Cypress Trucking PodcastReleased: 04/15/2026

Owner/Operator Truth: What Nobody Tells You First

Owner/Operator Truth: What Nobody Tells You First
Cypress Trucking PodcastReleased 04/15/2026
Ready to play
00:0000:00
Episode description

Lease purchase programs promise freedom, ownership, and the big money. What they don't tell you is what's waiting on the other side of that signature. In Episode 15 of the Cypress Truck Lines Podcast, three Cypress drivers who have seen the owner/operator life up close share what nobody tells you before you make the leap. One driver left Cypress for seven years to chase the O/O dream and came back with a story that will make you think twice. Another watched his brothers navigate trucking authority, insurance, maintenance costs, and the kind of breakdowns that don't just stop your truck, they stop your income. And a third didn't file his taxes for two years as an O/O and found himself staring down a $160,000 IRS bill. Knowing the difference between those outcomes is exactly why this episode exists. You also hear directly from Cypress leadership on why Cypress doesn't offer a lease purchase program and what that decision says about how they treat their drivers. New episodes drop every Wednesday. Subscribe now and never make a six-figure mistake without doing your homework first.

Listen on

Apple PodcastsAmazon MusiciHeartRadioSpotifyPodChaser

Show Highlights

Key moments and takeaways from this episode.

About This Episode

Everybody wants to be an owner/operator. Until they actually talk to one. On paper it's freedom, big money, and being your own boss. In reality it's surprise truck payments, surprise repairs, surprise deductions, and a paycheck that shows up already spent.

In Episode 15 of the Cypress Truck Lines Podcast, Marcus sits down with two experienced Cypress drivers who have seen the owner/operator's life from the inside and come back with stories that will make you think before you sign anything. You also hear the story of Carlos Trent, a current Cypress driver and former O/O who didn't file his taxes for two years and found himself staring down a $160,000 IRS bill. A CPA with transportation industry experience turned that bill into a $3,000 refund. The difference between those two outcomes is exactly the kind of information this episode is built to give you. This is not an episode designed to tell you that becoming an owner/operator is wrong. It's designed to make sure you go in with your eyes open. Because as Marcus puts it, today we're not selling the dream. We're checking the receipts.

Episode Highlights

We're checking the receipts: Marcus sets the tone immediately in the cold open. Everybody hears the pitch that O/O is where the real money is. But the real money comes with real bills. Surprise truck payments. Surprise repairs. Surprise deductions. And a paycheck that shows up already spent. This episode exists to give drivers the full picture before they make a decision that could cost them everything.

The $160,000 IRS story: Carlos Trent, a current Cypress driver and former O/O, didn't file his taxes for two years. The IRS came after him for $160,000. He didn't think he needed an experienced CPA, specifically one with transportation industry knowledge. He was wrong. When he finally got his taxes into the hands of a professional who understood the industry, every write-off was accounted for and that $160,000 bill turned into a $3,000 refund. The single most important piece of advice from this entire episode: get a CPA who knows the transportation industry before you go O/O. Not after.

Dean's seven year detour: Dean left Cypress for seven years to chase the owner/operator dream. He came back. That alone tells a story but the details of what he experienced during those seven years make it one of the most honest and impactful conversations the Cypress Truck Lines Podcast has had. The expenses he didn't anticipate, the stress he couldn't have prepared for, and the reality that looked nothing like what he was sold all factor into a cautionary tale every driver considering the leap needs to hear.

The cost of keeping a truck running: The numbers are specific and they add up fast. Engine top end repair: $15,000. Engine bottom end: $15,000. Transmission: $15,000. DEF filter system: $15,000. And that's before you touch tires, fuel, or insurance. As an owner/operator every one of those bills comes out of your pocket on top of your truck payment, your insurance premium, and your quarterly tax obligations. Adolf's brothers recommend having $50,000 to $60,000 in reserves before going O/O. Not to spend. Just to be sitting there in case things go sideways.

Why doesn't Cypress offer a lease purchase program?: Marcus reached out to Clay Hamblen at Cypress for the official answer. Clay's response was direct: trucking is challenging enough, and having a mixture of lease purchase owner/operators alongside company drivers would open up problems Cypress doesn't want. Their focus is 100% on company drivers. The culture at Cypress has been built around that commitment and the philosophy is straightforward. Don't fix what isn't broken. Dean is back and thriving. Adolf retired comfortably. Carlos came back and is happy. That's what investing in company drivers looks like.

The advice every driver should take away: Do your research before you make the leap. Being an owner/operator can work. It has worked and it will work again for the right person with the right preparation. But the drivers who struggle most are the ones nobody warned. Know your expenses before you sign. Understand your tax obligations before your first quarter. Get a CPA with transportation industry experience before the IRS comes looking. And if you're going to go O/O make sure you have serious money in reserve before your first breakdown because that breakdown is coming.

From The Host

“I feel like I genuinely know more about this industry after doing this interview than I did going in. And I'm not a driver. I'm a broadcaster. So if I walked away from this conversation understanding why the owner/operator math is so hard to make work, I think it's going to hit a lot harder for the drivers listening who are actually thinking about making that move. Dean came back. Carlos came back. Adolf never left. And all three of them are doing well. There's a message in that. The grass isn't always greener on the other side of your own authority. Sometimes the best deal you're ever going to get is the one you already have.” — Marcus Bridges, Host

Have a story to tell or want to be a guest? Email us at podcast.cypresstruck.com

Transcript

Expand to read the full episode transcript.

