While everything I wrote in
post #4 in this thread remains true, we are home now and thought we would try our carrier's Home Run program to get here. It worked.
Diane left it to me to find the freight and I did not work hard at it. The path of least resistance was
GetLoaded.com. I opened an account and found nothing the first day. The next day, as our head-home date approached, more loads were on the board including a couple that would have worked. I chose not the best paying one but the easiest.
We were in Tuscon at the time and deadheaded to Odessa, Texas, to pick up the load. It delivered in Minnesota, pleasantly close to home. Brokers called this a "partial" load. The pay of was enough to cover our fuel from Texas to home plus a bit more. The alternative would have been to deadhead straight home from Tuscon and pay for fuel the whole way.
It would not have been hard to find another partial load on the way from Texas to Minnesota but the program does not permit multiple pickups and deliveries. You can put one load on your truck and that's it.
That's OK, I think. If you start loading up the truck with multiple pickups and deliveries to work your way up to your customary level of pay, you start giving up the time it takes to complete them. The purpose is to stay in service for as long as possible to haul the "good stuff" our carrier dispatches, and then to get home when you have to. LTL loads (less than truckload) are not expedited loads. LTL shippers do not pay for exclusive use or straight-through service.
The freight we carried was a hot tub that required no special services or handling. It was interesting to see numerous reefer loads on the board that we also could have hauled. We have never before thought of our reefer as an asset that could help get us home, but it certainly could be if we used this program more.
Using the Home Run program was an interesting experience in several respects and fun to try. Before this load, we have never had freight on the truck that came from a source other than our carrier's dispatch. As an introductory learning experience, it was fun to talk to brokers and explore and use an outside load board.
If we wanted to get deeper and more-profitably into this, we could easily do so, but the experience re-affirmed our desire to stay with our carrier and its dispatch system. We have no desire to run under our own authority or book outside loads as a regular practice.
As long as our carrier keeps us busy enough with well-paying loads, waiting for the Qualcomm beep suits us just fine. The FedEx Custom Critical dispatchers are very well trained and very good. We missed having them in our corner when we hauled this outside freight. (On these loads, you communicate directly with the broker, shipper and consignee about the pickup, delivery and other details.)
Christmas will be the next time we are home with the truck. If we find ourselves more than 500 miles from home when it is time to go, we might use the Home Run program again, or not, depending on the circumstances.
If you are with FedEx Custom Critical and go home on a regular basis, the Home Run program is worth exploring.