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Welcome to Snowhawk's nest!

by Snowhawk from Lake Geneva, Wisconsin

Last Post 92 days, 16 hours Ago


On 7-12-08 at about 02:00 was a great time for taking lightning photos just before the rain started at 02:15. 

Check out my photos. The first photo was published on the front page -and in color- in the Lake Geneva Regional on 7/16/08 and on their web site.

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 This is a game played by two teams, one out the other in. The one

that's in, sends players out one at a time, to see if they can get in

before they get out. If they get out before they get in, they come

in, but it doesn't count. If they get in before they get out it does count.


When the ones out get three outs from the ones in before they get in

without being out, the team that's out comes in and the team in goes

out to get those going in out before they get in without being out.


When both teams have been in and out nine times the game is over. The

team with the most in without being out before coming in wins unless

the ones in are equal. In which case, the last ones in go out to get

the ones in out before they get in without being out.

 
The game will end when each team has the same number of ins out but

one team has more in without being out before coming in.

It's really that simple!   Isn't that right Mr. Pipines?

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Food for thought.

 A group of graduates, well established in their careers, were talking at a reunion and decided to go visit their old university professor, now retired. During their visit, the conversation turned to complaints about stress in their work and lives. Offering his guests hot chocolate, the professor went into the kitchen and returned with a large pot of hot chocolate and an assortment of cups - porcelain, glass, crystal, some plain looking, some expensive, some exquisite - telling them to help themselves to the hot chocolate.

When they all had a cup of hot chocolate in hand, the professor said: 'Notice that all the nice looking; expensive cups were taken, leaving behind the plain and cheap ones. While it is normal for you to want only the best for yourselves, that is the source of your problems and stress. The cup that you're drinking from adds nothing to the quality of the hot chocolate. In most cases it is just more expensive and in some cases even hides what we drink. What all of you really wanted was hot chocolate, not the cup; but you consciously went for the best cups... and then you began eyeing each other's cups.

Now consider this: Life is the hot chocolate; your job, money, and position in society are the cups. They are just tools to hold and contain life. The cup you have does not define, nor change the quality of life you have. Sometimes, by concentrating only on the cup, we fail to enjoy the hot chocolate God has provided us. God makes the hot chocolate, man chooses the cups.

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I am fully aware that there are other services out here like the police & the Red Cross and others that serve the public but this service does so without pay in most cases while risking their lives.  This is another one of my letters to help inform the public of the fire fighting services but this time I asked a local County newspaper (The Week Newspaper) to print this in its entirity but they would only except less than 1/2 the words for them to print so here's the whole letter :

The consistent annual national loss of our firefighters and the injuries they sustain so poignantly speak to the sacrifices of the front-line heroes who live and work among us everyday. As a volunteer professional fire photographer for many of the Walworth County Fire Departments, I have been privileged to observe and learn about the reasons that motivate a person to become a firefighter.

The poet, Kalil Kibran once wrote, "Work is love made visible." If ever there were a better definition of a firefighter's work, this is it. We can observe the truth of this quote weekly on the nightly news.

While we know what firefighters do in situations like the ones that occurred on September 11, and during natural disasters and in our communities across the nation, what do they really do most of the time and why do they do it?

First let's set the scene. Very few people know that the U.S. has the worst record in the civilized world for destruction of life and property by fire. Most of these fires do not occur in large buildings or in catastrophic events, but in single-family homes. Fire departments answer around one million calls annually. A fire occurs in the U.S. about every 18 seconds.

The average number of people who die annually in fires in the U.S. is about 3,500. A person dies in a fire in the U.S. every hour. To gain some perspective of the problem, imagine two fully loaded 747 planes crashing in a mid-air collision every month, year in and year out. This has been our average annual record since the 1970's when it was much, much worse. This, of course, does not count the thousands of people who are maimed or horribly disfigured. The destruction of property is annually in the billions. Regardless of the horrific anomaly of September 11, this country continues to have a significant fire problem. We lose about 100 firefighters annually as well. This kind of loss does not occur in countries in Western Europe.

The reasons for this dubious record are topics for another discussion. The key issues revolve around the historical and cultural context of our understanding of how fire safety developed in America. The good news is that things have been improving over the last 15 years. In fact, fighting fires accounts for about two percent of the over 15 various activities of a firefighter today. These functions range from hazardous materials to terrorism to disaster preparedness and emergency management. Add to these a myriad of activities dealing with inspections, code enforcement, public education and prevention. The main portion of a firefighter's day is spent in EMS or emergency medical services. This latter function has become so vital for the simple reason that the firefighter is the first and last responder to any and all emergencies in the U.S., 24 hours a day, regardless of the incident.

Consider this scenario: you are awakened from a dead sleep. As you rush to the scene you receive a quick overview of the emergency you will face. That situation could be as simple as shortness of breath, a multiple car accident or the tallest building in the city that has become a raging inferno with thousands of people in it. You are the one who they call. You are the one who is supposed to know what to do. You are the professional. Do you think that firefighters take the time to consider, "I didn't sign on for this kind of situation?" So what do you do? You do what your values and mission dictate. That mission is the protection of life and property in just that order. Who else is going to do it?

Firefighters protect our citizens' first right as written in the constitution: "life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness." Firefighters protect the first right so we can enjoy the other two. The history of this country is intertwined with firefighters. It is no coincidence that Ben Franklin founded the first fire department in America, the Friendship Fire Co. in Alexandria, VA, or that the first five presidents of the U.S. were volunteer firefighters.

Firefighters love being firefighters. Most firefighters wanted to be firefighters since they were small children. Many of the 1.5 million firefighters in this country are paid firefighters in one jurisdiction and also volunteers in another community close by. The reason for this is because they love what they do so much.

Who are these people? Not so much your blue-collar worker anymore. Many firefighters have college degrees. An individual doesn't become a firefighter by accident. There can easily be as many as 200 applicants for every available position in a metropolitan department. All-night vigils just to apply to take the examination are not unusual. Passing this battery of tests allows one to become a "rookie" (which has its own complex curriculum). After that it's constant training and study for the rest of one's career. The result is an extremely intelligent individual in superb physical condition responsible for our citizens' safety day and night.

