New found respect for Trucking industry (and NASCAR)

When progress causes some personal pain and why....

Over the last few days I took my family on a beach vacation at the not too distant beach resort areas on the Atlantic coast.  When I say not so distant, I mean areas that are within a couple hundred miles, and less than 3 hours drive time at road conditions.  Distances I used to drive without even blinking and without really thinking about it.  Distances and drive times that are showing up in serious aches and pains this a.m. and yesterday a.m. even though I was done with my driving and had returned home a few evenings ago.

As I told my wife, part of the problem is that the trip to the beaches in my area have been streamlined in most places.  The trip out U.S. route 50 used to be ridiculously long with stops in every little 'burg along the way.  Seriously, there were several (half-dozen??) draw bridges that would invariably be raised to allow some Ted Knight (thanks for the correction, Dr Guy) (in Caddyshack) or Richard Crenna (in the movie Summer Rental) style blow-hard blow-boater to take their sailboat with the 4-feet too tall main mast under the bridge to get from one side of the harbor over to the other, mostly because they were too cheap to pay for a slot at the marina on the side of the harbor where they wouldn't have to ever have the bridge raised.  Thanks to those draw bridges getting raised at the most inopportune times, the traffic would back-up literally for hours (and miles) on end.  From one draw-bridge back to the previous one (normally about 12 - 18 miles apart) was not at all unheard of.

The draw-bridges themselves and the back-up from them would compound upon each other and create a line of traffic from the Chesapeake bay bridge all the way to just outside of Ocean City Maryland, or to Rehoboth Beach Delaware.  In addition, there were stop lights, speed traps, many hidden entrances, cross streets, and residential areas with direct access to the roadway.

That stuff has all been, slowly but surely, eliminated from the roadway and what was a mostly rural roadway has been upgraded in many areas to bypass the small towns and to eliminate most of the bottlenecks that were along the way.  Bridges were built to replace the drawbridges with the new bridges that arc high up over the water and never require opening of a draw span.

Progress, lots and lots of progess.  Trips that used to take 4 - 5 hours, if not more, became first 3 - 4 hours, and then down into the lower 3 hour range (if you are riding close to posted speed limits).

There are still a few areas I'd love to see improved, including large stretches of 55 MPH speed limits that could very easily be raised to 65 MPH speed limits, and areas where by-passes could be built that would eliminate another 10 - 15 minutes out of the over-all trip.  If both were done (assuming that the new speed limits were enforced at approx. 5 MPH over the limit, allowing a little leeway to avoid speed trap situations, etc.) the trip could probably become one of a fairly smooth 2.5 hours for most drivers.

But, at the same time, this quicker trip has unintended consequences and side effects.  Side effects such as lower back pain and stiffness that has me popping the Tylenol to help relax the muscles and relieve the pain/pressure.  Side effects that remind me that I should more frequently say THANKS! to people like frequent JU blogger Mason who haul materials around this country as they drive long-haul runs.  And oh, yeah, also some more respect for the work that NASCAR drivers put in on any given weekend.

Even in the junior (not Dale, Jr., but junior level) level Busch series the drivers there are strapped into a NASCAR vehicle and driving their butts off for (on average) 200 - 300 miles.  Up on the higher level, for the NEXTEL/Sprint cup drivers, the races are typically 400 - 500 miles in length.  3 hours, if not more, of hard driving.  Even when you look at the racers and consider that they are just turning left for 500 miles, it is grueling work where drivers are racing around in cars that are hot, gunning the vehicle to get up to max speed only to smack brakes and slow down to go through the corners and immediately start gunning the vehicle again to race through the next straightaway.

In the case of the NASCAR drivers, there's a pool of money that is there to help reward the drivers.  In the case of the trucking industry, well, not so darned much.  Yeah, I would assume that most are making money at their jobs (or they wouldn't be doing those jobs), but they aren't getting rich at it.  They're doing the job because it pays well enough for them to survive and feed families, otherwise they may do something else.  But again, I suspect that they wouldn't be getting rich at the job.

Anyway, as my back finally starts loosening up (as the Tylenol kicks in) I send /salutes to the truckers that are hauling goods and materials across the country.  And oh, yeah, some salutes to those NASCAR drivers too.

