 This morning we're delivering this bundle under the tarp here in Steinbach. And then we're delivering the rest of this into Winnipeg. I'd wash my hands, grab some breakfast, orange juice. My hands are cold now. I washed them and then I went outside. It's another new day. Glad you're here. It's going to be great. Look at us go deliver some freight and go pick up some new freight. Into Niet, I get to deliver. They're going to take this hardwood lumber off the tail of my trailer. I'm more back here. I better not get stuck back here. He said I could get back here, so. Oh, look at this. It opens up in here. I'm going to be able to turn around. I've never been in here. I don't usually deliver to my home area. Usually out elsewhere. I have to make a tight corner for receiving. This is where he told me to go. He knows I'm back here. Just talk to him with a phone. Okay, this isn't that bad. It looked tighter than I was. The old Volvo can turn on a dime. This isn't even the tightest she can turn. Face ourselves this way. Talk to the receiver before I take my tarps off. I'm a crew, I hired so that I can have them film me all kinds of different angles when I make sharp corners like that. That'd be fun. I'd have to have a lot more subscribers to be able to afford that. And just like that, the freight was gone in there. So this is kind of like a bunch of garbage. This is a bunch of pallets that have been disassembled, put into or built into what they call L brackets, L something. They're put to put stuff in there, I think. It's all just a bunch of pallet wood. I brought this from Wisconsin up to Canada. I could have built these myself in a couple of hours. But hey, I didn't want to say anything. They paid me to bring them. Like, what, was a thousand miles? I'm just happy to be working. All right, let's blow this popsicle stand. I actually had a buddy, Justin, we called him Ginter, a year. Well, he lives around here somewhere. So I don't know if he still works here or not, but I had a buddy who worked here for many years at this place, got up and take it wider. I am definitely going to have to back up and take it wider. Okay. All right. Take two, Dr. Josh, made a boo boo. He made an oopsie, but it's fixable. Don't worry. I didn't hit anything. Not yet anyway. Take it a little bit. This is one of those receiving yards that wasn't designed for a 75 foot unit. That's okay. We made it work. I'm not in here so I can get out. You can do it. I'm a one man show, guys. I can do what I can. You just have to trust me. We didn't hit anything. We got some action going on in Steinbeck. Go the Mounties on McPhilip Street here in Winnipeg. I got to make a quick pit stop on my way to deliver. It's right on the way. Just had to take a little bit of a different route. My cousin, a friend that makes masks or is making masks for people who need it. Reusable ones. Had two available. So she left it outside, somewhere outside her place around here. And I'm going to go pick them up. There'll be one for me and one for Brett's area. This is, well, I'm going to have been here. Brett used to live in this area of the city. She grew up in this area. I see most people are wearing masks. Yeah. I ordered some like two months ago before all of this got big and they still haven't come. So this way we got a reusable one. It's got a little pocket built in apparently for a filter. Yeah, I know. I know. I know I'm going. Feels like home. It's not my home. I never thought of Winnipeg as my home city, but I guess it's the capital of my province. So I spent a lot of time here. I know the city really well. My first delivery job was delivering pizza in the southeast corner of the city. When I first got my license, I love to drive around and cruise, right? And I would always, oh, nice pickup on the right. Nice. Nice. Better stop here so this van can get through this. What was I talking about? Oh yeah. I always like to just cruise around Winnipeg, right? So I got to know the streets really well. So these are the masks and they come, like I said, with a built-in little pocket here where you can buy a filter and you put the filter in there. I like this design. I think that's the one I'm going to wear. Lots of Brit takes it, but we have to let these sit for three days before we use them anyway, just for, you know, make sure that everything is, you know, everything that's going on. Everything's weird. You got to let everything sit for three days. I can't live on services for more than three days, I believe, but this one's skulls and the pirates on it. It's pretty cool. I think Brit's really going to like that. So yeah, I don't know if she watches my videos or not. I don't know if my cousin who lined this up for me watches my videos or not, or if you're watching this one, but just want to say thank you for this. These are hard to come by and it was really nice for to make these for us. So really appreciate it. I'm going home for a couple of days now. No, for tonight and tomorrow. I got to leave on Saturday with this new load. So what we're going to do is we're going to just let these masks sit for three days, just in case if there's anything on them that they can be totally clean and whatnot, you know, just got to be careful. And then after that, on my next trip, I'll be able to use it. I know I'm touching it with my hands, but I have hand sanitizer. Don't worry. And I disinfect everything I touch on a regular basis, but I don't think there's anything on. I trust her, but you know, you'd never know on these times. You never know on these times. Crazy days we're living in and never thought I'd be wearing a mask at work. But here we are 2020 having a blast. It's a good thing I just got these masks to because a message just came through here from the big guys, the big guys at the office. Some of our customers now are requiring all drivers to wear a mask when we're on their property and in their facilities. And if they don't have a mask or some sort of face covering, they're going to be rejected and asked to leave. So it's a good thing I just got these masks. So keeping my options available to pick up freight. There she was 34,000 pounds. This is going down to Southern Illinois. Somebody down there needs whatever this is. So we've got four chains on the front, four on the back. That's more than enough for this. We've got to strap over the forks over here, keep that from rattling around. Should be fun. It's a nice weight, 34,000 pounds. It's a nice weight, not too heavy, not too light, enough to keep me planted on the ground, but not too much to drag me down. And the fuel economy should be pretty good because the air is just going to sail around it. It's a good load. And I was also just told by my wife that these masks that I got today, when we get home, we can actually wash them. She's got the special little bag that she puts delicate stuff in and we can put it through a gentle cycle on the wash. That way we can use them right away. I'm going out to, apparently my friend is moving tomorrow. So they need help moving all their stuff, at least their heavy stuff. So while we're moving stuff around and stuff and going in and out of the house, I can have my mask on. And it'll help also because I have a slight allergy to cats and they have a cat. So it'll serve more than one purpose. Well, here's today's project. Get all of this junk outside and out of here. So this is our master bedroom project that we're working on. This is what it used to be.