The same kind of intelligence and motivation apply to volunteers but these individuals do this for the love of their neighbor & communities. Were it not for the volunteer fire service in our country, the cost of fire protection could not be endured in such communities where it is a necessity – like within Walworth County.

This is no less so for senior fire officers and chiefs. Some of this country's finest leaders are fire chiefs and fire administrators loaded with any number of advanced degrees. Most receive Master's Degrees in Public Administration, Chemistry, Engineering or Education. Being a leader in public safety in a metropolitan Fire and Emergency Services Department is every bit as challenging as that of a CEO in private enterprise. This is especially true considering the constant constraint on resources, the microscope of public opinion and the size of the "market" served.

The American public has always loved its firefighters. Some years ago the Pew Research Center for the People and the Press took a poll of how much the public trusts its institutions. The results of the poll indicated that among seven different public and agencies, fire departments ranked second only to one's own family.

So what motivates people like the ones who work so hard to protect us in the performance of their duty every year? Edward Crocker, the Chief of the New York City Fire Department at the turn of the 19th Century, summarized it best when he said: "I have only one desire and that is to be a firefighter. The position may be a lowly one in the eyes of some. But those of us who do the work that firefighters must do consider it to be a noble calling. Our greatest moments come when we save lives. It is under the influence of such thoughts that we are driven to deeds of daring, even of final sacrifice."

There are many heroes in our society besides firefighters. But it is good to know when our loved ones are safe in their homes that there are professionals watching over them day and night: the ones living just down the street at the local firehouse drawn by a noble calling.

I know that the very people who belittle or give the fire departments grief for how they spend their fundraising money will one day be asking for their assistance and because of the fire department’s true dedication these brave individuals, whether they are firefighters or EMT’s, will be there to help that person.

Support your local fire departments when they have their fundraisers.  Support them at your city/town/village meetings when they ask for help. They are usually attempting to get funding to get equipment to help save another life or property - which just may be yours one day!

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Things you DIDN'T know about firefighters & the departments they work for.
By: Dennis J. Aitken (Snowhawk)

       First let me say that this editorial is my words and not necessarily that of any fire departments or individual firefighters.
Remember my First Amendment - Freedom of Speech!

This may not pertain to your community but it does for many communities that have volunteer fire departments from Minocqua to Lake Geneva - for that matter try any state that has volunteers.  Don't believe me? Call your fire department (on their NON-emergency phone line) and ask about some of the facts below. 

     Being a firefighter can be rewarding and it can be discouraging at the same time.  There are people that believe that the firefighter is extremely brave while often the firefighter takes more ridicule than compliments.  Some people think that firefighters are brave for running INTO a building while everyone is running out but they are there for a reason and that is to look for a life to save THEN to save the structure. 

Did you know…

  • there may be only one out of 1000 people that have the strength, desire, integrity, and fortitude to be a firefighter - and stick with it.

  • that within many counties most of the firefighters pay for their own schooling, their $1,500.00 turnout gear (fire fighting clothing), their own lights & siren system, their own $100.00 plus for special flashlights to find that life in the dense smoke, their own fuel for their personal vehicles to respond, and more?  I have talked to a few firefighters who get around $250.00 -$300.00 per year which doesn't even cover their vehicle fuel.

  • that these same individuals that have the guts to run into the blaze to save a life are not even given any health insurance by the departments that they work for?

  • the taxes that everyone complains about will be going towards the building that the vehicles are housed in, the vehicles themselves & their repairs.

  • that these firefighters are individuals who spends endless hours in training without pay?

  • that these firefighters are individuals who sacrifices home life, TV... even tender moments to jump up, get dressed in the middle of the night and run to their car when they hear the tones going off on their pagers?

  • that a stranger in your community cares enough to sacrifice their own life for their community?

     New equipment is necessary to help save lives or the burning structure or even surrounding structures.  You may think that these firefighters want the latest & greatest equipment on the market just to be better than the next department but your wrong.  The fact is that they want equipment that is well built and equipment that will help them do their job better or to save another life or to help save a structure.  What would happen if the fire department pulls up on your vehicle accident and doesn’t have the proper equipment to pull you from the vehicle or not enough hose to reach your house or your neighbor’s house that is in the back of the lot?
     The same people that have the gall to comment about the firefighters that sit around the firehouse doing nothing (they think) sure change their minds when all of a sudden THEY need help and the fire department personnel pulls up to their incident within minutes after they get the call.
     The next time you have a few extra dollars to donate, forget about someone else in another country, our government is doing a good enough job at screwing up our country with that project.  Worry about your own community that you live in or your own life or your property and donate to your fire department any time of the year.  Want to enjoy yourself some time?  Go to one of the fire department’s fundraisers and support them that way also.  When you make a donation you are not lining the pockets of some politician and you certainly are not giving to the fire department personnel; your giving to an organization that will obviously come knocking at your door to help you one day and hopefully, with enough consistent donations, will have enough equipment to handle the job.  Don’t just help out the fire department in the community where you live either.  Look at almost any incident and see how many surrounding communities come to the aid in an emergency.  There are many fundraisers that have great food and entertainment for the whole family. 

Remember that these brave individuals don’t make a salary working at the department. 

They are doing this because they feel a need to help you, their community.

If you have any personal comments you don't want to blog you may write directly to me: snowhawk@mia.net

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Gus Gnorski  is going to love this one...

GOD: Frank, you know all about gardens and nature.  What the world is going on down there on the planet?  What happened to the dandelions, violets, thistle and stuff I started eons ago?  I had a perfect no maintenance garden plan.  Those plants grow in any type  of soil, with stand drought and multiply with abandon.  The nectar from the long lasting blossoms attracts butterflies, honey bees and flocks of song birds.  I expected to see a vast garden of colors by now. But, all I see are these green rectangles.
 
St Francis:  It's the tribes that settled there, Lord.  The Suburbanites.  They started calling your flowers 'weeds'  and went to great lengths to kill them and replace  them with grass. 

 
God:  Grass?  But, it's so boring.  It's not colorful.  It doesn't attract butterflies, birds and bees; only grubs and sod worms.  It's sensitive to temperatures.  Do these Suburbanites really want all that grass growing there?  

