenexa, Kansas. That’s right, the place we dropped the load we’d picked up in OK, just before picking up the load heading to MA!


Todays photos come to you from the various states mentioned above. I hope you enjoy them!






 St. Louis, MO (rush hour traffic)








                                                      


                                                                          Illinois

 Indiana







Columbus, Ohio











                               Heading East!




                                                               Pennsylvania Creek


The following are the aftermath of a truck wreck three miles inside of Pennsylvania:

Truck in ditch (lower left corner-the driver walked away a little dizzy, but otherwise unharmed)

Ice flows on the rocks in New York

        










             Truck pulling two 53' trailers


Hudson River, NY

                                                                                                                              Frozen lake

Some signs along the way...


              I love the little pilgrim hats on all the MA signs!

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

February 2, 2010

Greetings from Kansas City, Missouri!

Since my last post from Dallas, Texas, we picked up a load in Ft. Gibson, Oklahoma that unloaded in Lenexia, Kansas (a suburb of KC). We pick up a load tomorrow morning heading for Massachusetts, due there Friday, the 5th.

I have been occupying my time with book edits. Two are line edits for my upcoming releases Comes An Outlaw and One Good Man, both from XOXO Publishing. The other two are edits I'm doing on a freelance basis, so lots to keep me busy along with walking Harley and Sonya, cleaning the truck, and cooking. A wife is a wife no matter where she's living!

By the time I get to MA I should have lots of new pics from Ohio, Pennsylvania, and upstate New York featuring the winter wonderland we'll be driving through. I'm also going to be posting photos of the truck, the inside and out so everyone can see how comfortable we are here.

Today I have photos from Oklahoma and Kansas. Enjoy!

North of Pryor, OK. (We live in SE OK and don't see snow very often).









This is touted as the "largest McDonald's in the world!" Located on I-44 turnpike in Oklahoma about an hour from the Missouri state line. It straddles both the east and west bound lanes with a gift shop, Will Rogers museum, and a latte shop.

The view from the observation windows.



Kansas City's finest! Horses & cops....this hit on two of my fav fantasies!

Sunday, January 31, 2010

January 31, 2010


Greetings fellow travelers!

We are currently in Dallas, Texas delivering a load in the morning, and from here, I have no idea where we'll go. My last post was from Dry Ridge, Kentucky and from there we went to Dayton, Ohio where we picked up a load that went to Kansas City, Kansas and then we switched trailers and headed south where we hoped to find warmer weather.

I have lived in SE Oklahoma since 1989 and have seen snow here twice. This winter is really making up for all those warm winters I am so fond of! Usually, this time of year we see the temps warming toward the mid to high 40's and by March we are back into the 60's, and come April, we are in the upper 70's. At this rate I'm beginning to wonder if we'll see those warm temps as early this year.

I've taken some pictures to share, so enjoy, comment, and follow me! I hope everyone is well and staying warm!

Welcome to Ohio!










                                                                        
                                       Crossing the Ohio River









Cincinnati, Ohio







                                                   Bengals Stadium

Sunday, January 24, 2010

January 24, 2010

Here I am in Phoenix, AZ! Traveling through Texas brought rain, New Mexico and Arizona brought snow, but down here in Phoenix it's a balmy 78 degrees with blue skies and a light breeze.

The trip was pleasant with little drama, and the snow made for some beautiful photos. And being the gabby girl I am, I met a few truck drivers along the way!


Evan from Nebraska















                                                              Mike from San Antonio, TX












Here Speeder, Speeder, Speeder!






This is on I-40 where it was snowing, south of the freeway the skies were clear and the sun reflected off the clouds.










  




                                                   Canyon east of Albuquerque, NM












Prickly Pear Cactus (north of Phoenix)






The parking lot of the LOVE'S truck stop in Phoenix, AZ.





                                                                                    




This truck carrying vehicles is also called a "parking lot".