<P>Hi every one, I call my self Motown it was my C.B. handle when I was a cross country truck driver and</P><P>owner operator , I have traveled to nearly every point in this country that’s on a compass rose. I hauled steel in Michigan pulling trailers with as much as 32 wheels, not including the truck having 10 of its own loads weighing as much as 162,000,00 pounds, I went across the country pulling super loads as long as 130 feet long and as wide as 20 feet wide, and 18 feet high then I hauled produce, coast to coast to and did relief work for 3 hurricanes, and then a year ago I had open heart surgery (8 by pass surgery) and had to give up my trade.</P><P>Since I was a young boy I hitched hiked, and hopped trains around the country before</P><P>I was 13 years old , I even hung under a rail road barge deck support struts to get from Detroit, Michigan to Windsor, Ontario, via the Detroit River, after attempting going across the bridge by foot and the tunnel, the cops chased me back, finally I was snagged by the The Royal Mounted Police in Canada, the cop was on horse back it started to snow got very cold so I asked him for help, and my Aunt and Uncle came and took me back because the cops wanted to throw my parents in the Bastille (jail) needless to say I got a lot of whippings for my miss adventures , I read Huckle Barry Fin books and saw a great deal of adventure movies that skewed and shaped my thinking , but I was never relived of my drive to hit the road</P><P>I always had and always will have a burning need to explore and meet new people and see this great land if you want to hear a great tribute about America, “you tube†John Wayne‘s America, how I love her (bring a tissue box) that’s the driving spirit to find the holy grail called, The United States. As a trucker I met and been with the best people to help you when your down in the middle of no where, in desperate cold and snow drifts as high as your truck and seeing -60 F and almost dying in a horrendous ice storm and gale force winds while watching and hearing batteries breaking and losing power 5 miles from safety, calling out desperately for help on the C.B. before the last juice in my truck had, failed, its funny like the friggen, Titanic kind of ironic huh.</P><P>But help came by a hippy dude listening to his C.B. base station miles away came and saved me while. I tried to walk back wards against the wind and blowing snow, covered by my k mart sleeping bag, to the truck stop in blowing snow and 80 mph winds, in the Upper Peninsula, of Michigan, about 5 miles away from the Mackinaw Bridge 76 truck stop. I was in the late stages of hypothermic shock. He took me to the truck stop. On the road you can find great people and also absolute dirt bags , those who know and traveled across this country and we know how great and also how dangerous the road can be.</P><P>I’ am in the process of restoring my “1979†28’ Airstream Motor home, I did a stupid thing by not researching what was doing and I paid for it (I was suffering from R.V. ignorance) and now I have been working on it for 4 years trying to get it right. And I’ am almost there. I lived in my Airstream for 4 years and it has saved me thousands in rent, I coined a saying that they (land lord, banker, sheriff,) can’t throw you to the curb , if you live at the curb, so my friends tell me to park it here or there. Every place I go people check it out. 2 bars in Florida paid me to hang banners on it for party’s, hanging them on the awnings , free beer and eats to, I stayed in Miami 2 years ago for two months at on my friends front lawn for two months, I also parked it on the causeways and pulled out the awnings and fished and b.b.q-ed , made Margarita’s my Airstream, has a built in ice maker and has a built in blender on the counter top. All was good until the generator set sneezed, its still to this day not working, another project, I have replaced the suspension its spring / air ride and it cost mucho money in parts, labor, pain, and I did a lot of it myself, sweat equity, my silver bullet will soon be back cruising,</P><P>I had polished aluminum diamond plate, storage boxes made. I have some more work before I put them In, expanding my battery capacity, sucks to be with out juice the light’s won’t work without it, the generator sucks way to much fuel to be practical, solar panels are butt ugly and they don’t fit well on a curved roof. I; am looking into flexible solar panels. For there size they don’t produce much power. I think a 400 watt wind mill generator can be mounted of f the trailer hitch by making a box tube section you could plug it into the hitch receptacle use a couple guy wires, and that should do it. They have awesome l.e.d. lights and also to fire up those lights they take very little power to operate 12 volt is the only way to go, look on line or go to Iowa 80 truck stop on line store they have the best selection, r.v. stores will rape you money wise, best to shop around. incandescent light bulbs are un reliable, dull and waste precious power, I know all about lights I had over 150 lights on my truck and trailer combined, truckers call them “chicken lights“, and by law you have to have them all working, I spent a grip of money keeping them lit, I’ am sure people seen trucks lit up like Christmas trees, truckers call our trucks “large cars†that’s if you got a long hood, lots of lights and chrome.