St Francis:  Apparently so, Lord.  they go to great pains to grow it and keep it green.  They begin each spring by fertilizing grass and poisoning any other plant that crops up in the lawn.  

God:  The spring rains and warm weather probably make grass grow really fast.  That must make the Suburbanites happy.   

St Francis:   Apparently not, Lord.  As soon as it grows a little, they cut it-sometimes twice a week.  

God:  They cut it?  Do they then bail it like hay?  

St Francis: Not exactly, Lord. Most of them rake it up and put it in bags.  

God:  They bag it?  Why?   Is it a cash crop?   Do they sell it?  

St Francis:  No, Sir, just the opposite. They pay to throw it away.  

God: Now, let me get this straight. They fertilize grass so it will grow.  And, when it does grow, they cut it off and pay to throw it away?  

St Francis:  Yes, Sir.  

God:  These Suburbanites must be relieved in the summer when we cut back on the rain and turn up the heat.  That surely slows the growth and saves them a lot of work.  

St Francis:  You aren't going to believe this, Lord.   When the grass stops growing so fast, they drag out hoses and pay more money to water it so they can continue to mow it and pay to get rid of it.   

God:  What nonsense.  At least they kept some of the trees.  That was a sheer stroke of genius, if I do say so myself. The trees grow leaves in the spring to provide beauty and shade in the summer.  In the autumn, they fall to the ground and form a natural blanket to keep moisture in the soil and protect the trees and bushes.  It's a natural cycle of life.     

St Francis:  You better sit down, Lord.  The Suburbanites have drawn a new circle.  As soon as the leaves fall, they rake them into great piles and pay to have them hauled away.   

God:  No.  What do they do to protect the shrub and tree roots in the winter to keep the soil moist and loose?   

St  Francis:   After throwing away the leaves, they go out and buy something which they call mulch.  They haul it home and spread it around in place of the leaves.   

God:  And where do they get this mulch?  

St Francis:   They cut down trees and grind them up to make the mulch.  

God: Enough!  I don't want to think about this anymore. St Catherine, you're in charge of the arts.  What movie have you scheduled for us tonight?   

St Catherine'  'Dumb and Dumber' , Lord. It's a story about....  

God:  Never mind, I think I just heard the whole story from St Francis.

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It's a little brisk this Saturday morning in March in the City of Delavan at Route 43 & Hwy "X" but you could not tell that to these brave men and women from Darien, Delavan, and Sharon Wisconsin fire departments who are learning the art of fire fighting

Inside their Nomex fire fighter's protective suits, known as turn-out gear, these firefighters can still feel the extreme heat that is devouring the building next to them.  Even the firefighters that are 50' away protecting other buildings by dousing them with continuous streams of water can still feel the heat from the monster.

Today it is hard to find people that have the guts enough to do this type of work.  It takes a very special kind of individual to go into a building that is burning to save a life or property for someone else, and sometimes they are even volunteering to get into these predicaments

Fire photography is the act of taking photographs of firefighting operations and the individuals that practice this form of photography are called fire photographers.  My name is Dennis Aitken and I am a fire photographer for fire departments within Walworth County with my priority being the Lake Geneva Fire Department.  Professional fire photographers are used for training, interdepartmental use, media and sometimes even personal use.

Since fire photography involves being relatively close to incidents that are potentially dangerous, fire photographers need to have special skills and knowledge about emergency incident scenes, operations, health and safety. Additionally, fire photographers are often required to wear the same protective equipment as firefighters do.  I met my first fire photographer many years ago out west.  He was in full turnout gear and his helmet shield had PHOTOGRAPHER where either Chief or Captain or the Lieutenant shield would be mounted and his name was written across the back of the jacket just like all the rest of the crew.  He was also a county wide photographer and did not have a department name on his coat, just the word PHOTOGRAPHER so that he could be easily recognized and sometimes called on at the scene.

To be considered in this field you must first prove that you know the photography end of the business by showing your work to the heads of the departments that you would be working for.  This would be for their  evaluation.  Next is gaining their trust to get into the department's "family” at the station or anywhere near a fire for that matter.  This can be done through years of emergency service related organizations and / or organizations like the Emergency Service and Disaster Association (E.S.D.A.) where you go through many of hours of training weekly before even going out on "real" calls.  Having any type of medical background is an added benefit in this field and makes your fellow workers feel more confident if an emergency occurs.

In general, fire photographers are not directly employed by fire departments unless it is for a big city. Instead, they provide a specialized photography service, which may involve a fee on a per-hour basis, per-call, or per-photograph basis because their equipment runs into the thousands of dollars not to mention all the gas they go through chasing after each call and let's not forget the turnout gear that has to be purchased by most photographers. Not being a paid firefighter through any particular city means that access to safety perimeters can be an issue. As such, fire photographers usually develop good relationships with their local fire department to improve access to fire scenes. Such access may, at the fire department's discretion, require additional training or other arrangements. I have been part of an organization for some time now that is called the International Organization of Fire Photography (IOFP).  A formal fire photographer's certification process is now being drafted by IOFP and this is the certification that I am trying to achieve after all these years of being a photographer. The intent of this certification is to attest that an individual has sufficient training, skills and knowledge in relevant areas (health & safety, firefighting operations, etc.) to operate safely within a safety perimeter on an emergency incident scene.

When people think of the Fire Department many things come to mind but not necessarily digital photography.  In going to photograph a new office building being constructed and the kinds of materials being used for potential future reference, or by creating a training video on a new respiratory mask, the Fire Photographer plays a crucial behind-the-scenes role in educating and ultimately saving lives. Digital photography, video, file sharing and presentation have yielded increased accessibility, productivity, and usability of many of today's modern fire departments from small towns and villages to the big cities for visual resources and preservation of history. A PowerPoint presentation can be easily distributed and displayed in the firehouse of  images from a three-alarm fire or practice burn for training purposes.

Many Fire Departments have gone digital. From Human Resources pictures that are taken of every uniformed member at each of their 12-15-month physicals, to dramatic documentation of three-alarm fires, to providing PowerPoint presentations on safety for training and education, the Fire Department's Fire Photographer is very busy and is usually well-paid for his/her expertise in their field. The Fire Photographer provides all still, and/or video photographic services for the fire departments and all their administrative needs. With a high demand and a big county to cover, efficiency and productivity are crucial. For this, a multi-talented photographer is faced with multiple tasks and switching to a digital workflow has made all the difference.

