Thursday, October 30, 2014
Hallelujah
Is the Universe answering my prayers, or what? So much further north I would have expected Goshen and environs to be further advanced toward winter, the trees bare, but in fact I saw some of the most gorgeous color I've seen all season today. It was overcast but the quality of light might change the character of the color, but never its depth. Muted is just as good, sometimes better.
Northern Indiana may be flat, but it was once High Forest too, and there are some beautiful old trees in those long settled towns; mature urban growth. It was downright beautiful, never mind the traffic.
Ah, once again, I have so much more to say, but I'm tired. Sweet dreams all.
Wednesday, October 29, 2014
Highway Blues
Past the peak, but still pretty as hell Autumn is beginning to wind down. Halloween is nearly here, many trees are already bare. It's been beautiful but I haven't gotten to enjoy it as much as I'd have liked. The last two years with Stonebelt I spent the vast majority of the fall season shuttling around Southern Indiana. This year we're short on drivers and I've spent a lot of time making deliveries as far away as the western suburbs of Chicago or Stanton Kentucky, running the interstates. The color is still there, of course. It's not like the interstates don't run through the same region, but it's not the same. Even if everywhere I drove was as pretty as Southern Indiana, the way that Stanton is, in the mountains, it's still not the same. You're separated from the landscape by a wide buffer while billboards and development proliferate throughout, not to mention the traffic. I've truly come to despise the interstates. They're a nightmare. There's a lot more that I was going to say but I just got back from a 12 hour trip to Charleston, IL and have to do Goshen, IN in the morning after a 10 hour turn around. Talk at you later.
Monday, October 13, 2014
Fringe Benifits
To think; I get paid to drive around Southern Indiana. Southern Indiana is beautiful. It can be a pleasure to drive its hills at any time of the year but it's especially nice in the autumn, when the trees show their true colors.
Why, I drove back Indiana highways today, and it was beautiful. Highway 3 was closed so I had to detour down highway 203, which is just a little slip of a road, maximum speed limit 45. For several miles it wound through the woods along the bank of a stream. The color on the trees was intense. It had started out rainy but for this part of the trip the sun came back out. Let me repeat, it was beautiful.
Of course I would rather have been in a sports car rather than a heavily loaded 18 wheeler. The road was narrow, and unfamiliar which engendered a lot of stress, but overall it was an enjoyable ride. Later it clouded over again and spat rain while I shuttled trailers around between Jeffersonville and New Albany, but on my way home, back out in the country, the sun returned.
I don't always have it so good though, tomorrow I go to Chicago.
Saturday, September 27, 2014
Thursday, September 25, 2014
Scrumptious
Another sunrise with color good enough to eat. I saw a dry cornfield ready for harvest, orange in the early light, with high red clouds drybrushed in swirls across an azure sky. It was but a passing moment, not an extended process building to a crescendo as in Morning Muse, but the beauty was potent and woke me to appreciate the quiet splendor of Southern Indiana at dawn, I had been but doing my job on a highway I'd travelled uncounted times (US 231 north of Spencer), then my eyes were opened.
The next thing I saw was the color in the trees. Autumn is in its early stages yet, but it's been a couple of weeks now since it began. Again, though, I'd only ever looked with my mundane eye. Now I saw red, orange, yellow mixed amongst the predominant green, muted as they were in the nascent light. The colors themselves, but especially their mixtures ignited my soul. It's as if my subtle emotion body were an egg shaped sphere where disparate zones glow with the stimulus of different wavelengths of light; the intermediate areas being the most exciting, if the least energized. I'm not trying to be poetic, I'm trying to describe what autumn actually feels like to me.
It wasn't long until I was back at work; the landscape, the sky, the air appreciated but mere backdrop. Traffic to negotiate, customers to deal with, loads to be secured and unsecured. My last load of the day was my first wide load. I've done over length before, where you have to be really careful rounding corners, but this load stuck out beyond the sides of the trailer. It was a piece of housing for the new crusher over at Independent Quarry. It required a permit, the banners and the flags, but it wasn't big enough to need an escort, I was wishing I had one though. "How the hell am I going to get that thing down Victor Pike?" I wondered. It was late enough that at least I figured I wouldn't meet any trucks coming the other way. A school bus might be a problem but most cars are below the bed of my trailer anyway. What was the first thing that I met once I'd turned onto Victor? You guessed it, two big trucks coming my way. No problem.
Who has time to savour the subtlety of the environment, especially when it's your home and you see it every day? It won't be long now, though, till Autumn is in our faces and can't be ignored. I'm sure that I'll feel then as I usually do, that although it's but a brief episode of the year the fall color is somehow eternal.
