Wednesday, March 19, 2014

Graduate of IITR Truck School!


My tests results - DO NOT OPEN :)
 Thoughts about trucks school...

Having had a class B CDL for over 36 years, I already had skills and habits of a professional driver before going to truck school. I went into this industry after doing a lot of research. I decided to go to a private truck school rather than a company school because I did not want to be indebted to a company and required to work for them or pay them for training. I received a partial scholarship from unemployment and funded the rest with a government loan for the balance at a fairly low rate. I chose an accredited local school with many branches throughout Oregon. The school was 4 weeks long, and focused on passing the DMV tests. I graduated just last week.

There were 6 students in the class. Three young men in their 20's, two men in their 50's, and myself, a 50 something woman. Out of the 6 of us, most had some truck driving experience thru farm work etc. I had 16 years in a school bus.  I found it interesting to note the differences. I had previously taken the DMV written tests and had my permit and most endorsements before class started. The first several days were spent preparing for the DMV written tests. We then did some work with mapping (I love maps) and learned how to do paper logs as well as receiving more information needed for the industry.

The second week we started working with the truck. Learning about pre-trips and hook and drop as well as some backing skills. I the third week we went on the road with two trucks. Each truck had a team of 3 students and an instructor. One was pulling a 48' trailer and the other was a set of 25' doubles.  The first 3 lessons were on the 'shifting range', a wonderful country road with straight stretches and right and left corners with little traffic. As we became proficient with shifting, we dipped into town to work on more traffic skills. By the end of that week we were all able to drive in town, on narrow country roads and the freeway as well. We learned about shifting uphill and downhill and navigating sharp in town corners.

The 4th week was perfecting our skills and final prep for the schools final test on Thursday. Two of my most challenging skills to learn were shifting and backing. After spending two weeks working on backing, my skills finally got better. I began visualizing a perfect backing pattern. On Thursday morning on the first try I successfully navigated the backing pattern. At that point I quit practicing and worked on visualizing. The fellas would let me know when it was my turn and I’d say, “I’m good”. They would shake their heads. 

Friday of the 4th week we signed up to be tested by a 'third party tester' (certified by DMV but independent of DMV and the school). I was first to be tested. Unknown to me, two of the young fella were in one of the tractors across the yard watching me. As they told the story, their jaws dropped as I drove the backing course without any demerits! I also got a 100% score on the pre-trip inspection and 95% on the driving skills test! With a total of 92.9 GPA for the class.

I had a wonderful instructor with great information to share, although, at times, I felt that I was singled out. Sometimes he was much harder on me than the others.  As I thought about this I wondered if he wanted to see if I would quit. Maybe, toughen my skin, and see if I would stand up for myself in this male dominated industry.  I also realized that he works mostly with young men and maybe he has had to get lessons thru hard heads at times. As angry as he seemed, he never held a grudge.  I did hear that there were times that he was hard on members of the other team too. So I was glad it wasn’t just because I was a woman! I enjoyed my time at school but wish I had at least one more week to perfect my skills before going to a training carrier!

It seems as of this moment I have two Orientation dates next week with my top two training carriers. Time to make some decisions!  


Monday, March 17, 2014

Written Feb 22 - just too busy studying to post...


Written Feb 22 and just posted today!

First week of truck driving school is done. Driving to Albany OR each day, a little over an hour each way. I have to be there by 7 AM, so the mornings are still dark.  Motoring through the pouring rain a few mornings was pretty crazy!  Very nice ride in the afternoons tho! We’ve been doing lots of reading, videos and testing. Some of it review from my bus days. I passed all of my DMV written tests, including the Haz Mat, the first try! I was sweating that one!  Next week we start working with the truck. Probably several days of learning pre-trip, engine and brake parts, attaching trailers, etc… before we actually get to drive. ­­­­I’m having fun learning new stuff and am looking forward to actually moving the truck around the lot soon! I’m guessing that we will do a lot of backing up practice and learning how to turn corners without running over stuff before they let us on the road.

Our class consists of 6 students and a great instructor. Herold is a kick in the pa-toot!  Old trucker fart that tells great stories while he shares his infinite wisdom with us.  The three young fellas, that usually sit in the front, have all been in a truck a time or two. Three of us old farts, sit in the back row mostly. One is a vet that drove a while ago and is back for a refresher. The other is fairly new to big rigs. Then there’s me the ‘token’ Newbie Woman! We’ll see how it all shakes down when we take to the road. It will be interesting to see how they split up the teams. Three students in a truck, with one instructor comprise each team.

