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For 3 long years I pulled a
set of Rocky Mountain Doubles (48 foot trailer and 28 foot trailer behind in combination) from Cheyenne to Laramie 5 days a week on Interstate 80 back in the late 1980's.
Miraculously, thank God I was
never involved in a single accident but that section of Interstate from Cheyenne to Laramie, well... all the way to Evanston, WY actually, has to be considered one of the most dangerous
highways on the planet to drive on in the winter.
It isn't just the snow and
ice it's the incredibly high winds that make it one of the worst white knuckle
drives a Trucker will ever have to endure, especially running with high profile
empty trailers.
When I left Cheyenne for Laramie every day I was usually fully loaded with freight
which was somewhat safer but most days on the return trip back to Cheyenne the trailers were completely empty. Nothing in my
life before or since was as treacherous and scary as the ride home with those
empties on a icy windy day.
People often ask me why I
left Wyoming, why I don't hunt, ice fish, snow ski, or enjoy snow machining.
It's an easy answer, after spending day after day fighting the elements outside
the very last thing I wanted to do was go play in it.
Of the 30 years I was in the transportation industry 13 of them were spent working outside in the oilfields and
on the highways of Wyoming. I more than proved my manliness and toughness during
those years and I earned my PHD in working in nasty winter conditions.
I'm actually thankful for
what it taught me. When you work outside during a long winter in Wyoming there is no, "I can't do this," excuse. You
put your winter clothes on, suck it up, bow your neck and go out and do battle with
Mother Nature to get the job done.
That kind of work ethic and dogged
determination day after day isn't something for the weak or the meek. It's just one of the characteristics that make the citizens
in Wyoming a very unique breed apart and some of the toughest,
hardest working and most independent bootstraps people you'll ever meet.
Americans to often take for granted all the modern day conveniences that make life easier. Just remember every time you buy building material, food, gasoline, heating oil, propane, clothes or any kind of consumer product imaginable some Trucker delivered it to your town or your door step and in some cases in weather conditions just like the ones in this story. Thank you American Truckers, without you life certainly wouldn't be as comfortable for the rest of us.
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