Saturday, August 9, 2014
All Work and No Play
Whew, I'm beat; another 14 hour day. They sent me all the way down to Monticello, Kentucky today, below Lake Cumberland and spitting distance from Tennessee. Not particularly far for an Over the Road driver, but let's remember that I'm a day tripper. This also came at the end of a very long, intense week. In fact the whole adventure started the evening before, with elements that were ramifications from the day before that; but I'll spare you the sordid details. Let's just say that I was back to work 10 hours from when I'd parked the truck, as soon as the law allowed. Granted, I didn't think that the one pm cut-off for delivery was firm, but I still have my pride.
The trip plan I was given was as if delivering straight from the mill, through Indianapolis, but I was starting from Bloomington. Fortunately there was a driver at the terminal in the morning who was familiar with the area and gave me an excellent route. His advise was golden, and the trip plan might have been OK too, if I'd actually been delivering in Monticello. That's what screwed me up. You see, Monticello is on the eastern side of Wayne County, and Wayne Lumber, my destination, the western side. Of course I waited to call for specific directions until I'd already struggled through Somerset and Burnside. My bad. I'd have done much better to have left the Cumberland Parkway on US 127 instead of going all the way to US 27.
Oh, and just so this story is spinning correctly let me mention that it rained off and on all day, making driving more difficult. But I made it before one pm! Just barely; by a matter of minutes.
There was a guy standing out front of the office eyeing me skeptically as I pulled up. He nodded when I greeted him then said, "We stop receiving at one, you'll have to wait till Monday." I must have looked really dejected because he guffawed and actually put his arm around my shoulder, giving me a manly shake. He was just kidding.
Looking at the map I figured I'd added an hour and a half to my trip what with all the stop lights in Somerset, which were definitely NOT timed. In truth it turned out that it was probably only more like an hour, or forty five minutes, even. You see, US 127 turned out to be the "scenic route." Back at the terminal when we were figuring out how I should go the experienced driver got all the way to Lake Cumberland then said, "Now you need a boat to cross; take the ferry."
127 is a good road, but it's windy, through the mountains. The speed limit may be 55 but practically you can do no better than 45 or so, average, if that. I actually caught myself bitching about it. I knew my weekend wasn't going to start until late but wait a second; "You're in the Mountains, Steve; take a deep breath and enjoy this."
I'm so glad that I relaxed before I got to...the dam. US 127 crosses the dam that holds back Cumberland Lake. I had several cars behind me approaching the 90 degree turn onto the dam. I had to stop until traffic cleared to make the turn. All the oncoming cars kept going onto the shoulder as if afraid of me. I wondered if I was over the yellow line, but wasn't. Perhaps the first one was afraid and the others followed? But no, there was a break, too small for me to go but large enough to stop a lemming. Yet they gave berth too. Perhaps they were trying to be kind, to give me enough room? More likely, but not sufficient. I needed the WHOLE road to make that turn.
I was stressed because I thought I was holding people up, but once I'd finally turned I found that the tailgaters had all come to the dam for the view and parked. I was free to cross at leisure.
And what a view it was. The lake to my right, narrower than some, but bounded by higher hills, and to the left a fucking Gorge. I've always wondered if that's not the etymology of "gorgeous." I guess we could look that up. But the view was of the Cumberland River curving off with a snake of mist above its surface mimicking what? Its future course, or the course of the river that was lost? No matter or energy is ever lost. "Gee, I hope this dam doesn't give way!"
So that was cool but there was another factor that frustrated me on the way back. This too you can look up online: The Worlds Longest Yardsale. Yup, US 127 in Southern Kentucky. Social scientists will be busy for years cataloguing this simian behaviour. It was early enough that it wouldn't have been an issue on the way in, but coming out..."I just wanna go home!" Then I passed KY 55, the highway I'd taken down to the Parkway before I realized it would have been my escape route. So if, which I doubt, I ever have to do this trip again I'll know the way to go, and a couple of ways NOT to go.
It's always easier in the morning, afternoon traffic sucks, everywhere. Imagine what it was like when I got to Louisville at five PM on a Friday, with every major road in that city under construction. "I just wanna go home!" But I made it, in one piece, glad of the overtime and with a story to tell. Yet that's not what I wanted to share with you, that was just blowing off steam:
I was on a back road in Davies County; Amish country. There were some sheep in an overgrown pasture. That was picturesque enough but the puppy bounding toward the sheep, its head rising out of the grass and disappearing again was priceless. Then I saw the two young boys in coveralls coming through a gate into the field to run after the dog and thought, "I must be in a Winslow Homer painting!"