It’s almost time to choose a training carrier. After school, students work for a training carrier that actually gives them driving experience. I am finding that due to sexual harassment lawsuits many of the training carriers will only send women students with women trainers. There are so few women trainers that a gal might have to wait for 3-4 months before she can get a trainer. Men on the other hand can start driving in a week or two. To me this seems like discrimination. I have heard at least one company has gone thru the courts on this issue too. I guess the truck companies are stuck in a hard place between the two types of lawsuits. I think gender should not be an issue for any of this stuff. I for one, don’t care what gender my trainer is. I just want them to be respectful, and be a good driver! And I don’t want to wait!!!  I have had a conversation with my top choice of training carriers and am hopeful that they will put me on a truck in a timely fashion.  The recruiter for that company will be at school next week and I will ask about that again!

Time to hit the books. Looking forward to sharing my thoughts with you again soon!

PS BarkClay says ‘Boooowowoowww’



Sunday, February 16, 2014

Final Transition to Lady Trucker Begins




Ladies and Gents!  The time has FINALLY come…  Monday begins a new chapter in my life. That of Lady Trucker!  I am so excited to start trucking school on Monday. I’m hoping that all the winter weather is behind us for this year and that the icy morning roads are done too (One can wish, right?).  I will be driving to Albany on a daily basis for the next month to IITR to learn all I can to pass the DMV driving test in a Big Rig… I have learned so much already. 

Trucking is a lifestyle, not just a job. More like a Gypsy, which I have been in the past when I was much younger. Living without an address in my little pick-me-up-truck. They call it homeless today. I am looking forward to traveling about and seeing the highways, freeways, warehouses and truck stops of the country.  I may even see some scenery too!  

I have plans of cooking in my truck so I don’t have to eat truck stop food all the time. In my little kitchen I hope to eventually have a microwave, fridge, lunchbox oven, crockpot and of course, a coffee maker! I have been saving recipes that should work well on the road, and testing them at home… Getting used to instant oats instead of steel cut. They only need very hot water for a few minutes to be yumms. Not perfect but better than truck stop food – Cheaper for sure!

Learning about online bill pay and banking is quite puzzling. Having done the cash/envelope system for so long I have been testing the new system the past month. Things I can do at one bank and not the other don’t make sense to me. How to get paperless billing and other ‘Up to Date in Kansas City’ (quoting an old song) stuff is still baffling. It is possible to teach this old dog some new tricks… Just like talking to someone who doesn’t speak English – please talk slowly! … Did I tell you I got a Smarty Phone?  Tricks – Just plain tricks I tell ya!

I will be keeping my little house and my snail mail address in Oregon, although I won’t be home to get paper mail often. I’m not expecting to get home more than once a month, if even that. I will miss my garden and yard. I’ll probably have to get some one to mow for me this summer. My roomie will hold down the fort and take care of my kritters and other inside housie stuff while I cruse the country. I will also miss driving my tiny Miata and my classic ’63 Valiant too. They will get their exercise while I’m home on very short breaks. 

Tomorrow is another early morning so I’ll say adios, au revoir, buona notte… good night!



Mom going to School?

Well nowwww,   Mom has been busy typing on that silly computer thing again. What's she up to?
She was doing the Snoopy Dog Happy Dance the other day. Said she had received a partial scholarship to go to Truck School. Chose IITR in Albany. Not quite so far to drive. Mom has been taking me in the car more often now. She says it's practice.  I get to go to Good Dog School! I am learning to be a good 4 legged Trucker citizen. MY teacher Aliesha gives me lots of yummy treats and fun new things to do too. I do pretty good for an Asp Terrior! If you want to learn new tricks you can hang out with Aliesha too.  Her web site is SitSpotClick.com ...   Hey, Mom it's supper time. Can we have dinner nowwww?

Friday, February 7, 2014

Oregonian In Winter



I am greatly enjoying driving the back roads of Yamhill County. Seeing the nooks where creeks flow from the hillsides, into rushing current of rivers. Mushy gravel roads shared with log trucks. Trees sleep above waiting for spring, catkins slowing swelling. I am savoring my last winter as a school bus driver for a while.

BarkClay Loves Snow!
Then nature takes a turn and Old Man Winter comes sweeping thru.  Just grey skies in the morning change to blowing sideways powder snow by midday.
With snow starting to build I leave McMinnville in my little truck for Yamhill to take the kids home early on the school bus. Snow is falling. I fish tail several times in front of larger pickup trucks and decide to chain up in Carlton – Thank goodness for insulated Carhart bib overalls!!!  - Only to find that my chains are tooo small to fit… I KNOW I read the box right when I got them from the garage… these MIGHT fit the Miata…  Climbing back in the truck, cold and a bit wet, I head to Yamhill only to spin out on the corner/hill in front of the school… ½ mile to go!

