 Good morning everybody from the dashboard of my truck near Ann Arbor, Michigan on our way up to Toronto, Ontario. Starting our day here. We only have about a day today to do a park here. Of course, I got someone coming up right beside me. Don't let me over. I don't want to place the park and sleep. 200 meters. Take the entrance to the right on I-94 east. Towards Ann Arbor. We're just outside that town right now. We're getting ourselves on the freeway here. Start making our way up to Canada with our essential freight. Slide right on. They can be on Circle Tube Highway 402. You'd think one or the other would have to own the bridge, but this side of the bridge is the camera. I already told them Karen. This is a Canadian bridge. Just like that. We're back in Canada. I guess that's what I call it. We're on this road for 152 kilometers. Ontario Flying Day. Which can't be good. I need to throw out my garbage. So the Warwick crossing wasn't all that special or anything. They asked if I was sick. I told them no. I'm feeling good. Asked all the regular questions and off I went. I guess for commercial traffic they're trying to keep us moving. So I'm trying to speed us through. But I'm surprised that they don't have some kind of like, you know, they have those in some countries. A lot of countries are on the world. They have these thermometers that don't touchless thermometers. Is that what they call them? They just point it at your forehead and it'll tell them if you have a fever or not. I'm surprised we don't have that at our border crossing, even for the drivers. Because if anybody's crossing with a fever, maybe they should be told, okay, you got to self-isolate even though you're a trucker. You need to go and self-isolate. You're sick. You have a fever. I thought for sure something like that. They just asked if I was sick. Well, no, I'm actually feeling good. But if I wasn't, and I lied, would you know? I don't know. I would support those electronic temperature readers. They don't have to touch us or anything. All they'd have to do is get us to lean out the window or something and just point it at our forehead and it just checks to see what the temperature of your head is. I thought that would be common sense. But I guess just another, what do they call it, a cog in the machine? I'm just another, just a lowly peasant. But I'm an essential peasant. I think it's kind of cool how Ontario paints the lines orange like it was back there in their construction zones. Sort of makes the driver more alert to, okay, there might be, you know, sudden changes in the lanes or something. You know, we're in a construction zone. I like it. We still got coals out here, but looks like this isn't as important of a construction zone. I don't know. We're just coming up to the greater Toronto area here. This is the most populated spot in Canada. I live very far away from here, but for today we're going to be here amongst all these other people and their germs. I'm just kidding. You guys are great. Some of you need to wash your hands though. Just saying. Go wash your hands. The other side of Toronto, Toronto is sort of like a long city. If you look on a map, it's built along the lake. So it's a long city rather than, you know, spread out from one central point. It's spread out along the lake. Oh, here's these orange lines again. See? Fancy. To the other side, I believe it's in Scarborough, which is like a burl or a suburb or another city within Toronto. It's all Toronto to me. And I can go park right at the customer. They're going to be there at 6 a.m. tomorrow. Get right to it first thing without having to wait around or make my way over. The truck has been running all right today. Running all right. Tomorrow we've got to go to St. Catharines to pick up our load. It's going to be a wide load, so that's kind of cool. Not too wide, just 10 foot wide. And we're taking it all the way to Alberta, like I thought. So to deliver the load, I'm going to have to shave off my magnificent beard. And I apologize in advance for that, but feel free to laugh at me because I know I look ridiculous without it. But for to get paid, I got to deliver the load. I could get someone else to deliver it from Winnipeg, but I want the pennies. So I'm going to take the pennies, the nickels, the dimes, and maybe even a Looney. And I'll deliver it. And I'll just shave. Not excited about it, but whatever. At least I don't go like a big great beard. I'm not losing a huge big beard. I'll be fine. It'll grow back. It's in the sky. And each little box has a person or two or a family in there. Not one building. Wall soundproof? Or wouldn't you get, like, wouldn't it be annoying having your neighbors above you making noise all the time? Or beside you making noise all the time? Can you guys hear each other through the wall? More big buildings. Way up on the hill. I bet you the view is great up there. You know, the only way to want to live in a building? A big building? I don't want to be on the top floor. Meters. Take. Begnet, Naven, then. Slide left and do 170 meters. You give it, let me. Okay, so you want me to go right. I'm messed up. I was supposed to exit at the next exit. 600 meters. Turn left on. Dunn Mills Road. Hey, look. Park anywhere and get away with the lights. Nice. I got those too. Just got to go around. Took the wrong exit. Thanks, Karen. 200 meters. Turn left on. Dunn Mills Road. And what's the city buses here? Like, the one coming up on the left. They got, like, blue LED lights on the front. Bright blue lights. Almost looks like that. Cop. They're police buses. He's got his park anywhere and get away with the lights flashing too. Oh, construction. Oh, my favorite. That's awesome. This is fantastic. No left turns right now. Oh, man. What kind of mess did I get myself into? Look at what you've done. When I trust her too much, the right exit to me. So I trust her. No, no, no. We're going to go all the way to the end here and get back on the freeway and come back. Looks like I can go all the way to... Oh, boy. Self-quarantining in these little boxes. I can understand all the posts online about people getting bored. Yeah, if I lived in the small places I got, I'd be bored. Cheaper to live out in the country. I was just saying. It's 600 meters. Like a U-turn if possible. It's not possible, Karen. For a lot of people, like all the people who live here, it's not really, it wouldn't really be cheaper for them to live in the country because all their jobs are here in the city, right? And they'd have to commute a long ways in. If I had to commute into the city every day, it wouldn't be worth that. I couldn't do that. I'd move to the city then. I just like being a little hard on them. I'm just having fun. Well, we eventually found the customer there where I'm delivering to and I don't know. I looked around and I'm like, I don't know this neighborhood. I don't know if I feel comfortable in this neighborhood. I don't want to sleep in this neighborhood. I just didn't know it. I mean, I don't know the area. So there wasn't really any good parking anywhere on the street. Everywhere I went, it said no parking, no parking, like typical. I can never find anywhere to park. So I went down the road to Pickering, Ontario where there's a petrol pass, truck stop. I've stopped here many times in the past before and I'm just going to sleep here. I'm going to go to bed almost right away. I'm just going to read my book a bit and then head off to Dreamworld. We'll be up early tomorrow morning to go unload this, I think it's called an aerial platform, no, aerial platform genie or a genie lift truck. I don't know what it is. We're going to deliver it and get it off my trailer tomorrow morning and then run over to St. Catharines, load up some oversized steel, which is going to be really heavy. Hopefully my truck is up to the task. I know I am. And we're going to pull that on out to Alberta. Don't forget to subscribe and click one of these videos around here on the screen. It'll take you to yesterday's and another video that I thought you might like. We'll see you tomorrow.