Up until January of 2001, all of the photographic work was shot on film then processed and printed in a traditional chemical darkroom. An expensive and slow process, the old photo archives take up many huge file cabinets and, if caught in a flood, could be ruined forever.

The primary goal of the Fire Photographer is photographing for documentation and education. The Fire Photographer produces huge quantities of files that need to be archived and accessed by a number of people for an array of needs. By January 2001, the cost of digital equipment had finally fallen to the point that going digital became a viable alternative for this Fire Photographer.

The long-standing protocol of only photographing firefighters when they first joined the Department can prove to be particularly challenging while searching through old personnel files to locate and then scan the photographic prints of missing firefighters - headshots that have been stapled or taped to personnel files, sometimes fifteen or twenty years ago are not always very helpful for identification purposes in an emergency.

Now a photograph of every firefighter should be had at every 12-15-month physical to keep up-to-date photos of each member and store the high resolution files in a digital personnel database. It is necessity for the image to be captured at the highest resolution possible, and files named properly and stored in the right location.


Fires are unpredictable, dangerous, and warrant immediate emergency response. Firefighters and their officers have their hands full working the fire and don't have time to think about the proper aperture setting on the camera but, on the other hand, the photographer is concentrating on the settings and not even thinking about running into the burning inferno. It is hard to prepare and train individuals for something you can't predict or necessarily control. This is why constant documentation of fires, changing equipment, and department protocol by the Fire Photographer is so important to the operations of all fire departments. All of the still photography, video, and PowerPoint presentations the Fire Photographer produce are key contributions not only for the local fire training academy and but also for keeping veteran firefighters up to date on changing conditions.

I can't show you all the pictures but this will give you a good idea of what a firefighter endures for training for your safety and to help protect your property and the property of others.  I purposly did not copyrite these photos so that you can use them for a screen saver program or a wallpaper.

Special thanks to the men & women from the Darien, Delavan, and Sharon fire departments for the respect that they showed me Saturday at their practice, especially Assistant Chief Timothy O'Neill from the Delavan Fire Department.

Snowhawk

 

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I Believe There Is A God. 

     Even though the hardships that my wife and I have endured He has always carried us on His hands so we have made it through each day and we wake up the next morning on top of the ground instead of 6' under.  By no means am I some religious nut or some holy roller or however you may refer to people that cram religion down your throat.  I believe that religion is very personal to me but since this is a "Faith Blog" I can let you know my feelings on this topic.
     You will notice in my writings that I give Him honor and respect by capitalizing such words that refer to Him as He, Him, and God.
     Some may say that there is no God and that you make your own destiny, I say that you make your own destiny but God helps you through your chosen path.
     God means something different to a lot of people, to me He is a guiding light making sure I follow a path where I can say that I have achieved good in this world and a path where I know that what ever happens He is here to help me.  I also recognize that God is many things to many other people, some of which do not see eye to eye with what I think God is.
     God is not limited by my beliefs, or my religion. In fact, I may be completely wrong concerning my beliefs of Him - but, more likely, my beliefs are simply inaccurate and fall short of the truth. Even atheism is, in a strange way, a path to truth, and therefore a path to God. So is every faith that has ever existed on Earth.
     God is not limited by anything. God is a concept that has existed in every empire, every race, every creed, and every culture since the dawn of man. Although God changes from place to place and time-to-time, there has never been a time when He (or She, or It) did not enter the mind of man in some form.
     God is beyond my mental grasp. I cannot imagine Him, and neither can you. He is all of reality, and transcendent of reality. He is all of time, and beyond time. He is you, and I - and beyond us both. That is God to me.
     God is Jesus, and Mohammad, and Buddha, and the Great White Spirit. God shows himself in the Bible, the Torah, the Quran, the Vedas, and every work of man and every thing in nature. Nothing exists outside of God.
     I cannot possibly see God as He, in all his glory, actually is. (Whew!  Hope you understood what I just tried to say there!) It would be like trying to look at the universe, and all of time, and all possible times, all at once.
And yet ... as much as God is unfathomable, God is also unmistakable. We look at physics and see that the evidence shows that the universe must have started as a single point, a Big Bang. What caused that point, that singularity, to burst forth into matter and energy? We don't know. Logic - causality - dictates it didn't happen by itself, so ... what, then?
     We look at genetics. Mankind shares it's genome not just with apes of 5 million years ago, but with reptiles 50 million years ago. The same genes, the same receptors and insertions, used and reused since life began. Why? Did a molecule as complex and life-guiding as DNA happen by chance? Yes - but what other chance was there? None. Any good biochemist can tell you that.
     An intelligent scientist does not discard a hypothesis simply because there is no physical evidence to support it, as any theoretical physicist worth his term at Cambridge knows.  The choice is yours - but it does make the singularity, the promotion of DNA, quantum probability and a host of other quandaries much easier to handle.
     The all-pervading spirit, the One, the All, the Everything ... including me. Including you.
The challenge then is obviously not to understand God, since that must be forever beyond the grasp of conceptual mind, but to experience God. That had happened to people through all times as well. What this means to those who did can also not be understood by the conceptual mind. Experience is individual and personal.
     This blog was about my belief in God; this is not saying that don't believe that many churches are in it just for the money as a business because that is an entirly new discussion.  I was talking about my belief in God.  When I was younger, back in the days of Latin spoken Masses, I attended a Catholic church regularly.  There was a preist that told me that whenever I needed to talk with someone and nobody was around I could always talk to God.  He told me that it didn't make a bit of difference if I was walking down the street coming home from playing ball or sitting on the toliet at home.  I never forgot those words and as silly as it may sound that's when I do my best talking.  Because money and politics was spoken in the church so often and I could hear that junk on TV, or better yet just turn it off, I slowly started staying away from going to church.  I believe the way I want to believe but I believe in Him - The Almighty.
I know that I was a little long winded but that is what God is to me.

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This was written back in 2003
By: The Snowhawk!

This is a real long blog but here you will learn
 the good and the bad of what goes on in
 A Trucker's Life - On The Road.

