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NPR Article: On The Road For Decades And Not Stopping Anytime Soon

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This is a great article/audio recording by StoryCorps, a national nonprofit that gives people the chance to interview friends and loved ones about their lives. These conversations are archived at the American Folklife Center at the Library of Congress, allowing participants to leave a legacy for future generations.

This interview is about two friends and long-time big-rig truckers Idella Hansen and Sandi Talbott.

 

On The Road For Decades And Not Stopping Anytime Soon

 

 

Nearly 9 million miles and counting.

That’s how many miles Idella Hansen and Sandi Talbott have between them. The best friends and big-rig truckers have been at it for an awfully long time. But back when they started, they were a rarity on the road.

“There weren’t that many women out here driving trucks,” Talbott recalls with Hansen, on a recent visit with StoryCorps. “And my husband’s health was not good; he only had one leg, so consequently I did all the driving.”

Talbott first got into trucking in the 1970s with her husband. But when his health started declining a couple of decades later, she started taking care of her husband while she was still on the road — a “rolling nursing home,” as Hansen calls her. After his death, Talbott carried on without him.

Hansen, for her part, got her start hauling freight when she was just a teenager.

“It was important for me to be able to take care of myself,” she says. “So at 18 years old and pregnant, I filled a gasoline tanker with gas and I got in it and I took off.”

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Since then, Talbott and Hansen say they’ve hauled missiles, live tadpoles and just about everything in between. And while more women have joined them on the road, they say it’s not uncommon to get a sidelong glance.

“When I take the truck in, it’s, ‘Oh, here’s a little old woman. We’ll make a bundle off of her,’ ” says the 75-year-old Talbott. When that happens, she’s quick to call up Hansen, who’s 66 herself. “I’m not going to get any kind of hogwash — you’re going to tell me how it really is.”

Age be damned, Talbott says: She’s going to keep driving as long as they’ll let her — and as long as her health allows.

“Four years ago, I had a heart attack while I was on the truck,” Talbott says. “And when I got ready to go back on the road, I pulled out of my driveway and started through the gear pattern, it was like I’m back in my element. It is my life.”

Hansen agrees.

“I’m not interested in retiring,” she says. “When I get in that seat, instead of being slump-shouldered, all of a sudden I have sat up straight, pulled my shoulders back, and it’s like a rush of hot blood.”

But what happens if Talbott’s health should fail?

“I’ll stuff you in the truck with me,” Hansen says, laughing.

“When they pry our cold dead fingers off the wheel — that’s when we’ll retire,” Talbott says. “Because when people retire, they die. And we ain’t ready for that.”

It’s settled then, says Hansen.

“I’m not interested in going home. I just want to drive my truck.”

Audio produced for Morning Edition by Liyna Anwar.

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23 Sep, 16

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