Sunday, August 3, 2014
Isolation Nightmare
It's over a month until the anniversary of 9-11 yet the event has come up repeatedly in the past few weeks. The company that I work for, Stone Belt Freight Lines, is bringing limestone from the facade of the Pentagon damaged in 9-11 back from DC (it was Indiana Limestone to begin with) for a memorial they are erecting in Indianapolis. Twice recently I've heard people at The Club that I frequent on the weekends, my "third place," talk about feeling at loose ends and unsure how to cope on that fateful day, then finding solace and community at the bar. Then, just tonight, at that same bar I kept hearing 9-11, 9-11. I turns out that one of the regulars has just bought a Porsche 911. Not quite the same thing but serendipity will have its way.
I truly appreciate the community that The Club affords, but my experience of 9-11 was quite different. I was Over the Road. I was in Virginia Beach, a locality that, with its naval station was set on high alert. Thank goodness I was sent west from there, across the Dismal Swamp, rather than north toward DC, where no traffic was moving.
The first I heard of events was local radio telling mothers to keep their children home from school. I remember talking to a young man in the trailer yard where I picked up my westbound load who was sure it was the beginning of the end of the world. Being jaded I figured it's always the beginning of the end of the world but was deeply affected nonetheless. There was a massive disruption in the Force that day. I too was at a loose end, unsure how to cope.
I reached out through email. I hadn't started The Reluctant Trucker yet but I had been doing email, which eventually led to the blog. I wrote a piece and sent it out to everyone on my contact list. I would edit it now, but here is what I wrote:
I delivered a load to Bayonne New Jersey once, an industrial town on the southern tip of an island in the Hudson River just below Manhattan. There were several hours to kill while they unloaded us so I wandered around the surreal industrial landscape. I could see two twins high rise towers in the distance above the acres of million gallon oil tanks and the miles and miles of pipeline. I thought to myself, "There's a city over there, I wonder what city it is. It can't be very large, it only has two big buildings." Yet there was something incongruous about the size of those towers and how far away they seemed.
You see, this was way back when I first started driving. I knew that we were in Jersey but I didn't know where. For some reason I thought that we were in the southern part of the state, having arrived during my co-driver's shift while I was asleep in the back. It never occurred to me that I was seeing the tops of the World Trade Center in NYC. Little city indeed.
That's how impossibly huge those towers were, I could see them as if complete, but none of the other buildings of New York. Seemingly twice the height of the tallest of the buildings that clustered at their feet they were out of all proportion to the rest of Manhattan. Seen from the East off the Brooklyn Queens Expressway lower Manhattan was nicely framed in the truck window, but the tops of the WTC were lost behind the roof of the cab. From the North they still dominated even though most of the city lay between. I've heard that they were measurably farther apart at the top than at the base because of the curvature of the Earth. Mighty impressive structures, and beautiful, I suppose, in a minimalist sort of way, though far less interesting than the jumble of architecture they lorded over. And now they're gone.
I speak of architecture because it’s something that I can grasp. Buildings can be rebuilt, the lives lost are irreplaceable. Sons, daughters, mothers, fathers, wives, husbands, sisters, brothers, friends, enemies, lovers, fiancées, innocent victims all. I'm staggered. I can't grasp it, but I'm affected by it. The closest thing in history was probably Hiroshima and Nagasaki, though this, of course, is closer to home.
I want to share with you how close it came, and how lucky I, and some of you, are. My ex-brother-in-law, Uncle Asolm, worked as the day manager at the Windows on the World Restaurant formerly located in the World Trade Center, NYC. I don't know the details but for some reason he didn't go to work that day, thank the Goddess. Apparently his brother was there but he got out in time. I heard a story on NPR, though, about a woman looking for her sister who was a waitress there and is now missing. We just don't know what might have been had he gone to work, I'm just thankful that he didn't.
Just to clarify one point: Essom worked at a restaurant in the concourse, in the lower floors, which is why his brother, who also worked there was able to escape. We still don't know what would have happened if he had gone to work that day.
Conspiracy theory: Being a devout Muslim who prays five times a day Essom must have known about the attack and his brother, whose name I forget just now and who I have only seen once through closed lids as he stepped past me on his way to work as a cab driver, while I slept on the living room floor of Jean and Essom's house north of the city, was surely there to set off the CIA explosives that brought down the third building.
I don't know what the truth is except not that.
But back to my email; I longed for an answer and got one. Only one, from someone that I wasn't very close to. I wrote in my journal, "I feel more isolated than ever."
Later, in a phone call to someone else I'd sent the email to I probed the subject. The reply: "Do you know how insulting it is to get an email addressed to a whole list of people, as if I don't count?" I was crushed and didn't even ask if he'd read it. I doubt now that he did and realize too that it's not a writing culture, that a reply might have been too much to hope for. After that rebuff I let the issue lie.
It's more than a month away from the anniversary of 9-11, and more than a decade since the event, but I am still affected by it. All those Sons, daughters, mothers, fathers, wives, husbands, sisters, brothers, friends, enemies, lovers, fiancées gone. Exes too, but who cares about them?
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