     The general public has this misconceived perception of a truck driver's life.  Most people think that we are out there making all kinds of money, having a great time, enjoying our freedom of not having anyone telling us what to do while we get to visit all the cool sites within the United States and eat at restaurants all the time. Of course let's not forget how much "fun" we have dodging "Smokey" while Bandit, Cletus, and Snowman are also having all the fun of speeding down the highways finding all those pretty women.

     In reality now I would like to paint a picture of my view of a trucker’s life. 

Ready for this?

     If you have watched the truckers movies at the show or on television and read the countless entries that are put on truckers forums each day you probably think you know something about a truckers life. But you're wrong.  No one but a trucker knows what a trucker's life is like.  Only in "Diaries" such as these are stories so compelling that it's difficult to stop reading.  There is real trouble, not the titillating weirdness we see from movies. These "Diaries" aren't just about the exquisite tension of the moments when things could have or may have been prevented but of actual accounting of everyday events that happen to real professional drivers on our roads today. You will find that events in this industry affect a truck driver's personal and financial life that not only affect the present but also may affect the rest of his/her lives.  I always thought that if I would have a full time job working for someone it would provide a support for my family, repay past debts, help ease tension with an occasional fun thing to do once in a while and even  - possibly - be able to save for the future after fixing our present house.  Man did I have a lot to learn!

    Trucker’s Diaries don't deal with just driving but with the sadness and tension fermented by bad luck or lousy judgment. After a while you can read, and feel, the stillness in the tractor and at times you might even be able to feel the emptiness that lies within his/her heart being away from loved ones that they are trying to support.  You won't know what to expect on the next entry because you can't be sure what his/her fate will be in the days to come.

    Now the movie "Smokey and the Bandit" is what started people thinking about all the fun we truckers have on a daily basis.  Sorry, John Q. Public, but we don't have that much fun and the food is less desirable then you might think at some of these eateries.  Today many truckers have refrigerators for sandwiches and cool drinks along with meal preparation items.  Some of the truckers have small plug in warmers to make warm soup or coffee.  To eat in restaurants on a daily basis is for the rich.  To eat in restaurants every few days is for the single trucker or maybe the owner/operator (I said MAYBE). To be able to eat in a restaurant, once in the two or three weeks that you are out, is the normal life of a trucker, more so the company driver.  So if your just reading this and you are not a trucker; go to the nearest truck stop and pay for a trucker's meal when your on your way out without him/her knowing about it!  Have the waitress tell the trucker it’s from a four-wheeler that appreciates all his/her hard work. That should make someone's day!

    "When I stop for supper, I've got nobody to have a conversation with. I do try to frequent truck stops where they know if not my name at least my face," one driver told me "But when I sit down to eat, I buy a newspaper. It's really hard not having anybody to talk to during those breaks. Even if you know another driver there, it's not like sitting at the table with your wife and family."

     Unlike the movie where it's easy to pick up a beautiful woman we don't even get to SEE that many beautiful women (except for seat covers that is) let alone attempt to talk to them or pick them up for dinner and a movie.  Most women that see us won't even give us the time of day... Unless your really gutsy like I am and go right up to them and actually ask them "What time is it?" just to prove to yourself that these women WOULD give you the time of day or because your so handsome. (Cough! Cough!)  Sorry that's just one of my ego trips I tripped over. HOWEVER... I have found that many of the lady drivers out there today are really kinda kewl! Many of them have a protective shell surrounding them because of the few ignorant people on the CB radio that only have one thing in mind when they hear a female's voice.  But in reality many of these ladies are really fun to talk to and I find that they are no different than their counterpart when it comes to professionalism.

     Loneliness is something I don't think ever crosses the general public's thoughts when it comes to truck drivers. The atmosphere of desertion is permanent. There are many times I wish I had a warm body just to curl up to.  NO!  I don't mean for sex, not at all.  Just the warmth of affection, the smell of a soft perfume, or the company of the opposite sex to carry on an intellectual conversation as to get a different point of view of whatever topic we are conversing about.  Sometimes a series of unaccountable events happen, as if by some pre-arranged plan: a plan of which I have not the least knowledge or control.  There are moments when the mind waits, as though for a revelation, while a complex tangle of calm is woven over thought; it is like a sleep, or a supernatural trance; and during this lull I am aware of a force of quiet reasoning and I am asking myself: "What the hell am I doing in a "Pickle Park" (road side rest area) when I could be at home with my family?"  I guess I'm homesick or is it the loneliness that is taken over my thoughts?  Somehow this isn't quite the same as I remembered before - some 30 years ago.  Now, even though these cabs and berths are so much larger it seems like I am a prisoner confined to it for days or weeks on end.  It is easy to loose track of days; Friday was no different from Saturday and so on because it is a constant feeling of chasing the white lines on the highway hour after hour meeting that deadline.

    Holidays are tough on everybody, because people (non- truck drivers) try to make plans. You can never make plans with a driver until he/she’s home.  People who are new to the trucking lifestyle should realize that a birthday, anniversary or holiday isn't necessarily the day on the calendar. It's the day that you can be together. Missing big days back home is just part of the job that you have to accept if you wish to stick it out.  Having the cell phone today and being able to hear each other's voices at just about any time has made the danger and uncertainty of many truckers’ job more bearable on all the families. It can't do much though to ease the greatest hazard of a trucker's life: the still moments during a route, the downtime that an office job would allow an office worker to spend with his family.

     Sleeping is another factor that the general public over looks.  We sleep with the drone of the diesel engines and the reefers humming away while being tossed around during windy weather.  Sometimes it is the equivalent to sleeping out in a damp, musty barn where the dampness goes right through you and effects your every joint when you finally get behind the wheel to start the next shift.


     Some days a driver will love and other days he'll just hate with a passion and he'll be asking himself  "Why is it that your out there in the pouring rain or freezing weather or why is it you were so nice to some idiot that just reamed you out for something you had no control over like weather or traffic or construction?" One day he/she will be so proud of his/her tractor because she handled avoiding a possible preventable accident like a true pro in the snow and the next week, in a different part of the country, he or she will be swearing at the truck because it broke down going up a mountain in the sweltering heat.  But like the rest of us, the driver will look at that tractor of his/hers and say, "OK! Betsy let's go for another ride and visit someone else and maybe their neighborhood will be better."

