Posts Tagged “company driver”

Veteran Trucker Tackles First Produce Load

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Jerry Cravens has been trucking since 1991 and as an owner operator since 2002.  After all these years, he is fueling at an Atlanta truckstop before picking up his first load of produce.

Leased to A.L. Smith Trucking of Versailles, OH, Jerry is picking up a load of tomatoes from a Del Monte warehouse in Atlanta for delivery to another Del Monte facility in Winset, NC.  At the Winset warehouse, he’ll load more fresh produce and head to Del Monte’s operation in Columbus, OH.

The closest Jerry has come to hauling produce was about 20 years ago with a load of cheese.  Since then his focus has been with dry freight.

As Jerry was preparing to pull out of the truck stop and head to the Del Monte warehouse, this writer forgot to get his contact information.  It would be very interesting to see if his first produce load would be his last.  Or just maybe he found a new challenge after all these years that he really likes!

Jerry fully realizes hauling perishables “is definately more challenging than pulling a dry van.”  He decided to haul produce on the recommendation of a friend who had “made good money” over the past year leasing with A.L. Smith.

Jerry says his career as an owner operator has succeeded  by being careful whom he hauls for and taking the most profitable loads.

Over the years he has considered obtaining his own operating authority, but he has known too many truckers who have tried it and failed.

Prior to trucking Jerry graduated from high school, then enlisted in the U.S. Navy  for four years, before transferring to the U.S. Army for another six years.

Between the experience in the military and his time hauling dry freight, he seems confident he is prepared to enter the world of produce trucking.  Jerry is aware of the “weird hours” and delays often associated with loading and unloading fresh fruits and vegetables, plus plenty of other issues at the docks.  He has been briefed on important factors such as maintaining the correct temperature for his load of tomatoes he’ll transport in a 53-foot Utility trailer equipped with a Carrier refrigeration unit.  The trailer is owned by the company to whom he is leased.

As Jerry was finishing fueling his truck, he was asked if he had any advice for anyone looking to enter trucking and wanted their own truck.  He advised they first learn the industry as a company driver.

As for buying a tractor, he advised against purchasing a new one.  He cited the high monthly payments as a primary negative with a new truck, along with the higher down payment required.  Jerry also cited other factors such as lease-purchase plans “where you will end up paying too much.  Buy a new truck and it is hard to come up with those $1800 per month truck payments.”

Jerry  practices what he preaches.  He owns a 2001 Kenworth T-600 with a 250-inch wheel base and a 13 speed transmission.  His truck payments are $500 per month.

“If you own your own truck you  always have a way home,” he surmises.  “I’ve seen too many of these company drivers fired while on the road and have had to find their own way home.”

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