If anyone has anything to chime in on, please feel free to add something.
It's good to make note of busy and not-busy areas as you are doing, but be careful about getting wedded to strongly held opinions in that regard.
We recently met a couple who were adamant about not going to Canada, and then met another couple who were thrilled to have just been dispatched on a $13,000 run in and out.
You might find yourself stranded in an area for a week and decide that you will never again go back there. But that was a one time event, and maybe you happened to be there at a time when it is slow in general at that time in that area but busy all other times.
You might find yourself waiting among a bunch of other trucks in an area and decide to stay away for that reason, but you may not know about the once-in-five-years special project that some company had going on that brought a bunch of trucks in at that time.
When we were with your carrier, we came to regard Seattle as a place to avoid. But with our present carrier, it is one of our best cities in and out.
You are not wrong to develop caution about certain areas and circumstances, but be also cautious about developing strongly held opinions about such things. Diane and I have met a number of drivers who have made and stood by freight-area vows that provide emotional satisfaction when made but also cost them lots of money in future business.
Yesterday, Diane and I made the decision to deadhead out of Salt Lake City after getting skunked there for a couple days. It was a long deadhead to Los Angeles (Ontario) but it seemed best to get there before Friday in hopes of catching a weekend run.
Not far out of Salt Lake City, an agent called us with a load that we took at a good all-miles rate (not great but good). We will deadhead 600 miles to the Friday pick up and drive 2,200 miles loaded over the weekend. When I told the agent how grateful we were for this load and that we "got skunked" in Salt Lake City, he said "It's July. After twelve years of July's, I hate them."
Our experience and the agent's comment could easily provide material to vow to never take a load to Utah in July. But the fact is that we got paid well to go in and got out in fine style, albeit out on August 1 in this case. July was an acceptable gross-revenue month for us. August is off to a fantastic start. And a "remote" place like Salt Lake City helped make that happen.