Mile Marker: The Logbook of a Long-Haul Driver, 1974–2006

A worn spiral-bound Mead logbook surfaces at an estate sale: thirty-two years of a long-haul trucker's federally mandated duty-cycle entries, I-80 and I-40 corridor, 1974 to 2006. The host reads five entries slowly and lingers on the marginalia — CB handles, a cook who didn't charge for chili, one word in the remarks column he'd never written before.

Mile Marker: The Logbook of a Long-Haul Driver, 1974–2006
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Somewhere in the pile at an estate sale — under the tax folders and the Reader's Digest condensed books — there's a dark-green spiral-bound Mead logbook. Bent rings. Two overlapping coffee circles on the cover, each a different shade of faded. Inside: thirty-two years of federally mandated duty-cycle entries, filled in day after day with the kind of precise, abbreviated handwriting that becomes its own dialect after a decade. The form is DOT standard. The man who kept it drove the I-80 corridor — Nebraska, Wyoming, Utah, Nevada — and stretches of I-40 through Oklahoma, Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona. He drove for small carriers and as his own owner-operator. He drove in blizzards and in a hundred and four degree heat. He logged 473 miles on what would be the last legible day, stopped early, and wrote one word in the remarks column that he'd never written before.
This episode opens five entries from that logbook — 1974, 1981, 1989, 1996, and 2006 — moving through the decades in the order the pages fall. The form entries are spare and numeric, the way the federal grid demands. The marginalia are something else: CB radio handles of strangers met on channel 19, a note about a cook who made chili in the middle of a Wyoming blizzard and didn't charge for it, a family with running kids at a delivery drop in the New Mexico desert. None of it was asked for. All of it was kept.

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