MADE IT!!!  Boss wants drop off times for the snow route kids…  Uhu – When we get there?...   My guess, around 2:00pm…   Pre-tripped busses, ready to roll.  On to the school to load older kids and wait for shuttle busses from the grade school. Uhoh, trouble in Carlton… Waiting… snowing…waiting…Snowing… Snowing More… Waiting… Load ‘em all up!  We’re off!!!  … and sliding…  

“Are we sliding?”  -  “Nope, not now” -  Children sitting safely. Excitedly talking about the snow.  “Can I move to that seat?” – “No stay put today, please”. 
First stop, second stop, third stop… “Why are we stopping here?”  -  “It’s a snow route stop!”  … “ He has to WALK home?”  -  “Yes” -   “Are you taking me to my house?”  - “Yes!”   Onward and further up into the boonies we go…  Wipers caking with ice make it hard to see out the windshield… Amazingly children still sit safely. Snowing harder.  Last stop! – As the kids disembark they sink almost to their knees! They step back on the bus… Off with you now!  They trudge across the park to their bridge that will take them home.  And now for my turn around?  We’re all good this time! NO CHAINS!   Windshield is still streaking with ice.  On the way back to town I stop to clear the wipers.  Wonder if Boss would let me take bus home for the weekend? Probably NOT!  Safe into the first port!

Can you see the ski tips?
Now! Back to McMinnville ~ Arg!  Throw two bags of bus chains in on top of the 150 lbs of sand already there. Deep Breath… I’m DOING this NOW!  Deep Breath Again! I take the main highway back into town, No sweat!  One hill I see a cute (expensive) sports car with fat tires spinning wheels to a stop as a line of trucks wish they could just push him up to the top!  In my lane, at the bottom of said hill, is the STOP sign onto Hwy 99W… Breeeeath – slide… Slide, SLIDE… Traffic clear  - YES GO! Town is just across the bridge!  I’ll make it!!!  Red light - good!  Red Light two – good!  Les Schawbie ahead…  Time for new tires to replace the bald ones on the back!  I walk the several blocks home ready to relax…  The snow is beautiful, now that I am not driving, I can fully enjoy… HEY!  I’m gonna get my Cross Country skis out and ski back to Schwabie!  What a great idea!  The snow is just perfect to ski an hour later when I get the call my truck is ready!  I get sideways glances from drivers as I head back. Glide, slide, kick, hey not bad after 6 years I do remember how!  Truck home. I can’t wait till tomorrow to ski again!  I love snow!




Tuesday, January 28, 2014

Three Weeks Left


Three Weeks Left - Getting Ready!

Here it is, the last week of January. Three more weeks until MY school starts.  I’ll be bursting like the spring flowers when it ultimately gets here!
            I’ve finally entered the world of technology with my first smart phone… Granny with a smart phone – look out!  LOVE it! Wonder how long it will take for me to blast thru the data plan and have to up my ticket!  So many fun buttons to play with!  Now I need to learn short hand for texting. I’ve been told that the ‘words’ that most folks use are different than the ones us ‘seniors’ might use! LMDO! (Laughing My Dentures Out!) … On another note, have found several good trucker tools and other things that will be helpful when I’m on the road (my excuse to get one, by the way).
            I am now the proud owner of a Truck Simulator and have begun to practice! I have heard that backing can be the hardest thing to overcome. Having driven a horse trailer for so many years I hope it will quickly become second nature! Finding reference points and pivot points will be interesting as well. Not sure how accurate the simulator will show those, but it’s always helpful to have the general idea before attempting new concepts. The other thing that causes me to ponder, is the pre trip and post trip. I notice that my current process of checking the bus is changing with big rigs in mind! Being a FB fan (facebook for those of you that aren’t texting yet!) of several trucking communities, I’ve learned the importance of always doing a good pre trip on your vehicle whenever you get ready to roll - just in case someone is messing with the Lady Trucker!!!
            I have been looking into training carriers to work with/for after school is over. My list includes: 11 Western states my first year out; BarkClay the Truck Dog, my main man goes with; Great training program with safety and skills at the top of their list;  Well maintained equipment; Hands off freight (one can hope!)… Not asking for much! ROFL...CGU  (Rolling On Floor Laughing…Can’t Get Up!)  I think I’ve narrowed it down to my top three picks now.  May Trucking, Knight Transportation and Werner.  It seems that these are the ones on the ‘Left Coast’ that have what I am looking for. Thank you to all my FB Trucker friends that have given me input on these choices!
            Guess that’s about all for now. I’ve posted a picture of my Truck Simulator below… GG…LWO (Gotta Go … Laurence Welk’s On!)   ;)