1 00:00:01,520 --> 00:00:07,520 Everybody wants to be an owner operator, right? Until they actually talk to one, because on paper 2 00:00:07,520 --> 00:00:14,400 it's freedom. It's big money. It's be your own boss. In reality, it's surprise truck payments, surprise 3 00:00:14,400 --> 00:00:20,879 repairs, surprise deductions. And my personal favorite, a paycheck that shows up already spent. 4 00:00:21,160 --> 00:00:26,719 We've all heard the pitch. Oh, you got to be in. O.O. that's where the real money is. Uh. Reality 5 00:00:26,720 --> 00:00:33,519 check. That's also where the big bills are. And and really big bills. Okay, today's episode will tell 6 00:00:33,520 --> 00:00:39,720 you that I've got one driver coming on here who lived it, another who watched it happen up close 7 00:00:39,720 --> 00:00:46,599 and said, no thanks. I like sleeping at night and retiring relatively early, and I had a third 8 00:00:46,600 --> 00:00:52,480 driver to make things more interesting that didn't even want to come on the podcast, but he 9 00:00:52,480 --> 00:00:57,960 had plenty to say about the subject. So if you've ever thought about becoming an owner operator or 10 00:00:58,160 --> 00:01:03,009 if you've been told that's where the money is. You might want to stick around for this episode 11 00:01:03,009 --> 00:01:07,529 because today we're not selling the dream. We're checking the receipts. 12 00:01:12,970 --> 00:01:17,529 Count down to the Cypress Truck Lines podcast starts now. 13 00:01:19,849 --> 00:01:26,769 Your number one professional flatbed podcast here to deliver stories, safety updates and company 14 00:01:26,769 --> 00:01:31,489 news directly to your ears. Let's get down to business. 15 00:01:38,489 --> 00:01:44,050 Cypress and Sunbelt. How's the weather out there? Welcome into the Cypress Truck Lines podcast. I am 16 00:01:44,050 --> 00:01:49,289 your host, Marcus. Thank you so much for being here with me today. We've got an awesome episode 17 00:01:49,289 --> 00:01:55,609 planned for you. So much information, uh, that I actually, I feel like I know more about the 18 00:01:55,609 --> 00:02:01,299 industry as a whole after having the interview that you're going to hear here in just a few 19 00:02:01,300 --> 00:02:06,579 minutes. Uh, welcomed a couple of drivers on very knowledgeable, a lot of experience in the industry, 20 00:02:06,580 --> 00:02:12,979 and they have some thoughts about the trappings of becoming an owner operator. Now, obviously 21 00:02:12,979 --> 00:02:17,739 that's not something you're going to do at Cypress. It's not an option. And we'll get into that a 22 00:02:17,740 --> 00:02:23,699 little bit in this conversation as well. But there are many drivers out there who have tried it and 23 00:02:23,699 --> 00:02:29,299 have not decided that it was the place that they wanted to be and have gone back to being a 24 00:02:29,300 --> 00:02:35,660 company driver. And that's kind of what today's episode is all about. We want to know what it was 25 00:02:35,660 --> 00:02:41,940 like. Why is it that some people jump into it? What are some of the positives, if there are any, and 26 00:02:41,940 --> 00:02:47,419 negatives? Uh, there's a lot of hint, hint. I don't want to spoil anything, but you heard it in the cold 27 00:02:47,419 --> 00:02:54,139 open. Um, you're not going to get the most shining representation of being an owner operator today. 28 00:02:54,380 --> 00:03:01,160 Um, you know, I want to talk a little bit first about actually, let me put the brakes on here. 29 00:03:01,160 --> 00:03:05,679 Let's get to the homework real quick first, because that's what responsible adults do. 30 00:03:05,720 --> 00:03:12,400 podcast.cypresstruck.com is the website. Go there and find everything that has to do with the 31 00:03:12,400 --> 00:03:16,720 podcast. That's where you can get in touch with me. Send me an email if you want to be on the show. If 32 00:03:16,760 --> 00:03:22,120 you want to hear about something in particular on the show, I take all the suggestions. I make 33 00:03:22,160 --> 00:03:27,639 episodes out of as many of them as I can, and I want to welcome every Cypress driver or employee 34 00:03:27,640 --> 00:03:34,160 that wants to be a part of this podcast. So podcast.cypresstruck.com, it's real simple. Bookmark it. You can 35 00:03:34,160 --> 00:03:39,639 listen to every single episode there. And that's your hub for finding out what all the episodes 36 00:03:39,639 --> 00:03:44,640 are about. You know who was on it, what we're talking about. It's all there. It's your one stop 37 00:03:44,640 --> 00:03:49,959 shop, as I like to say. And the nice thing about it being a one stop shop is unlike becoming an owner 38 00:03:49,960 --> 00:03:56,449 operator, it won't cost you a thing. Uh, so back to what we were talking about today. I 39 00:03:56,649 --> 00:04:03,169 spoke on the phone for, I would say, about 45 minutes to, uh, current Cypress driver Carlos Trent. 40 00:04:03,210 --> 00:04:10,089 Now, Carlos was an owner operator at one time. And we are going to reference a lot of my 41 00:04:10,089 --> 00:04:15,969 conversation with Carlos in the interview segment that's coming up around the corner. But I wanted 42 00:04:15,969 --> 00:04:21,129 to tell a story here that Carlos left me with, uh, that we didn't get to in the interview segment. 43 00:04:21,130 --> 00:04:28,010 And it's very impactful. Uh, you will hear us talk a little bit about Uncle Sam, the IRS and 44 00:04:28,010 --> 00:04:35,009 taxes that are involved with becoming an owner operator. And the anecdote that Carlos told me 45 00:04:35,010 --> 00:04:41,850 was he did not think that he needed a real, experienced CPA, 46 00:04:41,969 --> 00:04:47,649 uh, especially an experienced CPA, an accountant that had experience with the transportation 47 00:04:47,649 --> 00:04:54,619 industry. Um, it just call it an oversight, call it inexperience. Um, maybe call it. Hey, I 48 00:04:54,620 --> 00:05:01,379 wanted to see if I could try this and get through it myself. I 49 00:05:01,500 --> 00:05:07,259 guess the only way I can tell you is the IRS came after Carlos. He didn't file for two years, and 50 00:05:07,260 --> 00:05:13,379 they came after him for $160,000. Now, I don't know about you. 51 00:05:13,420 --> 00:05:20,259 $160,000 would be like 150,000 more than I could just hand you right now 52 00:05:20,260 --> 00:05:25,339 comfortably and not think that I've got to sell my house, my car, my two corgis, my wife and 53 00:05:25,340 --> 00:05:31,939 everything else, uh, that I could get a buck off of. And trust me, uh, they they would sell me long 54 00:05:31,939 --> 00:05:38,579 before they would let me sell them, I promise you that, but I digress. 160 grand is nothing to 55 00:05:38,620 --> 00:05:43,578 scoff at. And granted, Carlos made some mistakes in the lead up to that, and he was honest with me 56 00:05:43,579 --> 00:05:50,099 about it. But what he came away with was I got my taxes in the hands of a true 57 00:05:50,099 --> 00:05:56,709 professional that knew the transportation industry and this $160,000 that they were after 58 00:05:56,709 --> 00:06:02,469 him for, after everything had been filed and all the write offs had been taken care of, actually 59 00:06:02,469 --> 00:06:08,829 turned into a small refund for Carlos, I believe he told me somewhere around $3,000 if memory 60 00:06:08,829 --> 00:06:13,429 serves. Look, that's not a huge chunk of change that you're going to go slapping high fives about 61 00:06:13,429 --> 00:06:19,109 all over the yard, but you would much rather have somebody give you three grand back than take 62 00:06:19,109 --> 00:06:25,870 another 160,000 from you. So that's the type of cautionary tale that we're going to tell 63 00:06:25,910 --> 00:06:32,389 through experience today. Um, it's no laughing matter, and it's not something that you can just 64 00:06:32,390 --> 00:06:38,950 jump into without a lot of thought and preparation. And if I do say so, a 65 00:06:38,950 --> 00:06:44,828 ton of money sitting in your bank account, um, especially if you want to operate as your own 66 00:06:44,829 --> 00:06:49,789 authority. Now, if you're going to lease on to another company and that's something that you 67 00:06:49,790 --> 00:06:54,849 want to do. You're going to get some really good information. In this interview from Cypress driver 68 00:06:54,849 --> 00:07:01,289 Dean Kreigsman, who will tell you about three separate lease purchases that he went through. 69 00:07:01,290 --> 00:07:07,928 And you notice how I called him Cypress Driver. That's current Cypress driver that's no longer 70 00:07:07,929 --> 00:07:14,249 lease purchase guy with another company. There's a reason for it. And I've teased it enough. At this 71 00:07:14,249 --> 00:07:21,169 point in time, I'm just going to get into it. It's a great interview here. Joining me just around the 72 00:07:21,170 --> 00:07:27,130 corner, we've got Cypress Driver, as I mentioned, Dean Kreigsman and also retired Cypress driver 73 00:07:27,169 --> 00:07:34,130 Adolf Metzer. Now, Adolf has a ton of experience in the industry, and he also has two brothers that 74 00:07:34,130 --> 00:07:40,570 are both owner operators that he has worked with and worked around during his career. So he's got 75 00:07:40,570 --> 00:07:46,890 some great insight on what really goes on. Once you decide owner operator is the way that you 76 00:07:46,890 --> 00:07:52,739 want to go. So without further ado, let's bring these guys in here and get to the real juicy part 77 00:07:52,739 --> 00:07:54,299 of today's episode. 