     There are many things that go on in my life on the road that is hard to put in any kind of logical or chronological order at times. Seeing all the beauty that Nature displays for us, which many people living in its presence take for granted day after day, is sometimes an awestruck adventure in itself.  For example I might pass a house with its own corral and a few horses and close by there might be a beautiful stream meandering through the property.  Maybe I'll pass by the land that the dinosaurs once roamed and are now being excavated by scientist for a museum.  I might pass places where the Union or Confederate armies or real life settlers, cowboys and Indians or even the slaves in the South once lived with their families or fought for freedom and property or searched for silver and gold in "them thar hills".  In some places you almost expect to see John Wayne or Roy Rogers and Dale Evans on horseback on a trail or sitting under the stars by a warm campfire with their homemade coffee or maybe even singing while they played their guitar.  While looking in the hills and valleys you almost expect to see Indians with their families around their teepees sitting on the ground talking amongst themselves and working on some project while their children are having fun running around them.  You think of how people crossed this great land with covered wagons, on horseback or simply walking, not on paved roads or sidewalks of today with restaurants and truck stops and flushing toilets but in the wilderness - on their own - twisting their ankles on gopher holes and rocks without a doctor to be found for weeks or months and the facilities might have been but a hole made in the ground or leaned up against a tree.  I think of all the cool sites I have seen - whipping by at 61 miles per hour that is - like the White House and other monumental structures of the area in Washington D.C., the Arch in St. Louis, MO, the beautiful Twin Towers in New York City or the Sears Tower in Chicago or other beautiful architectural structures in various cities.  Then there is man’s creation of Mount Rushmore or God's creations like Mount Shasta or the Colorado River.  Although I don't have time to actually view these sites I enjoy the privilege that this great country of ours lets us experience while traveling through this land of prosperity.

     I get to see how many people live today.  Some people have mansions; some have sprawling ranches, simple homes, condos and apartments.  I might pass by rundown homes that you might think were abandon but you might catch a glimpse of a cloths line drying out the wash or worse yet see the homeless that live under the overpasses.

     While driving the truck driver thinks of his family, loved ones and pets back home along with his/her children or friends that he/she could be with after working a normal eight hour day but the driver knows that he/she is totally responsible for the safe operation of the tractor, the trailer and its cargo, along with everyone around him/her 24 hours a day - period - end of conversation.  Mind you that we also have this responsibility while we are sleeping.  As I said before we sleep with the drone of the diesel engines and reefers outside our small cubicle we call "home" with one ear still in full operation so that we might hear an indication of tampering of the cargo or someone attempting to sabotage the tractor or trailer and the thought of theft does not just stop with the vehicle or cargo but our tire chains, load locks, spare tire or worse yet our fuel.  When things like theft happens the suspicion is immediately drawn to the driver for selling these items for extra cash for himself.  Most drivers are not trusted as far as the office personnel can throw him/her when it comes to this but yet we are entrusted with thousands if not millions of dollars worth of cargo per load. We must constantly be wary of personal safety even if we just use the bathroom at a rest stop.  We always think about our personal possessions within the cab while we pay for fuel, go to use the facilities, take showers, or are away from the truck for more than 20 seconds.  Our thoughts are with this vehicle and its contents from the time that we accept the responsibility of the tractor at the terminal until the unit is returned to the terminal some weeks or even months later. Even when we are not driving and have our time off at home we are responsible for these things 24 hours a day.  Don't think so?  See what the outcome is if anything bad happens to either the tractor or the trailer or worse yet... the load while you are enjoying your time off at home!  "Enjoy your time home!" they say.

     There are times where frustration can get the better part of us while sitting for hours not moving and not getting paid for it or having to travel many hours, free of charge, just to pick up a load. For example: On this last two week stint I had no problem running my first 70 hours from Green Bay, Wisconsin down to Victoria, Texas but the return trip had hours of what I felt was wasted time.  At one point I was stuck at a rest stop, out of hours, without a phone, and a smelly port-a-potty that should have been changed days ago instead of working bathrooms.  I was stuck there for 18 long hours.  I arrived in Mt. Pleasant, IA at Wal-Mart and made my delivery on time but had to wait for hours on end (without being paid) to receive the next load assignment. 

     Generally, I believe that most truck drivers are a bunch of individuals that are from all walks of life that, for one reason or another, decided to get into this industry.  We are under constant stress from time constraints without any regard from the dispatcher, shipper or the consignee about traffic, construction, weather, or our own personal health.   Although we don't have the physical being of "the boss" (And no I'm not talking about our wives, guys.) we are sometimes our own worse enemy because we allow the QualComm (satellite communications from management to the truck) to control and ruin our day or night with its infernal annoying "BEEP" at any given second.  We are in constant fear for our own safety from theft and personal harm as I had stated before.  Germs from facilities that only God knows who was there last, sabotage, food that either goes bad on us or is prepared without much effort by cooks who care less about the clients they feed, the animals that we might hit that don't see us or can't hear the air horn and the worst fear of all "The Professional Four Wheeler".  These are the morons on the road who think that they are the only ones on the road.  That's right "They OWN the road". Just ask any of them. These people are talking on their phones, or listening to music that is about 600 decibels too loud to hear an air horn or a siren from an ambulance or police car, or fist fighting with other passengers, or having sex either with themselves or their "toy" or with an accomplice or two - or more, or the flasher who is there to watch the reaction on a driver's face instead of the traffic accident that he/she is about to cause, or the four-wheeler who is totally oblivious to any other traffic around them and either cuts directly in front of the truck for absolutely no apparent reason or aims their vehicle from the hammer lane (far left lane) to the exit four lanes across and just 200 yards to the right of them in less then 3 seconds.  Trust me this list can go on & on & on!  I think that in MN & NJ they must actually teach their drivers to cut directly in front of another vehicle they are passing within no less then 2-car lengths of space.  I have been the victim of this act many times myself in these states and heard many remarks over the CB about this very thing that happens to other truck drivers constantly.  It's amazing that for one mile in front of this four-wheeler there are no vehicles and for one mile in back of them there are no vehicles and worse yet there are no vehicles within miles of anyone including the truck they are about to cut in front of but yet they find this yearning deep within them to do it!  It should be taught to all four-wheelers that a truck driver can't just stop 40 tons of moving vehicle as fast as they can stop that vehicle that they are driving no matter what it is that their driving.

