Big Rig Two: More Comic Tales from a Long Haul Trucker
by Don Mctavish ISBN: 1896300715
Post Your Opinion | | A Review of: Big Rig 2: More Comic Tales from a Long Haul Trucker by M. Wayne CunninghamCalgary-born Don McTavish spent forty years of his life long-haul-trucking
across western Canada. Now a Vancouver retiree, he has shifted gears
and spends his time, effort and obviously abundant energies writing
comic turns about his former career as, to use his jargon, mileage
merchant, hi-miler or wagon yanker. And if you're a pavement pilot
at heart looking for guidance in graduating from Gear Masher U,
Donny's your man. What he doesn't know about the industry, its
quirks and its characters probably isn't worth jawing about-at least
to hear him tell it and he tells it well. In fact, it's old Donny's
colourful telling that gives his book much of its entertainment
value. His equally colourful stories make up the rest of the load.
It's the same formula for success that drove his first book, Big
Rig, up the best-seller lists.
As Donny tells us, he has driven rigs the size of bowling alleys
and weighing tons over snow covered highways and onto narrow city
streets. Vancouver in winter, for example, where "some of the
hills in this town would bring tears to a mountain goat" is
his fave-not. He has bounced down dirt roads and up creek beds to
mining camps. He has dumped molten slag, loaded logs and hauled
steel piping across a slushy ice bridge to a construction site. He
has grazed at most local gag and heaves between Edmonton and Vancouver
and counted as his friends folks with names like Chrome Stack,
Zorro, Little John, Hydraulic Jack, Klink Klank, Yabadaba, Sowbelly,
Sinful Sid and "a fellow pot-hole seeker, Fast Eddie."
He remembers when rigs were outfitted with stump-mounted seats and
had manual steering and tires with inner tubes subject to flats
from sharp rocks. And he recalls Williams brakes being as "useless
as foam rubber crutches." But for him the biggest improvement
since his early trucking days has been, "Well leaping
line-haulers-Air Conditioning." He was bitten-actually almost
electrocuted-from having blind faith in a boss and he cheered
mightily when a curmudgeonly weigh-scaler named Hockey Stick got
sent down the road. Once he tried warming a tin of beans on his
engine but with disastrous results. And more than once he was
grateful for pea pickin' miracles and their non-disastrous outcomes.
McTavish's collection of tales provides a lighthearted look at the
gear-ologist's life and turbulent travels. It's an easy and fun way
to learn all about "bed bugs", "bogies",
"deadheads", "pebble merchants" and more. And
it will give you a whole new perspective on those asphaltologists
roaring up the highway, and heading to only they and their dispatcher
knows where.
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