78 00:08:01,820 --> 00:08:06,299 All right, it's time to get our guests in here for today. And I am super excited about this 79 00:08:06,300 --> 00:08:11,939 conversation because it's going to be a very honest conversation. And obviously, that's what 80 00:08:11,939 --> 00:08:16,699 we're always aiming to have here on the Cypress Truck Lines podcast. But this one in particular, 81 00:08:16,980 --> 00:08:21,299 I've gotten to talk with these guys a little bit. I've got to talk to another driver that's not 82 00:08:21,299 --> 00:08:26,620 even joining us today. Spent 45 minutes on the phone with him just getting information for this 83 00:08:26,620 --> 00:08:33,539 episode. So we're here to talk about the trappings of becoming an owner operator today. Uh, 84 00:08:33,539 --> 00:08:38,940 and we have a couple gentlemen here joining us that have seen it all, uh, from both sides of the 85 00:08:38,940 --> 00:08:44,939 fence. And first, I want to welcome on, uh, Cypress driver, Dean Kreigsma. Dean, thank you so much for 86 00:08:44,939 --> 00:08:49,269 being here today, man. Appreciate you making your first appearance here on the Cypress Trunk Lines 87 00:08:49,270 --> 00:08:55,950 podcast. Yeah. My pleasure. Now, uh, Dean, just so everybody knows here, uh, you're sitting there 88 00:08:55,950 --> 00:09:00,589 waiting to get unloaded, and they've kind of been, uh, making you wait. You might have to, uh, 89 00:09:00,590 --> 00:09:05,589 accomplish some work during the interview. Just want to put that out there in case anybody hears 90 00:09:05,590 --> 00:09:11,909 it while we're talking to you. Um, we got a job to do here, right? That's right, that's right. Thanks 91 00:09:11,909 --> 00:09:18,469 for being here, Dean. Also joining us today is a retired Cypress truck driver that came very 92 00:09:18,469 --> 00:09:23,988 highly recommended from multiple people. Uh, I hadn't gotten or I have not got to meet this 93 00:09:23,989 --> 00:09:29,989 person face to face yet, but I was told by so many people that I met face to face that I needed to 94 00:09:29,989 --> 00:09:34,549 get him on the podcast. Please welcome Adolf Metzer to the show. Adolf, thank you so much for 95 00:09:34,549 --> 00:09:40,909 being here today. Hey, thanks, Marcus, for having me. And excuse me if the noise gets a little bit loud 96 00:09:40,909 --> 00:09:46,520 because I live in Pensacola, Florida, and the Blue Angels practice during the day, so if they fly 97 00:09:46,520 --> 00:09:52,239 over it, it might get kind of loud, you know? I will tell you this. I'm more than happy to be 98 00:09:52,239 --> 00:09:59,158 interrupted by the Blue Angels on this show. That is amazing. How often do you see them fly over? Um, 99 00:09:59,159 --> 00:10:05,399 every, um, like, during the week? Uh, they normally get home on the shows on Sunday, so they get a 100 00:10:05,400 --> 00:10:10,639 little day off on Monday, kind of recuperate. So. Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays, they normally 101 00:10:10,640 --> 00:10:17,640 do a practice show here in Pensacola, and then they fly out for Friday, Saturdays for 102 00:10:17,640 --> 00:10:24,480 the actual air show around the country. Wow. So they actually. So we actually live in the 103 00:10:24,480 --> 00:10:31,399 flight path of the runway for the, the for the NAS Pensacola Airfield. Wow. And 104 00:10:31,440 --> 00:10:35,719 is that something that you was that, uh, like a retirement decision? You wanted to go down there 105 00:10:35,719 --> 00:10:42,200 and be there? Have you always lived there? Is it something you enjoy? Um, like when I was retired 106 00:10:42,200 --> 00:10:47,769 from the Navy. My last duty station was 107 00:10:49,050 --> 00:10:55,929 NAS Pensacola, so I grew up in California and Wisconsin, so we chose once 108 00:10:55,930 --> 00:11:02,889 we moved here to Pensacola. We decided we weren't leaving. Gotcha, gotcha. 109 00:11:02,929 --> 00:11:08,769 Well that's awesome. I hope at some point in time we'll get you back on the show and we'll talk 110 00:11:08,809 --> 00:11:15,089 about your service and kind of what led up to trucking at Cypress. Uh, we love our veterans here 111 00:11:15,090 --> 00:11:20,569 on this show. Thank you for your service. Uh. Greatly appreciated. Um, but let's go ahead and get 112 00:11:20,570 --> 00:11:26,849 into our conversation that we're here for today. Uh, Dean, I want to start with you. Um, talk to me 113 00:11:26,849 --> 00:11:33,488 about your journey as an owner-operator. Uh, you can kind of fill me in on your career in trucking 114 00:11:33,489 --> 00:11:38,890 in general. Did you start out as an owner operator, or did you start with a carrier and then go to 115 00:11:38,929 --> 00:11:45,789 owner operator? Just kind of walk me through how it went for you? I actually started off with, uh, 116 00:11:45,790 --> 00:11:52,189 Cypress. Truck lines, um, and uh, I started about, uh, 13 years ago 117 00:11:52,590 --> 00:11:59,469 and, um, I spent, uh, just about five years with 118 00:11:59,469 --> 00:12:06,229 them and, uh, you know, everything was okay, but, you know, I wanted 119 00:12:06,229 --> 00:12:13,030 to try out, uh, being an owner operator, possibly making more money. And that's that's why 120 00:12:13,030 --> 00:12:17,989 I left. Yeah, that's the hook, right? That's what everybody says, is. That. Hey, you're going to be an 121 00:12:17,989 --> 00:12:23,509 owner, operator. You're going to make the big bucks. Own your own truck. You know, you get to own your 122 00:12:23,510 --> 00:12:29,909 own truck and, uh, make a lot of money. Yep. That's that's how they sucker you. And, um, 123 00:12:30,110 --> 00:12:36,949 well, there's there's a few different types of, uh, owner operators out there. Um, there, there's 124 00:12:36,990 --> 00:12:43,719 the, uh, owner operator that goes out and buys their own truck and 125 00:12:43,719 --> 00:12:50,560 goes and gets their own authority and their own brokers. Uh, and, you know, that's a 126 00:12:50,560 --> 00:12:57,039 true owner operator right there. And, uh, you know, does his own thing. That wasn't me. Of 127 00:12:57,039 --> 00:13:03,799 course. And another type of owner operator is the same thing, except 128 00:13:03,800 --> 00:13:10,680 that they don't work on their own authority. They, uh, go in, uh, lease on with a 129 00:13:10,680 --> 00:13:17,439 company, uh, and, uh, you know, work off of their, uh, authority. Uh, and then 130 00:13:17,440 --> 00:13:23,999 there's the sucker. I mean, the lease purchase, uh, uh, owner operator. 131 00:13:24,159 --> 00:13:31,119 Uh, and I am in that category. Uh, I am the one in that category. Um, 132 00:13:31,159 --> 00:13:38,119 the nice thing about the lease purchase is. And this is what reels you in. No credit 133 00:13:38,119 --> 00:13:45,009 checks and no down payments on your truck. You just. Start. Rolling and start making 134 00:13:45,010 --> 00:13:51,930 payments. You just start rolling and they pull out your payment, uh, out of your paycheck. 135 00:13:52,250 --> 00:13:57,329 Uh, of course, you're under the the company that hires you. You're under their authority and 136 00:13:57,330 --> 00:14:03,409 everything, and and, uh, they're the ones leasing the truck to you. Um, and, um, 137 00:14:04,849 --> 00:14:11,569 uh, so, yeah, they, uh. Let me clarify something here. Dean, sorry to interrupt you real quick, but I just 138 00:14:11,570 --> 00:14:15,929 want to clarify that you didn't do this lease purchase program with Cypress because they don't 139 00:14:15,969 --> 00:14:20,649 actually have a lease purchase program. If I'm not mistaken, this was with another company. Correct. 140 00:14:20,690 --> 00:14:27,249 Gotcha. This was another company. Uh, Cypress. I'm a company driver. And, um, 141 00:14:27,290 --> 00:14:33,809 that's all they they do. And that's all I've ever been with Cypress as a company driver. Um, but, 142 00:14:33,849 --> 00:14:40,699 um, when you do a lease purchase, you're considered an owner operator, And, um, that's what I did 143 00:14:40,700 --> 00:14:47,379 with the other company, and I was with them for seven years. And the problem 144 00:14:47,740 --> 00:14:54,500 is that it's a big payment, uh, each week. Uh, and you're, you're an owner 145 00:14:54,500 --> 00:15:01,379 operator. So I had to pay for fuel and insurance and the whole nine yards, even though 146 00:15:01,379 --> 00:15:08,379 everything is through the company. But the only one, the only ones making money or the real 147 00:15:08,379 --> 00:15:14,940 money, uh, is the trucking company, uh, that does the lease purchases. Uh, they're the only ones really 148 00:15:14,940 --> 00:15:21,938 making money. They nickel and dime you to death. So in seven years, were you. How close were you to 149 00:15:21,980 --> 00:15:27,658 paying off that that lease purchase? Were you an owner, like a true owner of the truck by the end 150 00:15:27,659 --> 00:15:34,259 of that? Well, um, actually, after my first three years, I did pay off a 151 00:15:34,260 --> 00:15:41,029 truck. Wow. Um, and, uh. And then I stayed with that company. But I did pay 152 00:15:41,029 --> 00:15:47,270 off a truck. And, uh, that's when I was making, uh, pretty good money. I, I couldn't 153 00:15:47,270 --> 00:15:54,030 complain. Of course, the economy, uh, got a little worse. And, uh, then the rates started 154 00:15:54,030 --> 00:16:01,029 dropping. Uh, and then, uh, I also started having some problems. You know, with 155 00:16:01,030 --> 00:16:07,789 that truck. And, uh, finally, uh, what had happened was, um, 156 00:16:07,830 --> 00:16:14,349 after two years of no truck payments, I went two years. Uh, you know, after paying that 157 00:16:14,349 --> 00:16:21,029 off the truck needed some work, and it needed about $15,000 worth of work. Wow. 158 00:16:21,070 --> 00:16:28,029 And, uh, not only did I not have that to put into that truck, but I felt that the 159 00:16:28,030 --> 00:16:34,669 truck I had put well over a million miles on that truck, and I did not want a 160 00:16:34,669 --> 00:16:40,890 chance putting the money into that truck. And then two weeks after I get it back, maybe the 161 00:16:40,890 --> 00:16:46,490 transmission might drop out of it or something like that, or. You blow a steer, tire or any number 162 00:16:46,490 --> 00:16:53,329 of things that can go wrong. Right. Yeah. I just didn't want, uh, you'd put money into 163 00:16:53,330 --> 00:16:59,809 that truck that had well over a million miles on it. Uh, I just thought it was time to get rid of it. 164 00:16:59,809 --> 00:17:06,569 And, uh, that's when I jumped into another, uh, lease purchase. Uh, and then from 165 00:17:06,569 --> 00:17:12,449 there, it was a nightmare. Sounds like it. And and listen, I've. I've heard these lease purchase 166 00:17:12,449 --> 00:17:19,449 programs can be real nightmares for guys. Um, I, I talked to a lot of truck drivers over making many 167 00:17:19,449 --> 00:17:24,688 podcast episodes over these last three and a half, almost four years that I've been doing this. And 168 00:17:24,810 --> 00:17:31,009 I'll be honest with you guys, when I say there, it's it's a very slim few amount of drivers I've 169 00:17:31,050 --> 00:17:37,019 talked to that have had success with the lease purchase program in any kind of sustained fashion. 