     I am an avid motorcyclist myself but to watch some of these "Evil Knievil" bikers that have no regard for their own safety just drives me up a wall.  Unfortunately, I have seen where one of these "ultra kewl" bikers drove his crotch rocket straight through the back doors of a trailer in the Eastern states some time ago.  They had to literally scrape his sorry butt off the doors.  Now just think of the driver of this truck for a minute.  First off some lawyer will find some discrepancy in his logbooks six months before the accident and say that he shouldn't have been there in the first place and that this accident was preventable because of this.  Now this truck driver probably feels bad enough that he has this kid's bloody remains on the back of the trailer but now he has to worry about his career.  No, I didn't just say his job - I said his career because this is an accident that he will have to live with forever; not only in his mind but on paper for the rest of his life that might prevent him from keeping or obtaining a decent job in this industry.

    Yet as trucking moves the economy, truckers aren't reaping what they've helped sow.  Truckers drive hard, putting in long hours day and night, often for not much more than minimum wage. Yes, you heard me – “not much more than minimum wage”. And truckers have to drive tired, pushing mile after mile on a few hours of sleep, sometimes just to break even with the expense of living on the road. But the bottom line isn't the law that tells truckers how long they can drive. It's an economic system that pushes them to drive past exhaustion, no matter what the law says. Truckers are spending weeks away from home and family, living out of duffel bags at crowded truck stops, showering in seedy stalls the size of closets and waking in the middle of the night with prostitutes banging on the door. The average trucker works more than 3,000 hours a year and makes between $30,000 and $45,000.  Most blue-collar Americans work about 2,000 hours a year.  Which means that truckers are working 50 percent more for not much more pay, if any more pay and doing this without the benefit of overtime pay.  Many drivers drive 3,000 miles a week, working an average of 70 hours with take-home pay of about $500 a week -- or less than $8.50 an hour. When you add in time spent waiting to load or unload there's days out there a trucker don't even make minimum wage. Most truckers must drive long and hard to make money because they're paid by the mile -- not by the hour. Unlike almost all other industries, trucking is exempt from the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938, the law that established a 40-hour workweek. That means truckers don't have to be paid minimum wage of $5.15 an hour or overtime pay unless they're in a union.  Drivers should not literally be driven to death just so they can make a living.  It's a difficult, unpredictable job in a difficult, unpredictable business. Shipments get delayed. Ports get clogged. The highway stacks up with traffic because of construction and wrecks. Trucks break. Rules change.

    The trucking industry does not care that drivers waste away their lives and their incomes on loading docks.  If the load has to go, many parts of this system truly don't care if drivers run when exhausted -- as long as they're not caught and the load is on time.  Shippers don't have any interest in streamlining their loading practices because there is no benefit in it for them to do so.  Receivers don't care if a truck is unloaded in an hour or a day. Shippers now demand precise delivery times, sometimes penalizing drivers for being late -- which can happen if truckers run into delays from road construction, heavy traffic or bad weather or mechanical failure. Once the driver gets to the dock to load or unload, he/she often must wait. While they do, they don't make ANY money, and the hours count against their allowable driving time.

"We show up on time, and we sit and sit and sit.  I've spent as much as eight hours in one place before I even got assigned to a dock door." Says James Thurman, sitting at the breakfast counter at a Virginia truck stop.  He said that the week before he had gotten to the dock of a home improvement store at 4 a.m. after driving all night. He got out of there at nearly 3:00 the next afternoon. "It was a whole day wasted," he said. "With any other job, the law says you're to be paid for the work you do. But we don't get paid for that.  And even if we wanted to rest while we're waiting, that's virtually impossible because we need to move our trucks up in line.”

    You can almost see the long hours wearing truckers down. At 1 a.m. in Waco, Texas, a truck crept into the Flying “J” Travel Plaza. The driver backed his rig into one of the few open parking spots, then crawled directly into his sleeper berth in the back of the cab, so exhausted that he forgot to shut off his left-turn signal. Inside the truck stop, several haggard drivers stood in line at the fuel desk, duffels in tow, waiting to get a coupon for a shower. In the trucker's lounge nearby, one driver stared blankly at the TV screen while another was sprawled across two seats, out like a light.

    It's 11 p.m., and there is a trucker out there tonight fading fast. Every trucker knows the feeling. You've tried bouncing your left leg, blasting the air conditioner, or singing out loud.  Yes, some of us even sing on the CB! Yegads!  Some truckers even start an argument on the CB just to keep themselves awake. You're so tired you feel as shaky as when you have the flu. You overreact, like a drunken driver; jerking the rig to the right, then back, trying to keep it between the lines. But you've got to make a living, you got to try to at least make the mortgage this month even if the other bills are late.  The customer needs the load tomorrow and God help it if I have to tell the dispatcher in the morning that I wasn't on time because I was tired.

    Drivers are essentially forced into an artificial 14-hour daily cycle rather than a 24-hour cycle that the rest of society operates on. This causes them to be required to rest when they are not tired and to work when their body is telling them they should be sleeping.  Government and various so-called safety groups would like to limit working time to eight hours a day and truckers, of course, would like to get the government out of the business of telling them when they must go to sleep and when they can and can’t drive. They would like the flexibility to be able to sleep when they are tired and work when they are rested which is how it should be. 

    Even the motoring public doesn't care until a tired trucker runs someone over.  In their distress, the public lashes out at those “Monster Trucks” and “Mad Man Truck Drivers” and demands yet one more law be enacted to protect them and their families from this scourge of the highway. The media, of course, joins the circus by learning only enough about the problem to misrepresent it or only half report it.  "Trucker Lied In The Logbook!!!" they say in print.  They have their guilty party, after all, and the trucker is the perfect scapegoat.

    Unfortunately, I must be honest in my observations, too many of the new drivers of today travel at speeds well over the posted limit, they weave in and out of traffic and follow less than a car length behind autos, using intimidation in hopes that the small vehicle will move. They cheat on their logbooks (as many of us do), drive when over tired and fill the CB airwaves with language that would cause a junk yard dog to blush.

It makes you wonder why anyone would want to be a trucker.