</P><P> </P><P>In closing in all my years of being on the road its very important to look sharp as far as your self and your ride, inside and out, if your paint is not right, touch it up, cans of paint are cheap, don’t by a heap to save money you will pay the penalty if you look like Joe sh-t the rag man you will be treated, as such., especially the cops will be eye balling you. Cops and court systems are especially horny for seizing your stuff, your car, you, etc, etc. they are to be avoided like the plague, keep your car papers in order and not in your glove box put them where you can access them fast, cops get really nervous when they see you reaching for things,</P><P>Truck stops are home to a lot of strange things and people, hustlers, pimps and hookers a.k.a lot lizards, drug dealers, perverts and other miscreants, there is also some real fine folks as well there and some heinous folks as well a few years ago a truck driver had a kidnapped girl tied up naked in his sleeper for a year, he was a company driver for some big out fit, nobody could figure out how he got away with it for so long, she escaped and ran into the truck stop, cops came and gaff led him up, now he’s Ba Ba’s play thing. There is also a lot of woman besides men driving trucks, now, you might want to get in a training program and van dwell while you drive truck see America and get paid for it. Never let any stranger now your personal business and this advice will save you a lot of grief.</P><P>Truck stops are good places to make some honest cash, (Keep your options open)</P><P>Detailing trucks, (woman fare pretty well cleaning the trucks interior) both inside and out, polishing their wheels and tanks, again be wise so you don’t get ripped off by a truck driver who will complain you didn’t do it to his satisfaction, this is how they get you to come down in price. Buy a walkie talkie C.B. or a dash unit, to hustle some work, it can also save your butt if your out of range of a cell tower if you break down.</P><P>men can help tarp a load make a quick $20 or $40 also moving companies often hire casual labor, to fold moving pads “blankets†etc. casual labor pools pay about $7-10-15 hour depending on what they have you do. Don’t sell yourself cheap, never appear desperate, any sign of desperation will diminish your chances to get paid what your worth. Another caveat , never ride with casual labor vehicles those deals can get you stranded some long way away from your mobile house, always drive your vehicle to the jobs, there’s an old trick they give you a few bucks send you in for a soda or coffee, or they say I have to go cash a com-check or other cash advance check, and they skip off, make sure they have the cash at hand before they start the deal, if you don’t they may drive off. <SPAN style="TEXT-DECORATION: underline">“So get paid right when you finish †get a hand writen promass to pay before you go do the work.</SPAN></P><P>Truck stops have showers and they cost about $10 bucks ask a driver if he or she have an extra shower on their card or coupon, drivers are some times generous and have a lot of shower points because they buy fuel there. they are private and clean, and a hot shower is good for your morale, the truck stops also supply the soap and towels, always ware some shower shoes, its very important to keep clean both your cloths and yourself. They have laundry facilities it cost more money then private Laundromats. If you don’t have a shower get a black solar shower water bag, they work very well and a hot shower, you can find it in any store that has a sporting goods department it will keep your self respect hi and also there are water collapsible rubber and these sinks you can wash your body and your underwear and socks clean, if you have a camp site you can heat up a base ball size rock, place it in the portable sink, it will boil the water quickly, also good quality dish soap its concentrated and cheaper then laundry detergent and you can wash your self squeaky clean, I keep mine in a stainless steel water bottle, the plastic bottles leak and it wastes precious re$ource$. Also you can buy a portable shower/ potty shelter that you can do you business in for about $60+ bucks, it takes only a few minutes.</P><P>Water is a precious commodity, always have at least 10 gallons of it, and always rotate your water supply, to always keep it fresh a back up food supply is important you don’t touch unless you really hard up, I used to truck out west and I was stuck at an old abandoned truck stop in the middle of a blizzard in the middle of Wyoming for three days, If I didn’t have a back up food and water supply, that kept me alive and mentally secure, if I didn’t it would have been very un pleasant. Morale is crucial and not being hungry or thirsty is crucial, I had my truck with 300 gallons of fuel a full size bed , police scanner, satellite radio also I had heat and lights, microwave, refrigerator and a coffee pot and DVD player, 24†flat screen, and a lot or movies on hand, a comfortable environment , I keep a -40 f, sleeping bag and a -0 full size sleeping bag on my bunk. So if things went awry mechanically I could survive fairly comfortable. The second day into the storm another trucker who was staying there as the road was closed was stuck like me, that driver came over to my truck to mooch some food, water and cigarettes , I gave him food and water. He was “not†in the least prepared, and if I was an jerk I would have made him go with out, I live by what goes around comes around , that guy was like me in the 1980’s when I was totally unprepared and almost froze to death on the road. I kept a Bible and other reading materials in my truck, boredom is not contusive to having good morale, I have a pet wolf he is a morale booster , we been together through thick and thin, he was laying in the snow outside my truck then, he loves the blizzards but hates the rain. I hope what I wrote here has helped others with my prospective on things. Especially being prepared for the worst of times, Americans have to be tough and at the same time keeping our minds right be diligent and non-complacent, always know your environment. And by loving our fellow human beings, like we love our selves...</P><P> </P><P> </P><P> </P><P> </P>