170 00:17:37,020 --> 00:17:41,818 It's it seems to be Dean a lot like what you're talking about, where you might get to a point 171 00:17:41,819 --> 00:17:46,619 where there's a spurt of having some, some good income and feeling like you're really making some 172 00:17:46,620 --> 00:17:52,660 good money. But all it takes is one breakdown. And all of a sudden, if you weren't saving that money, 173 00:17:52,699 --> 00:17:59,019 you find yourself in a real pickle. Um, and and that does sound like kind of. What? What happened 174 00:17:59,020 --> 00:18:04,459 to you? Now, Adolf, I want to go to you here for a second, because not only have you driven a lot, but 175 00:18:04,459 --> 00:18:09,459 you told me off the air that you've got a couple brothers that are owner operators. So you have 176 00:18:09,459 --> 00:18:14,218 some good experience in seeing the good, the bad and the ugly here. I just want to ask you, from 177 00:18:14,219 --> 00:18:20,459 your perspective, did you ever consider becoming an owner operator, and, uh, why or why not? Did you 178 00:18:20,499 --> 00:18:26,578 did you stay away from it? Well, I'm actually right before I retired, I bought a cab over a 179 00:18:26,579 --> 00:18:33,270 1983 cab over Peterbilt. It was an older truck because I was going to try it. 180 00:18:33,270 --> 00:18:40,149 So when I was still in the Navy, I bought that, that that truck in South Florida. It 181 00:18:40,150 --> 00:18:46,910 didn't it run. I went down there and my brother went that went down to South Florida. Um, worked on it 182 00:18:47,550 --> 00:18:53,909 pretty much all day, like Friday evening, Saturday till 183 00:18:54,310 --> 00:19:00,389 midday towards the evening. And then we we actually drove it back to Pensacola, 184 00:19:00,989 --> 00:19:07,149 uh, on Sunday and that's I mean, but but but then, um, 185 00:19:08,349 --> 00:19:15,029 the thing was, was the maintenance cost. Yep. The maintenance cost 186 00:19:15,030 --> 00:19:21,750 always gets you. And so what you got to figure out is 187 00:19:22,149 --> 00:19:28,989 how much is your time worth? You have to ask yourself an honest assessment. 188 00:19:29,349 --> 00:19:36,279 You know, how much are you going to want to put forth in this business? Because 189 00:19:36,319 --> 00:19:42,399 being an owner operator is a small business. Now you're a business owner, right? So, I mean, I mean, so 190 00:19:42,400 --> 00:19:49,199 you got to be pretty proficient in everything, you know. So that was something that, uh, that 191 00:19:49,199 --> 00:19:55,799 Carlos told me again, uh, Carlos Trent had a nice conversation with him. He told me to use any info 192 00:19:55,840 --> 00:20:01,838 that I. That I wanted to from our conversation. And one thing that he brought up is, he said, you can't 193 00:20:01,839 --> 00:20:08,559 do this without having a really good accountant, and not just any CPA that you can go find down 194 00:20:08,560 --> 00:20:14,800 the block. You got to have one that understands the trucking industry intimately. Uh, Dean, can you 195 00:20:14,800 --> 00:20:21,639 speak to that? Uh, from your experience? That's true. And I, uh, you know, I 196 00:20:21,639 --> 00:20:28,599 haven't found a real good one yet, but, uh, you know, I, I, uh. Yeah, that that's 197 00:20:28,699 --> 00:20:35,299 absolutely true. And it's very important to find it's very difficult to find a CPA 198 00:20:35,339 --> 00:20:42,339 that is familiar with trucking and, and knows all the ins and outs and everything. Adolf, did you 199 00:20:42,339 --> 00:20:48,619 find that also a tough part of the whole thing? Well, it's because, um, 200 00:20:49,660 --> 00:20:56,379 it was very difficult for me to. Because I had to do everything. And here in Pensacola, there really 201 00:20:56,380 --> 00:21:03,339 isn't very many, um, trucking tax people, right? You know, that they were. So 202 00:21:03,339 --> 00:21:09,939 then my brother helped me with it a little bit, and then, um, filling out like, like the, like 203 00:21:09,979 --> 00:21:16,539 the, you know, for your if the, for your road tax, you know, for every state, you know, you, you have to 204 00:21:16,540 --> 00:21:22,740 record how many miles that you're driving in every state that you operate in. Wow. You know. And 205 00:21:22,740 --> 00:21:29,629 when you're. A company. Here. Oh sorry. Go ahead. So at the end of the year, You have to pay your 206 00:21:29,630 --> 00:21:36,349 your after taxes. So if your mileage plus how much fuel that you buy in each state, it adds 207 00:21:36,350 --> 00:21:43,149 up. So at the end of the year you can possibly owe $10,000 or more. It all 208 00:21:43,149 --> 00:21:49,948 depends on how proficient and stuff that you operate. And. Taxes. Yeah, and that's 209 00:21:49,949 --> 00:21:54,109 even going to come into your load selection right where you're looking at different loads that 210 00:21:54,109 --> 00:21:58,189 you're thinking about picking up. You might not want to take this load that you've got a really 211 00:21:58,189 --> 00:22:02,109 good rate on, because it's going to put you in a state where the taxes are really high and you're 212 00:22:02,109 --> 00:22:06,990 going to have to buy fuel there. Like I think about your one of your home states out of 213 00:22:06,990 --> 00:22:12,549 California. Uh, you know, gas. Is the. Worst. Yeah. Diesel's through the roof right now. The taxes 214 00:22:12,550 --> 00:22:18,149 have always been high in that state, and so you might not even want to take a route that goes out 215 00:22:18,149 --> 00:22:23,029 there if you're really thinking this through. But a guy that hasn't thought it through might just 216 00:22:23,030 --> 00:22:28,640 see the the dollar amount at the end of the load and say, I'm going to California, right? And then at 217 00:22:28,640 --> 00:22:34,519 the end of the year, they end up tied up in all these taxes. Well, we'll see, because, um, in general 218 00:22:34,560 --> 00:22:41,279 speak for just general speaking, um, going out west, the or the 219 00:22:41,280 --> 00:22:47,879 lows paid typically pretty good coming back from, from the West coast. They pay 220 00:22:47,920 --> 00:22:54,759 like like nothing. I mean, you might have to I mean, I mean, you might have to get five, 221 00:22:54,800 --> 00:23:00,959 four, five, six, 700 miles empty just to get a load you might like from San Diego, LA. You might have 222 00:23:00,959 --> 00:23:06,759 to run all the way to Eugene, like around Oregon, just to get a lumber load coming back to the 223 00:23:06,759 --> 00:23:11,879 Midwest. Did you know that? Did you know that? I'm. I'm recording this from Eugene, Oregon right now. 224 00:23:11,879 --> 00:23:17,240 And you said that, or is that just a random city that you picked out? Yeah, that's just like a 225 00:23:17,240 --> 00:23:24,159 random city that I picked out. Um, I mean, we've I mean, because we've ran all the way up 226 00:23:24,160 --> 00:23:29,929 to Oregon to pick up lumber to come back to the Midwest or East Coast. Sure. Not with Cypress, but 227 00:23:29,969 --> 00:23:35,329 like, my brothers and stuff like that. Yeah, right. It's crazy. And that's a long deadhead when you're 228 00:23:35,370 --> 00:23:39,169 when you're the one paying for the fuel, that's a long deadhead where you don't have anything on 229 00:23:39,169 --> 00:23:45,889 and nothing that's producing money. Exactly. So like all your empty miles. So, like your empty 230 00:23:45,889 --> 00:23:52,129 miles and you're loaded miles. All that's miles that you got to pay. 231 00:23:52,650 --> 00:23:58,609 So as a company driver, you don't even sweat it because you're getting paid from from the last 232 00:23:58,610 --> 00:24:04,209 place that you're unloaded to wherever you got to go pick up and then to wherever you gotta take 233 00:24:04,209 --> 00:24:10,969 that load to. Right. You can pay. Um, you know, they or they go by most companies go by 234 00:24:11,730 --> 00:24:18,289 zip code from zip code to zip code. They don't do the actual Google Miles. They go zip code, a zip 235 00:24:18,290 --> 00:24:24,859 code that used to be called the American household. Good moving mileage chart or whatever. 