12,088 views 11 replies
Reply #1 Top

Though I can probably still handle endurance driving runs, and would drive for literally hours on end, only stopping to fill-up the gas tank as I go, and/or stopping to grab a bite from whatever fast food place I want to stop and suffer through both service and food at, I'm much better off to do as I used to do in the older trips to the beach -- stop frequently, grab drinks, use the restrooms, get out and stretch and break up the trips a lot more than I do when I stupidly drive to the beaches and don't think about the idea that I should force myself out of the driver's seat often.

I've done 6 - 10 hours worth of driving over the course of a day in the not so distant past.  If I stop frequently (every hour give or take), it's not that bad.  Maybe every 90 minutes, give or take.  I get out, stretch out a little (even just by walking around some), and feel less stiff when I get where I'm going -- especially the next day.

It's the long driving periods where I go for 2 hours or more without stopping that get me and make me want to see about getting a deep muscle massage.

Reply #2 Top
the work that NASCAR drivers put in on any given weekend.


unless you mean weekends when they're not racing, they're not working in any credible sense of that word. i'm not even sure it's a legitimate sport. in any event, comparison to actual labor performed by professional transport drivers is ridiculous and insulting.
Reply #3 Top
Has anyone driven a race car and as a professional transport driver? If you have, please let us know if kingbee is right. If kingbee has, then I'll take his word for it.
Reply #4 Top

i'm not even sure it's a legitimate sport.

I posited that once when the topic came up, and was soundly booed and poo-pooed about them being real athletes and it is a legitimate sport.  not being a fan, I figured to let them have their sport, and I would just cheer on my Raiders.

Psst- Terp - It's Ted Knight.

Reply #5 Top

Kingbee buzzed a bit and the following came out:

unless you mean weekends when they're not racing, they're not working in any credible sense of that word. i'm not even sure it's a legitimate sport. in any event, comparison to actual labor performed by professional transport drivers is ridiculous and insulting.

As Jythier suggests above, I'd love to see you (Kingbee) behind the wheel of a NASCAR vehicle for the duration of a race, even on the Busch circuit, I suspect you'd find it hot, boring, miserable *work* that would leave you demanding "where's the Gatorade?" at the end of it all.

I'm not saying that Truckers aren't doing much more than NASCAR drivers are, and that they aren't doing 'real work' comparitively speaking, but I would take up the argument that NASCAR drivers are putting forth a fair amount of effort.  They typically sweat out pounds during a race, and look like they've been to hell and back when they finish the events.  Though I've said many times I'd love a chance to drive in a race, I know I'm past my prime for it.

(Though I would dearly love to have plenty of spending cash to use to run about 30 laps around the track at something like the NASCAR experience or Richard Petty Driving Experience.)

Reply #6 Top

Dr Guy said:

Psst- Terp - It's Ted Knight.

Thanks, corrected above.

Reply #7 Top
Has anyone driven a race car and as a professional transport driver? If you have, please let us know if kingbee is right


if ju counted among its ranks such a person, is it likely he or she would denigrate one or the other occupation?
Reply #8 Top
I'd love to see you (Kingbee) behind the wheel of a NASCAR vehicle for the duration of a race, even on the Busch circuit, I suspect you'd find it hot, boring, miserable *work* that would leave you demanding "where's the Gatorade?" at the end of it all.


the only sort of officiated racing in which i've competed had the same effect (running & biking). neither was nearly as hot, boring or miserable as installing chimney bracing in the valley in august/september/october when temps outside (in the shade) were well over 100.

no matter how good i felt about having run over a dozen 6:15 avg miles and despite the fact i received no rankings, ribbons or pats on the back for my work in the attic, only one of those activities is likely to prevent someone from being flattened by their chimney during the next earthquake.

I'm not saying that Truckers aren't doing much more than NASCAR drivers are, and that they aren't doing 'real work' comparitively speaking, but I would take up the argument that NASCAR drivers are putting forth a fair amount of effort. They typically sweat out pounds during a race, and look like they've been to hell and back when they finish the events.


"professional wrestlers" put forth a lotta effort too. compared to mma cage fighters, what they do could hardly be considered a sport much less productive.
Reply #9 Top
was soundly booed and poo-pooed about them being real athletes and it is a legitimate sport.


cockfighting is considered sport by many. i'm not sure whether the roosters or their owners are considered 'real athletes'.
Reply #10 Top
cockfighting is considered sport by many. i'm not sure whether the roosters or their owners are considered 'real athletes'.


I would say the roosters are - the owners have a different name however.
Reply #11 Top
Aren't the rooster owners named after the sport?