I would move to El Paso, Tx.
Depends on company. ..me ..I would go towards El Paso ..We do ok along the Border..
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If it were me, I'd head straight for a carrier that has some idea as to where the freight is likely to originate, in areas where I don't.
Self-inflicted. There's too much freight coming out of El Paso to take one for that cheap.Been to E.P. twice. One load, for Prestige, went to Greeneville, Tn. 1500+ at .50
Granted, there's not a whole lot of van freight that comes out of Nogales, but then again there are rarely other vans down there, so what does come out of there you can not only get pretty easily, but at a good rate. You may have to sit a day or 3, but sitting for extended periods in Nogales is a rarity.One more, 406 mi to Nogales, for Jung. That one paid .75 or so. Enough to DH back to E.P.
I abhor deadheading in the same direction that paying freight will take me. Especially 650 miles.Then on to Dallas on my own dime.
Never cut a tree down in the wintertime. Never make a negative decision in the low time. Never make your most important decisions when you are in your worst moods. Wait. Be patient. The storm will pass. The spring will come. - Robert SchullerSo yeah, no fan of El Paso here.
and just what carrier would that be??....I've not encountered one yet that has that kind of fortune telling abilities.....
It doesn't take fortune telling ability to choose Atlanta over Savannah, or Cleveland over Youngstown, does it? And don't you have a few [closely guarded] 'fishing holes' yourself?
Newbies don't know where the [frequent] shippers are, but dispatchers/load planners do, or should. Seeing loads originate from the same location regularly, or pretty often is a major clue, lol.
Always remember that dispatchers and load planners work for the carrier, not the contractor. Their business, and your business are NOT the same. Their responsibility is to the carrier, your's to yourself. Their concern is always covering 100% of the loads at the highest profit for THEM. Your's is to take loads that make profit for you.
But us carriers and dispatchers do care where you are. If you don't move we don't get money either. If your dispatcher doesn't know good spots for the places you are, for the type of truck you're in, maybe suggest they should go on road and learn.
Another thing is, us carriers who deal with overflow will probably hardly see a load from top carriers out a bad bad spot. Those are usually already given to their own drivers.
If it's not profitable for you to take it, more then likely, it will covered by someone like us who basically deal overflow.