236 00:24:25,619 --> 00:24:30,540 Wow. That's that's way beyond my knowledge there. But that's exactly why we wanted you to. Come on. 237 00:24:30,579 --> 00:24:37,059 It's because you know this stuff, man. So, uh. Yeah. So so so, like, in typical, 238 00:24:37,459 --> 00:24:43,859 um, most trucking companies don't pay doorstep to doorstep. They pay zip code to zip code. So some 239 00:24:43,859 --> 00:24:50,020 zip codes might be 20 to 30 miles further or shorter. But it kind of works out in the wash, 240 00:24:50,060 --> 00:24:57,019 though. Sure, sure. As a as a company driver, it kind of works out in wash. As an owner operator, 241 00:24:57,020 --> 00:25:02,899 you're paying for every mile. Right? And that seems to be the theme here. Uh, is, is money going out 242 00:25:02,939 --> 00:25:08,099 more than it's coming in as an owner operator? Uh, there's something that that Carlos said to me 243 00:25:08,099 --> 00:25:12,899 that really rang true. And I want to present it to both of you guys and get your thoughts on it. Dean, 244 00:25:12,899 --> 00:25:19,419 I'll come to you first. Uh, what what Carlos said to me was, uh, when the money comes in, 245 00:25:19,979 --> 00:25:26,759 the truck takes half, Uncle Sam takes about half and you're left with the rest. How accurate of a 246 00:25:26,760 --> 00:25:33,438 statement is that, uh, from your experience there. Uh, that that is 247 00:25:33,800 --> 00:25:40,640 accurate. You say it's pretty accurate. That's pretty accurate, because, um, just with my 248 00:25:40,640 --> 00:25:46,279 experience of dealing with my brothers as owner operators, and they were independent owner 249 00:25:46,280 --> 00:25:51,079 operators, they found their own loads and their own brokers and everything. They wasn't I mean, 250 00:25:51,160 --> 00:25:57,639 they all had their own authority, so they weren't leased on to a company. So whatever it paid it, it 251 00:25:57,639 --> 00:26:04,079 paid. But the times of those types are going way under. And I would 252 00:26:04,439 --> 00:26:10,519 and I would professionally say that generation of truck drivers is pretty 253 00:26:10,560 --> 00:26:17,238 non-existent anymore. Pretty much. Interesting. You're either going to be a a lease purchase or 254 00:26:17,239 --> 00:26:23,529 you can be leased to a company because they have like a load board, you know what I mean? Or you're 255 00:26:23,529 --> 00:26:28,968 going to pay for that service. Got it. So everything. Yeah, everything. And their insurance 256 00:26:28,969 --> 00:26:35,649 and everything. Exactly. So? So, Dean, uh, going back to your experience. 257 00:26:35,689 --> 00:26:40,650 You jumped in. We kind of cut you off when you had jumped into the second lease purchase with the 258 00:26:40,650 --> 00:26:45,810 company. You were an owner operator? For how long were you in that lease purchase before you 259 00:26:45,810 --> 00:26:49,249 decided you were sick of banging your head against the wall and wanted to go back to being 260 00:26:49,249 --> 00:26:56,129 the company driver? Well, actually, I went to a lease purchase, uh, with 261 00:26:56,130 --> 00:27:02,930 with a truck and, um, that truck. Uh, I only had that 262 00:27:02,930 --> 00:27:09,849 truck for about six months. I couldn't keep that truck out of the 263 00:27:09,850 --> 00:27:16,289 shop, and it was eating me up alive and everything. It, uh, drained my 264 00:27:16,290 --> 00:27:22,938 escrow that I had, uh, my, uh, because, uh, my paycheck each week they would take out, you know, 265 00:27:23,099 --> 00:27:29,458 escrow, uh, maintenance, uh. Uh, and that I had an, a maintenance account that they put into escrow and, 266 00:27:29,699 --> 00:27:36,259 uh, that, that drained immediately. And, uh, then they were taking everything out of my paychecks to pay 267 00:27:36,259 --> 00:27:43,219 for the repairs on that truck. Uh, and after six months, I gave them the truck back. 268 00:27:43,260 --> 00:27:48,579 I said, give me another truck. I need something more dependable because I can't keep this one out 269 00:27:48,579 --> 00:27:55,459 of their shop. So I actually started a new lease purchase with a third truck, uh, after I turned 270 00:27:55,459 --> 00:28:02,419 the other one in. And that's the one that I had that one for about eight 271 00:28:02,420 --> 00:28:09,179 months when I decided it was time to leave and go back to, uh, being a company 272 00:28:09,180 --> 00:28:15,859 driver. And was that, uh, was that third lease purchase also a nightmare? Could you, could you not 273 00:28:15,860 --> 00:28:19,709 keep that one out of the shop, or was it a little bit better but you still just weren't making 274 00:28:19,709 --> 00:28:26,670 money? Yeah. Um, I, I couldn't keep it wasn't as bad, but I couldn't keep 275 00:28:26,670 --> 00:28:31,469 that one out of the shop either. That's just a never ending problem. And you're you're seeing the 276 00:28:31,469 --> 00:28:37,069 writing on the wall, right? There's no there's no getting out of this. No there isn't. You know, the 277 00:28:37,069 --> 00:28:43,629 only thing you can do is turn in your truck and eat. Eat the 278 00:28:43,909 --> 00:28:50,269 the cost you have into it. Uh, all the money, uh, that I that I paid for that truck each week, 279 00:28:50,669 --> 00:28:57,509 uh, for eight months, uh, you know, basically, uh, thrown out the window. Oh, and that 280 00:28:57,550 --> 00:29:03,709 hurts, man, when you look back and add that up, that really that hurts. It does, 281 00:29:05,230 --> 00:29:10,389 it does. Hey. So, Dean, let me ask you a question real quick because I've heard it from different 282 00:29:10,389 --> 00:29:17,209 stories, right? Um, what's the average miles on on one of these 283 00:29:17,210 --> 00:29:22,969 lease purchased trusts, because I've heard anywhere from 450 to 600,000 miles. Then you go to 284 00:29:22,970 --> 00:29:29,769 this company like, hey, this is your new crappy truck. Or I mean. You mean how many miles? 285 00:29:29,810 --> 00:29:35,968 When I received the truck, when I, when I received the truck, uh, probably the, 286 00:29:36,770 --> 00:29:43,609 uh, first truck that I had turned in my my second lease purchase and the first one that 287 00:29:43,609 --> 00:29:50,569 I turned in, um, when I got into that truck, uh, that truck 288 00:29:51,050 --> 00:29:58,009 had about, uh, right at about 400, 000 miles on it. Um, and 289 00:29:58,010 --> 00:30:04,249 then the truck after that, my, uh, the last, uh, lease purchase truck that I had, 290 00:30:04,609 --> 00:30:11,448 um, that one had 225,000 miles on it when I received it. Oh, 291 00:30:11,529 --> 00:30:18,099 so so you went from, like, okay, to a little bit better. I mean, they still have 292 00:30:18,099 --> 00:30:23,099 400 something thousand miles, so they're pretty much through their lifecycle, pretty much through 293 00:30:23,099 --> 00:30:28,499 their lifecycle to say, or through a rebuild. I mean, because that was like one of the things that 294 00:30:28,500 --> 00:30:35,459 scared me away from doing that was a typical rebuild. $30,000. Right? Yes. Right. 295 00:30:35,499 --> 00:30:40,939 And, and and they're kind of selling you. They're kind of leasing you a used truck. Is is what 296 00:30:40,940 --> 00:30:47,419 you're saying there, Adolf? Is that like 400,000 miles is not a new truck by any means. In fact, 297 00:30:47,420 --> 00:30:52,419 it's a it's a well used one and you're about to take on the payments and buy that thing from them. 298 00:30:52,420 --> 00:30:56,579 There's plenty of life in that truck. Sure, but you have to consider that you're going to be the one 299 00:30:56,579 --> 00:31:01,499 paying for that engine rebuild. And what did Carlos tell me? 15 grand for the top end of the 300 00:31:01,499 --> 00:31:08,459 engine. 15 grand for the bottom 30. Just like you said, Adolf. So? So. Yeah. So 30. And we 301 00:31:08,460 --> 00:31:14,269 haven't even touched a transmission that's pretty much worn out, you know what I mean? I mean. So 302 00:31:14,429 --> 00:31:21,349 that's why we haven't even. And you haven't even mentioned, uh, the filters for the DEF systems. And 303 00:31:21,349 --> 00:31:28,268 how much do those runs? That's that's about another 15 grand for the system. Wow. Wow. 304 00:31:28,269 --> 00:31:34,430 Yes. And so just in what we talked about right there, what transmission we're thinking, what, 30, 40, 305 00:31:34,470 --> 00:31:41,309 50. Um, probably half of a of a rebuild, probably about 15 grand for a 306 00:31:41,310 --> 00:31:48,229 used for a used transmission. Okay. So with the rebuild of the engine, the rebuild of the 307 00:31:48,229 --> 00:31:54,789 transmission, the diff filters alone, we're talking we're at 60 grand. We haven't talked about new 308 00:31:54,790 --> 00:32:01,269 tires, new steer tires, new drive tires. Those are really expensive. Um, what did we. You know exactly. 309 00:32:01,310 --> 00:32:08,189 Uh, your your fuel tanks. Carlos told me the truck he had had 210 gallon fuel tanks. So he 310 00:32:08,189 --> 00:32:14,959 is going, uh, you know, up to 220 gallons at 5 to $600 per tank. That's 311 00:32:14,960 --> 00:32:20,719 another thousand bucks every time you run out of diesel. Uh, again, we're sitting here in the 312 00:32:20,720 --> 00:32:27,439 neighborhood of $70,000, and you're also paying every month for this truck that we're we're 313 00:32:27,439 --> 00:32:32,599 talking about here. So if you guys haven't, if everybody listening hasn't really put this 314 00:32:32,600 --> 00:32:39,520 together yet, what we're trying to say is it's really expensive to be an owner-operator. Very 315 00:32:39,520 --> 00:32:45,878 much. Yeah. Um, and, and there's, there's other, uh, deductions taking out as well, especially if 316 00:32:45,879 --> 00:32:52,079 you're leased on with a company. Right. Um, like, uh, car rentals, uh, chains and 317 00:32:52,080 --> 00:32:58,719 binders, uh, all your equipment. Uh, you know, you usually have to rent those from them. Um, 318 00:32:59,000 --> 00:33:05,598 they take out for that each week. Yeah. So, like, you're, like, for the things that we take for 319 00:33:05,599 --> 00:33:12,089 granted at Cypress bungee cords. I know Matt and Aaron. They're constantly like yelling about 320 00:33:12,090 --> 00:33:18,769 bungee cord, a bungee cord, bungee cords. You know, with, you know, we're throw 30 here, 30 there. 