Some like the feeling of independence that comes with driving 80,000-pound rigs, being their own bosses and not having to punch time cards. Some enjoy the lone cowboy lifestyle and the chance to see the country while getting paid to do it. For others, it's a step up. Or it's all they've ever known. I heard one driver say, "I'm 55 years old.  What else are you going to do when you're my age?"

    It's a challenging profession. As the saying goes "Trucking, the hardest job you will ever love."  Many people today think that truckers are a bunch of gypsy vagabonds but today's truck driver, whether he/she is an owner/operator or a company driver, is expected to run a business from his rig, away from home and only God knows for how long, and still maintain a positive personal relationship with his family, friends, community and church.  He needs to be part lawyer, mechanic, accountant, dispatcher, dockworker, driver and whatever else the job might require him to be. After all that, he is then expected to deliver freight that gets loaded late and he/she better be on time. For many truckers, the job isn't worth it. Industry experts say annual driver turnover at many companies’ runs from 60% to 120%. That has created a shortage of 80,000 to 100,000 drivers, according to the American Trucking Associations. Some industry experts say the shortage is caused by inefficiency -- drivers are wasting their time waiting to load or unload. Others say there are plenty of drivers, just not enough good ones. The best drivers move on because they know that they can do better with fast-food wages.

    When you're not trucking, you're either talking about it or thinking about it. You could talk for a full day and never break the surface of the stories (all true, of course) about the experiences you've had. Whenever someone else comes up with a story, you can immediately think of at least two that will top theirs. People that don't know trucking seem boring and are hard to relate to. They seem to have led very sheltered, uneventful lives but you have to understand that trucking isn't a job; it's a way of life.  Non-truckers think of days and weeks on the road as tedious monotony. Real truckers think of this as their natural world with something new and interesting over the next hill and at the end of every trip. When they are on the road, they can't wait to get back home and when they are home, they can't wait to get back on the road.

     Why we like it and keep coming back for more is either that we are glutton for punishment, cynical to our own endangerment or just plain nutz!  But we do and we keep our country's economy running daily.  Everything that is in your home or business including the materials to build the building that you are in was delivered by some kind of truck and a professional truck driver is whom you have to thank for it!   I don't mean to sound pragmatic about it but to get to be somebody who gets to love what they do for a living, that's so rare, and so there must be some kind of price you have to pay. 

For many truck drivers of today it's become such a nightmare and yet it's become something that all of us just have to deal with to be part of this industry.  The biggest problem in the lives of a trucker is trying to be the kind of man that we want to be, the father that we want to be, the husband that we should be, and how to process the failure of financial satiability if this career doesn't work out.

 

A list of things “Four-Wheelers” usually do
that truckers see everyday!

Please learn what road courtesy is at a young age so that you may live longer
and maybe, just maybe, you can teach someone in your family too!

·  DON'T pass trucks on the shoulder of the highway.

·  DON'T try to sneak past a truck on the right as the truck is trying to make a right turn. 


·  DON'T pass trucks going uphill, then slow down in front of them while going down the other side.
                 (HINT: A loaded truck needs to gather speed going downhill to help make it up the next one.)
 

·  DON'T pull out from a stop sign directly in front of a truck because you don't want to get stuck behind it.
 

·  DON'T fail to dim headlights, figuring the truckers are so high up that it won't matter.
 

·  DON'T tailgate or pull into the passing lane next to a truck and then stay there, not realizing what could happen if a tire blew out.  (HINT: If you’re a motorcyclist get away from a truck at your earliest opportunity.)
 

·  DON'T drive in the trucker's blind spots on the passenger side of the cab and to the rear of the vehicle.
                  (HINT: If you want to pass, do it and then get out of the way.)
 

·  DON'T merge slowly from an exit ramp onto the interstate right in front of a truck in heavy traffic.
 

·  DON'T refuse to let a truck into your lane. He may have an emergency or may need to get out of some other driver's way or he may even need to exit.
    (HINT: It's hard to change lanes with a 65-foot rig, especially in heavy traffic. If a truck has its turn signal on, let it merge. He/she is TELLING you what he is about to do.  He is NOT asking you for your permission. 
However, flashing your lights (ON & OFF - Not with the bright lights.) quickly will let the trucker know he/she is at a safe distance to pull in front of you.)
 

·  DON'T cut in front of trucks!  Period!  Especially in small gaps in heavy traffic or construction zones.

    (HINT: Most trucks carry a full capacity to make their delivery economical.  Their tractor, trailer and the weight of the delivered item is usually in the range of 80,000 pounds.  That is 40 TONS! 
It takes the average truck, with good brakes, 3 football fields of length to stop at 55 MPH.  That truck WILL completely run over you if you cut in front of him and then suddenly you need to stop.  When a truck is driving down a road and he has space in front of him it is because he is desperately trying to keep a safety space for himself and the person in front of him.)

There is nothing that anyone has in his/her possession that hasn’t been delivered by a trucker -
with the exception of a baby,
that’s left up to God and women,
the rest is left up to us truckers!

  MAY GOD BE YOUR FOG LIGHTS
ON THE HIGHWAY OF LIFE


The Snowhawk
(Dennis J. Aitken)
said it!

Seven thirds to you drivers & eighty eights to the lady drivers out there!
Catch ya on the flip flop!
Keep the shiny side up & the rubber side down!
We're gone!

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Snowhawk

Here it is Walworth County - www.walco-es.org !
featuring
Walworth County
Emergency Services

Check out the Fire Gallery

It isn't easy getting all the information from all the departments but it is coming along slowly. The web site will be improved every time I get more information from any department. If it doesn't work out... well at least I gave it my best shot. I have hundreds of hours invested in this project not to mention personal layout of cash for the hosting.

I haven't been able to start with the police departments yet because getting all the fire department info has been like pulling teeth and I really don't know if all this effort is appreciated yet because I haven't heard many comments.


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I love photography I have taken photos for Badger High School's ProStart (culinary) team for a few years during their state & national competitions, food photography for restaraunts, manufacturing photography, and nature photography. Also for local newspapers, the International Organization of Fire Photographers (IOFP), and now I am the fire photographer for most of Walworth County's Fire Departments

Member Since: 1/31/2008