321 00:33:19,610 --> 00:33:26,449 Um, my personal thing when I drove for Cypress was I'm gonna leave as many bungee 322 00:33:26,449 --> 00:33:31,369 as they put on my trailer that I'm taking out of here. So if they put six bungee, I'm leaving. Six 323 00:33:31,370 --> 00:33:38,369 bungee. That's it? Yes. Because I found them. Yeah, because I found other, other trucking 324 00:33:38,369 --> 00:33:45,328 companies that we load at place type things as they steal your bungee, you know. 325 00:33:47,489 --> 00:33:53,489 And are we getting a Blue Angels fly by right now? Yeah. Well, that's one of our 326 00:33:54,290 --> 00:34:00,170 the, uh, because a lot of the military pilots are trained here, too. So they come zooming past the 327 00:34:00,170 --> 00:34:05,809 house every now and then. Okay. Gotcha. Well, we heard it, but, uh, anyway, onto it. Continue what you 328 00:34:05,810 --> 00:34:09,590 were talking about there. The bungees are a very valuable thing and you don't think about. That's 329 00:34:09,590 --> 00:34:16,549 an expense if you're an owner operator and guys will steal them. And if you go into the truck stop 330 00:34:16,549 --> 00:34:22,429 just for for giggles, one bungee cord at the Loves Truck stop is approximately a 331 00:34:22,430 --> 00:34:29,429 $5 $5 a corner protector that we I mean, they're all they're 332 00:34:29,429 --> 00:34:36,349 all in the safety lanes. I mean, we use them like napkins. You know, we put bungees on. I mean, 333 00:34:36,350 --> 00:34:42,669 seriously, I mean, we go through so many cords. It's crazy. But they're $8 and something 334 00:34:42,750 --> 00:34:48,989 apiece at the Love's truck stop. And. That's. That's your expense as an owner operator, not the 335 00:34:48,989 --> 00:34:54,949 companies. Correct? Yeah. Correct. So you got to pay for all all those 336 00:34:54,949 --> 00:35:01,709 consumables. Windshield washer fluid, um, diesel treatment, bungee cords, horn protectors, 337 00:35:01,989 --> 00:35:08,439 um, slip pads for underneath your coil, rack. coil racks. 338 00:35:08,559 --> 00:35:15,039 lumber. All that is on you. You bought it? Yep. Or it's. Or it's 339 00:35:15,040 --> 00:35:21,960 rented and taken out of your pay each week. So, Dean, let's talk about from moving forward now, 340 00:35:21,960 --> 00:35:27,040 because now you've told us you you were out of your third lease purchase. You ate that huge 341 00:35:27,040 --> 00:35:32,200 amount that you'd paid into it for eight months, but you decided to come back to Cypress. Uh, they 342 00:35:32,200 --> 00:35:38,079 obviously were happy to have you back. Um, how did the financial situation turn for you once you 343 00:35:38,080 --> 00:35:44,839 started, uh, driving for Cypress again? Um, actually, uh, it's it's 344 00:35:44,840 --> 00:35:51,240 better with Cypress. And, uh, I have benefits with Cypress as owner operator. You you don't have any 345 00:35:51,240 --> 00:35:56,958 benefits. Uh, if you want health insurance, you got to go out on your own and and get it and, uh, and 346 00:35:56,959 --> 00:36:03,398 purchase it. And, uh, plans usually aren't as good when you're getting them on your own as opposed 347 00:36:03,399 --> 00:36:09,209 to being with a company and getting insurance through a company. Right. Uh, 2 to 3 times more 348 00:36:09,210 --> 00:36:14,249 expensive, I imagine. I mean, I know how much I pay a month for health insurance, and it's a fat chunk 349 00:36:14,290 --> 00:36:20,968 of my paycheck. There's no question about it. Yes, yes, it's pretty bad, but, uh, 350 00:36:21,169 --> 00:36:28,010 uh, I'm making, uh, overall, I'm making, uh, I'm actually making more money with Cypress, uh, than 351 00:36:28,010 --> 00:36:34,689 I did as the lease purchase. Uh, owner operator. Yep. And that seems to be the story that we hear time 352 00:36:34,689 --> 00:36:39,529 and again. Now, it's not to say that there aren't successful owner operators out there. It's not to 353 00:36:39,530 --> 00:36:45,889 say that there aren't successful lease purchase program, uh, uh, people out there, but more often 354 00:36:45,889 --> 00:36:51,769 times than not. Sounds to me like a lease purchase program is a little bit of a trap. Dean, would you 355 00:36:51,769 --> 00:36:58,769 agree? I do agree. Um, you know, I, uh, I don't know what the numbers are, but 356 00:36:58,770 --> 00:37:05,540 I would say it's probably a very low percentage of guys that actually pay off a truck. I did 357 00:37:05,580 --> 00:37:12,419 pay off one truck. And, uh, I believe I'm rare. Uh, that that that 358 00:37:12,419 --> 00:37:19,378 doesn't happen very often. And everything. So. Sure. Adolf, what are your thoughts there? I would 359 00:37:19,379 --> 00:37:25,819 recommend to anybody that's, um, thinking about being a lease purchase driver. Thinking about 360 00:37:25,820 --> 00:37:31,619 leaving Cypress. Cypress? I mean, I used to see them all the time here in Pensacola, and I'd be like, 361 00:37:31,620 --> 00:37:38,379 man, they got nice trucks. So. But, um, I would strongly suggest 362 00:37:38,419 --> 00:37:44,859 if you're thinking about leaving to be an owner operator. Drive all week for Cypress. All week, 363 00:37:44,939 --> 00:37:50,538 Sunday to Friday. Come in on Saturday and work in a shop all day, 364 00:37:52,139 --> 00:37:58,938 all day. Changing tires, changing brakes, greasing trucks, doing oil changes and 365 00:37:58,939 --> 00:38:05,908 work all day Saturday and then on Sunday. Sit down and have a heart to heart with your wife and 366 00:38:05,909 --> 00:38:12,629 say, is this really worth it? She's probably going to tell you no, and your body is probably going to 367 00:38:12,629 --> 00:38:17,709 tell, you know, as well, because, uh, that shop work is an easy work, right? And you're going to have to 368 00:38:17,709 --> 00:38:23,229 do it. If you're an owner operator. Exactly. You're going to have to turn wrenches or you're going to 369 00:38:23,270 --> 00:38:29,989 pay somebody. Um, I think the average national cost right now is $95 an hour. 370 00:38:30,269 --> 00:38:37,230 Wow. Plus diagnostics for a new truck. So just so just to hook the computer to, it's going to 371 00:38:37,270 --> 00:38:44,029 be, like, like an hour of labor and then plus a diagnose whatever issue that you have. Yeah. It's 372 00:38:44,030 --> 00:38:49,069 amazing to me that we've we've all become so in tune with electronics. But the minute that a 373 00:38:49,069 --> 00:38:55,109 mechanic plugs that computer into any automobile, uh, the juice starts flowing. Man, you would think 374 00:38:55,110 --> 00:38:59,908 it's a lot harder for them to plug that computer in. Uh, based on the amount of money that you pay 375 00:38:59,909 --> 00:39:06,849 for it. right? Exactly. And you know. And then for the long run, 376 00:39:06,850 --> 00:39:13,728 I think, is how much stress can you. Can your heart handle? You know, 377 00:39:13,770 --> 00:39:20,769 physical, mentally and and I mean, how much can your heart handle 378 00:39:20,929 --> 00:39:27,609 before you have a and I hate to say it, a heart attack for so much stress. Sure, sure, Dean. But. 379 00:39:28,010 --> 00:39:34,569 Sorry. Go ahead. Go ahead Adolf. But as a company driver, you wash your hands of all 380 00:39:34,569 --> 00:39:40,049 that excess stress because it's not your stress. All you got to do is drive a truck from A to B, 381 00:39:40,090 --> 00:39:46,409 unload and come back to A. That's it. Dean, was your stress level a lot higher when you were in the 382 00:39:46,409 --> 00:39:52,928 lease purchase program with the other company? Yes, absolutely. Because, uh, I had to, uh, 383 00:39:52,929 --> 00:39:59,699 especially coming up on payday, I had a I was stressing out on it. I had no clue on what my 384 00:39:59,699 --> 00:40:04,340 paycheck was going to be like. Uh, because what kind of deductions they were going to take from 385 00:40:04,340 --> 00:40:11,138 me and, uh, any type of back, uh, shop fees that I owed them or anything like that. Uh, 386 00:40:11,139 --> 00:40:18,099 I stressed out, especially on, uh, on payday. Coming up on payday? Yeah, I imagine so. 387 00:40:18,139 --> 00:40:23,859 Man, it's it's one of those things that it just doesn't feel like you can ever get out in front 388 00:40:23,860 --> 00:40:29,580 of it. Uh, at least in the short term. Um, and you know what? You guys talk to me about something 389 00:40:29,580 --> 00:40:35,620 when we were off the air that I gotta bring up here, uh, before. Before we get too far gone from it. 390 00:40:35,620 --> 00:40:42,499 But, uh, Adolf, I understand that you actually went to the company that Dean was working for. Uh, for a 391 00:40:42,500 --> 00:40:47,620 very short bit. Uh, can you guys talk to me about that a little bit? How did that go for you? What 392 00:40:47,620 --> 00:40:54,539 was what happened there? Well, it was. I mean, I'm not gonna. I mean, I'm not gonna, 393 00:40:54,580 --> 00:41:01,229 like. I'm mean, uh, me and Aaron had a heart to heart on a Saturday. 394 00:41:01,230 --> 00:41:08,110 And on Saturday, I drove the truck from from Birmingham. I 395 00:41:08,149 --> 00:41:14,709 grabbed the load according to the load, the specific load I was, I was having was, uh, I had to 396 00:41:14,749 --> 00:41:21,550 be tarp. It wasn't tarp. So I took the truck. So I got mad, took the truck back to, uh, Jacksonville, 397 00:41:22,750 --> 00:41:28,350 cleaned out my truck, and then I snuck into a couple buddies and they said, hey, man, come on over 398 00:41:28,350 --> 00:41:35,029 here. Right? Oh, man. We're making all kinds of money. Oh, man. I'll go try them out. So then I went over 399 00:41:35,030 --> 00:41:41,949 there, quit my job in Cypress, went over there, and everything seemed to be okay, 400 00:41:41,989 --> 00:41:47,830 blah, blah, blah. Come Thursday, everybody getting their trucks, right? 401 00:41:48,789 --> 00:41:55,270 And I was like, where's my truck? Right. Oh, it's over there getting detailed. 402 00:41:55,600 --> 00:42:00,800 Okay. And it was over there in Birmingham. 403 00:42:02,279 --> 00:42:08,519 And I said, well, when's my truck going to be here? Well, it should be here around 4:00. Okay. 404 00:42:09,559 --> 00:42:16,520 But the same company that I went to and Dean was at they have a A and a B, kind of 405 00:42:16,560 --> 00:42:23,280 like cypress, cypress or sun belts. They have a a and a B. Mhm. So, so so something was kind of 406 00:42:23,320 --> 00:42:30,320 fishy. So I started walking around the yard. I seen it like I was like I'm not liking any of these 407 00:42:30,320 --> 00:42:34,599 trailers. And I'm very particular because I was in the military, I'm very particular about my 408 00:42:34,600 --> 00:42:41,039 trailers and my tires and my equipment. Very particular. I started seeing a lot of recaps. I was 409 00:42:41,039 --> 00:42:47,959 like, I'm not liking this. Looking at the trailers, deck boards are all loose brake 410 00:42:47,959 --> 00:42:54,898 chambers hanging down. I was like, I'm out of here. And I called the Clay. I was like, 411 00:42:55,780 --> 00:43:02,379 can I come back? And he goes, yeah, come on back. Monday morning I was back in orientation. 412 00:43:02,460 --> 00:43:09,459 I actually, I, I, and I ran into you while you were over there. Yeah. You know. Yeah. And your 413 00:43:09,459 --> 00:43:16,379 truck was in a shop. My truck was in the shop. It sure was. Really. The whole thing comes full circle, 414 00:43:16,379 --> 00:43:20,299 right? If you want to know where Dean's at. He's waiting for his truck to come out of the shop. 415 00:43:21,100 --> 00:43:28,100 That's right. So? So the the key to the story is whenever 416 00:43:28,100 --> 00:43:34,939 you think about leaving a company, it doesn't have to be Cypress. Any company, any job. Don't burn 417 00:43:34,939 --> 00:43:41,899 your bridges because you might have to come crawling back. Yep. I'm back with Cypress, aren't I? 418 00:43:42,379 --> 00:43:48,458 Yeah, that's a true statement. And the key thing is, as long as you're a good driver, you're a safe 419 00:43:48,459 --> 00:43:55,229 driver. You don't break records and you keep your hands off the cell phone. You can come back, right? But 420 00:43:55,230 --> 00:44:00,989 if you're if you're one of those problem guys that can't follow rules and stuff. Chances are 421 00:44:01,029 --> 00:44:07,229 you're not coming back. It's true, it's true. Well, fellas, this is this has been awesome. This 422 00:44:07,230 --> 00:44:12,829 conversation. I feel like we've got a lot of really good information out there. I, I kind of 423 00:44:12,870 --> 00:44:19,589 told everybody coming in here, we're not going to give you the most shining, uh, representation of of 424 00:44:19,629 --> 00:44:26,509 becoming an owner operator here because what we have is I, I've talked to now, Dean, uh, Adolf 425 00:44:26,550 --> 00:44:32,189 Carlos and I again spent a lot of time on the phone. Nobody here has said, hey, go do it. It's 426 00:44:32,189 --> 00:44:36,749 you're gonna make a lot of money. Everybody has said, look, if you want to go do it, it's an option. 427 00:44:36,790 --> 00:44:43,590 Here's a laundry list of things you should look out for. And I'm going to say, Dean, 428 00:44:43,590 --> 00:44:49,669 I want your advice and Adolf yours to. Dean, I'll go to you first here. Would you say that 429 00:44:49,909 --> 00:44:56,800 40 to $50,000. Sitting in a bank account is about what you should have before you take 430 00:44:56,800 --> 00:45:03,279 on an owner-operator, or lease-purchase program. Uh oh. Yeah. Absolutely. 431 00:45:03,320 --> 00:45:09,719 Um, and, um, I mean, I can't say too much about, you know, being a 432 00:45:09,720 --> 00:45:16,279 true owner-operator because I've never been there. I've always been a, you know, lease purchase. But 433 00:45:16,280 --> 00:45:21,999 yeah, even going into a lease purchase, you should have a lot of money in your bank account. Uh, 434 00:45:22,000 --> 00:45:28,999 because. Yeah, the company that you lease on with. Ah, they will probably. Well, not all of 435 00:45:28,999 --> 00:45:35,438 them, but some of them have a maintenance, uh, program they take out a little bit each month and 436 00:45:35,439 --> 00:45:42,319 set up a maintenance account for you and, you know, an escrow account. And, uh, each paycheck, they take 437 00:45:42,360 --> 00:45:49,359 a little certain percentage out and put it into that escrow, uh, to build up. The problem is you 438 00:45:49,360 --> 00:45:56,009 have to let it build up. And then when you need it, it's there. I was in the shop all the time, so I 439 00:45:56,009 --> 00:46:03,009 never had a chance to build up my escrow. Right. So. So they would do the 440 00:46:03,010 --> 00:46:09,409 work on the truck and then at a later date, they would take it, uh, out of my paycheck. 441 00:46:09,770 --> 00:46:16,449 Uh, and that could be six months from the time the work was done. You know, 442 00:46:16,610 --> 00:46:21,769 uh, all of a sudden they'll just take out money and you're like, what's this from? And you look and 443 00:46:21,769 --> 00:46:28,128 it's, oh, they did this work six months ago, and they're just not taking it out. Uh, 444 00:46:28,490 --> 00:46:34,809 yeah. It kills you. It absolutely kills you. It does. It does. Adolf, From what you've seen from your, uh, 445 00:46:34,809 --> 00:46:40,729 your brother's doing the owner operator thing. Uh, how much money do you think if let's just say 446 00:46:40,729 --> 00:46:45,489 this, you're you've decided that tomorrow you're going to go and you're going to tackle this? How 447 00:46:45,490 --> 00:46:51,219 much money would you want sitting in a bank account just ready to be spent on a truck before 448 00:46:51,219 --> 00:46:57,979 you would go out and try to become an owner operator like your brothers. Um, I would say 449 00:46:58,019 --> 00:47:04,458 anywhere from 50 to 60,000, because you need to, I mean, to save a lot of money. Like, I have a little 450 00:47:04,459 --> 00:47:11,139 shop down the road, and I probably got about 10 to 15 grand and different tools and compressors and 451 00:47:11,139 --> 00:47:17,418 all that that my brother and a couple friends use. But, um, 452 00:47:18,219 --> 00:47:24,820 I would say about 60 grand. Yeah. That's crazy. And I mean, it's. With good credit, with good credit. 453 00:47:24,860 --> 00:47:30,899 Yeah. 800 plus, 800 plus. Yeah. I didn't even think about that. Because if you're not doing the lease 454 00:47:30,899 --> 00:47:36,139 purchase thing like Dean, that credit check is definitely going to come into, uh, some somebody's 455 00:47:36,139 --> 00:47:40,859 going to have to give you a loan, right? I mean, you're going to have to either get a fuel card or 456 00:47:40,860 --> 00:47:47,399 you have to get a loan. Yeah. To go buy your your equipment. So I would say to start 457 00:47:47,399 --> 00:47:54,359 out 60 grand cash. It's not a cheap game, man. It's not a cheap game doing this 458 00:47:54,360 --> 00:48:00,919 owner operator thing. So just from my my personal experience and my 459 00:48:01,080 --> 00:48:06,878 looking at my brother's and everything. Um, when I walked away from Cypress, I had my 401 460 00:48:07,919 --> 00:48:13,000 plus, I got my military retirement, and I had everything paid off when I left Cypress. Everything. 461 00:48:13,479 --> 00:48:20,319 Everything paid off. House, cars, everything. 100% paid off. And I 462 00:48:20,320 --> 00:48:27,320 walked away from Cypress with 140 grand in the bank. Wow. All from being a company 463 00:48:27,320 --> 00:48:34,239 driver. Company driver? Yes, sir. Yes, sir. Well, I I'm I'm glad to hear it, man. And 464 00:48:34,239 --> 00:48:39,439 congratulations on the retirement. Uh, you still sound like you got a lot of energy left in you. I, 465 00:48:39,479 --> 00:48:45,688 I, I really appreciate you even coming on this podcast. If I were you, you I would be recording 466 00:48:45,689 --> 00:48:51,528 this podcast from a golf course right now, or a fishing hole or something like that. So, uh, we 467 00:48:51,570 --> 00:48:57,370 greatly appreciate the time from you and Dean. Same goes to you, man. Uh, I know, because I haven't 468 00:48:57,370 --> 00:49:01,449 heard you do any, uh, get out of the truck or anything like that. It sounds like you're just 469 00:49:01,450 --> 00:49:07,448 still waiting, man. Which is a part of being a truck driver, isn't it? Yeah. It is. I mean, I'm, I 470 00:49:07,610 --> 00:49:14,449 actually, I'm pulled up into place and, uh. Oh, he's offloading me right now. Oh, perfect. Well, 471 00:49:14,449 --> 00:49:19,169 it's great timing, fellas. Uh, real quick, we'll get to your final thoughts here. I always give 472 00:49:19,169 --> 00:49:23,809 everybody that comes on the show a chance to say anything that they want to before we leave. So, 473 00:49:23,850 --> 00:49:29,168 Dean, since, uh, they're about to start unloading you or have started, uh, final thoughts from you, my 474 00:49:29,169 --> 00:49:36,048 friend. Thanks for being here today. Uh, my pleasure, my pleasure. Uh, you know, uh, my final 475 00:49:36,049 --> 00:49:41,929 thoughts is just, you know, do your homework, uh, before you decide to, you know, become an owner, 476 00:49:41,929 --> 00:49:48,899 operator and, uh, Think, Think through it real hard. Amen to 477 00:49:48,939 --> 00:49:55,500 that, man. Good advice. Good advice from somebody that's seen it. Uh. It's expensive. Right? It's very 478 00:49:55,500 --> 00:50:02,179 expensive. Well, thank you, Dean. We appreciate the time. Adolf, final thoughts from you before we let 479 00:50:02,179 --> 00:50:08,898 you go, my friend. Again, thank you for the time. Um, um, just real quick. You got to be 480 00:50:08,940 --> 00:50:15,219 fat, F.A.T. You gotta be faithful. You gotta be accountable, and you gotta be trainable. 481 00:50:15,860 --> 00:50:21,259 So if you can do those three things, you can be a successful 482 00:50:22,260 --> 00:50:28,859 driver. And then the last thing is stay off that cell phone. Stay off it, man. 483 00:50:28,899 --> 00:50:35,379 Stay off it. Great advice from you there. Uh, Adolf and, uh, Dean, both of you guys did awesome today. 484 00:50:35,379 --> 00:50:40,019 Thanks for making your first appearance on the Cypress Trunk Line podcast. We will definitely get 485 00:50:40,020 --> 00:50:44,669 you guys back in here again. Okay. Thank appreciate it. I appreciate it. 486 00:50:49,430 --> 00:50:55,908 Oh. Great stuff there from Dean and Adolf. Really 487 00:50:55,909 --> 00:51:02,229 appreciate those guys coming on to share all the great insight. You know, it's not really a 488 00:51:02,230 --> 00:51:08,989 surprise, I guess is what I'll say. Uh, to see Dean back with Cypress after he started out there, uh, 489 00:51:08,990 --> 00:51:14,069 liked it, but kind of got, uh, he got hooked. You know, he said it. He said I fell for it. I was the 490 00:51:14,070 --> 00:51:19,269 idiot. I went lease purchase. He called himself an idiot. Um, I don't think that that's the case. I 491 00:51:19,269 --> 00:51:24,470 think he's being a little hard on himself there. I think it's easy for anybody to see dollar signs 492 00:51:24,470 --> 00:51:30,349 and a new opportunity and jump at it. We are all guilty of that at one point in time or another. 493 00:51:30,389 --> 00:51:35,628 Even if it's only, you know, seeing those little green double zeros on the roulette table and 494 00:51:35,629 --> 00:51:41,029 thinking, man, that's going to hit one of these times, I'm going to put my $50 on it. Nope. Never 495 00:51:41,080 --> 00:51:46,479 does. But you still do it. And that's okay. That's human nature. That's who we all are as a species. 496 00:51:46,600 --> 00:51:53,199 Uh, but I really appreciated Dean being so honest about his experience and saying, listen, not 497 00:51:53,200 --> 00:52:00,158 only was it stressful, not only was I constantly bleeding money, um, but it it really 498 00:52:00,159 --> 00:52:04,959 I was not successful at it doing it that way. And I wanted to come back to something where I could 499 00:52:04,960 --> 00:52:10,158 be successful doing it this way. And he's doing it the Cypress and Sun Belt way now. It's working out 500 00:52:10,159 --> 00:52:16,639 great for him as far as Adolf is concerned. Um, what what a great, just wealth of knowledge when 501 00:52:16,639 --> 00:52:23,600 it comes to the trucking industry. Um, and seeing his brothers firsthand struggle 502 00:52:23,600 --> 00:52:29,559 with the trappings of being owner-operators. You know, he, he said that his brothers have been doing 503 00:52:29,560 --> 00:52:35,719 it for a while now, so they're obviously finding some success in it. And he's still cautioning you, 504 00:52:35,759 --> 00:52:42,699 man, it's probably not a good idea unless you can get a 50 or 60 grand saved up in your 505 00:52:42,699 --> 00:52:48,860 bank account. That's a lot of money. Like, I, you know, just having that sitting there in case you 506 00:52:48,860 --> 00:52:55,259 need to use it. That's that's big, big bucks. And, uh, I think that this episode did exactly what I was 507 00:52:55,259 --> 00:53:01,579 hoping it would do today, which is sort of shed light on why we don't have a lease purchase 508 00:53:01,580 --> 00:53:08,579 program here at Cypress. And I reached out to, uh, to Clay Hamblen, actually. And I 509 00:53:08,620 --> 00:53:15,459 said, Clay, give me a couple of sentences or a paragraph about why Cypress doesn't 510 00:53:15,459 --> 00:53:20,699 have a lease purchase program. And he sent me something back. And I'm going to kind of read this 511 00:53:20,700 --> 00:53:24,899 verbatim because he wanted me to clean it up a little bit. But I think there's a little bit of 512 00:53:24,899 --> 00:53:30,419 magic here in exactly the way that Clay wrote this. So listen to what his response was. He says 513 00:53:30,420 --> 00:53:35,419 trucking is challenging enough, and we have discussed offering a lease purchase program. But 514 00:53:35,420 --> 00:53:40,949 up to this point, we've always felt that having a mixture of lease purchase owner operators with 515 00:53:40,950 --> 00:53:46,949 company drivers would open up and cause more problems. We'd rather be able to focus 516 00:53:46,950 --> 00:53:52,908 100% of our effort into company only drivers. We've built a good culture here at Cypress Truck 517 00:53:52,909 --> 00:53:58,669 Lines and there's a saying don't fix what's not broken. Um, I think that's very well said. And you 518 00:53:58,669 --> 00:54:03,790 can tell the other thing that I think is important here to draw on. You can totally tell 519 00:54:03,790 --> 00:54:10,589 that Cypress is 100% invested in their company drivers, because look at Dean. He's loving it. 520 00:54:10,629 --> 00:54:15,869 He's right where he wants to be. Look at Adolf. He's retired, for God's sake. I mean, the guy's 521 00:54:15,870 --> 00:54:20,989 living down in Pensacola, Florida, watching the Blue Angels fly over his house every day. That is 522 00:54:20,990 --> 00:54:27,229 the life. And that's brought to you by being a company driver. Okay? It's it's not. There's no ifs, 523 00:54:27,229 --> 00:54:32,869 ands or buts about it, if you will. And I'll also draw reference to another gentleman who provided 524 00:54:32,870 --> 00:54:39,279 a ton of awesome, uh, info for this interview. And that is Carlos Trent. And one of these days I'm 525 00:54:39,280 --> 00:54:42,918 going to get him on the episode or get him on the podcast. He doesn't like the way his voice sounds 526 00:54:42,919 --> 00:54:47,959 on a recording, and I get that. We've all struggled with that. Trust me, as a broadcaster, the first 527 00:54:47,959 --> 00:54:53,359 four years of my career, I wouldn't wear both ear earphones on my headphones. I had to have one of 528 00:54:53,360 --> 00:54:57,958 them off because I couldn't stand the way my voice sounded in my head. It goes away, but it 529 00:54:57,959 --> 00:55:04,319 takes 1000 hours. So I'm going to get Carlos one of these days. But I will thank him kindly for the 530 00:55:04,320 --> 00:55:10,040 stories and the information that he brought about being an owner-operator. It's another guy who was 531 00:55:10,040 --> 00:55:16,040 doing it, saw how much he was spending, and just said, this ain't it. I gotta go back and be a 532 00:55:16,040 --> 00:55:20,799 company driver. Now he's back with Cypress and happy as a clam man. And that's that's what you're 533 00:55:20,800 --> 00:55:26,600 looking for, right? At the end of the day, trucking is a job. It puts food on the table. And what we 534 00:55:26,600 --> 00:55:31,959 discovered here is that you might very well have a lot less food on the table. If you are an owner 535 00:55:31,960 --> 00:55:37,688 operator that doesn't have some walking around money in your pocket. Okay. 15 grand for the top 536 00:55:37,689 --> 00:55:44,048 end. 15 grand for the bottom end of the engine. Another 15 grand for your transmission. Another 15 537 00:55:44,049 --> 00:55:50,689 grand for your def filter system. And on and on and on. We haven't even touched your tires. We 538 00:55:50,689 --> 00:55:56,049 haven't even touched your fuel. We haven't touched your insurance. It's an expensive game. Trucking is 539 00:55:56,050 --> 00:56:01,649 an expensive game. There's no question about it. So do your research before. It's not to say that 540 00:56:01,649 --> 00:56:08,089 being an owner, operator or doing a lease purchase program with another company won't work for 541 00:56:08,090 --> 00:56:14,449 somebody. It can. It will. It has and it will again. However, do your research 542 00:56:14,449 --> 00:56:20,489 beforehand. And if you take any advice that we gave in this entire episode, I'm going to say get 543 00:56:20,490 --> 00:56:27,289 a really, really good numbers guy. Uh, CPA great. But you better make sure and vet 544 00:56:27,330 --> 00:56:32,449 them that they've got a little bit of transportation industry experience or in Carlos's 545 00:56:32,449 --> 00:56:39,349 case, a lot of transportation industry experience. I told you off the top $160,000. 546 00:56:39,389 --> 00:56:44,428 The IRS came after Carlos for and he ended up getting that turned into a refund by somebody 547 00:56:44,429 --> 00:56:49,429 that knew what they were doing. Um, the IRS does not care about getting it right. They just want 548 00:56:49,429 --> 00:56:53,949 the money until you can prove to them that you don't owe them that money, and then they'll be 549 00:56:53,949 --> 00:56:58,669 okay with it. Oh, you got all these write-offs. Well, you should have told us. Yeah, funny how that works, 550 00:56:58,710 --> 00:57:04,949 Uncle Sam. Uh, but I digress yet again, I really think that this episode was chock full of some 551 00:57:04,949 --> 00:57:10,229 great advice from some really experienced guys. And, uh, man, if you're if you've ever thought about 552 00:57:10,230 --> 00:57:15,469 it before, or maybe you're out there doing it right now and it's starting to kind of rear its 553 00:57:15,470 --> 00:57:21,228 ugly head, the reality of the situation, then maybe you should give Cypress a call, come back here and 554 00:57:21,269 --> 00:57:25,789 hang out with Dean and Carlos and maybe even see Adolf every now and then. If he drops by the 555 00:57:25,789 --> 00:57:29,669 lot, I'm not sure. Be hard to pull me out of Pensacola, Florida too, with the Blue Angels 556 00:57:29,670 --> 00:57:34,638 overhead and all. But that's about all I've got for you today, I want to remind you to head over 557 00:57:34,639 --> 00:57:41,559 to podcast.cypresstruck.com. That is our website for all things podcast. You can find all 558 00:57:41,559 --> 00:57:46,799 the episodes up there and you can send me your email messages. If you want to be on the show or 559 00:57:46,799 --> 00:57:51,119 you've got something that you want to talk about. I'm constantly making episodes out of your guys's 560 00:57:51,119 --> 00:57:56,159 ideas and I would love to hear yours. So head on over to the website and say hi to me. Hit me right 561 00:57:56,160 --> 00:58:01,639 in the pocket. As I say, Cypress, be safe out there. Uh, make sure you keep the shiny side up on all 562 00:58:01,639 --> 00:58:06,759 those beautiful cypress trucks, and we will see you next week, 5 a.m. local time for another 563 00:58:06,760 --> 00:58:11,159 episode of the Cypress Truck Lines podcast. I've been. Marcus, you've been awesome. We'll see you 564 00:58:11,160 --> 00:58:11,959 next week.