We are a dying breed and no one respects what we do out here. I am a widow of a trucker and I drive. I am reminded about the hard work we do. To all my brothers and sisters you are making me proud to call you FAMILY
The golden days of trucking, and I was there! Drove from 69 to 89 until doctors pulled me out of my truck & off the road. That day was one of the worst days of my life but I've got enough memories to last a lifetime. They called me High-Gear...
The Average Quiz : I have a feeling you would've loved it. To be sure, driving back then had it's ups & downs but for the most part the good outweighed the bad by a long shot. Sadly you young drivers today will never understand the freedom & independence we had..it was a different world back then, and lord did we have fun...
One of my favorite past times were watching all the different paint schemes. Now? Shoot. Boring. Bland Invisible. Kenworth. Peterbilt. Freightliner. My favorite in that order. 70-80s only.
I couldn't agree with you more, @@TheBostonTrucker! I'm absolutely certain Lesa "Yo-Yo" Worley's still wearing her oversized, ten-gallon cowboy hat, tight jeans, and cowboy boots to this very day while still looking beautiful, elegant, and sophisticated! Thanks for commenting, bro!
Lesa is one beautiful lady, inside and out. Soooo very glad to have met her years ago. A straight up gal, that I'm proud to call my friend. Just killin' me that her health is goin' down the tubes. "Eagle Claw" on the flip.
What an interesting story! I'm so delighted (not to mention a little bit envious) you got to meet Lesa "Yo-Yo" Worley many years ago! Despite her health woes, I'll definitely continue to pray for "Yo-Yo'"! Thanks for commenting, @@tombeyer375!
Haven't bought DEF in over 5 years. W9 glider w/6nz. Started driving in 75, I remember the old days. Some of it was kinda rough, but we had a good time.
I remember growing up through the 80s and talking with truckers on the CB while we were driving on family trips... some of the best people out there, and they still are
Yep,Transport City is just a parking lot and a body dump now. I retired from trucking last year,the trucking business has become unrecognizable from when I started in 79.
I used to buy log books 6 at the time at truck stops @ 25C a book and no one ever check them. We drove till we got tired, had 4hrs nap and went again. No fcucking stress, no cameras or aircon, just bloody mosquitoes ( Canadian North) and permits for every State or Province. @#&&%$@, other than that, no comment :-)
What an awesome video ! The golden age of trucking for sure , I sent this to my uncle and he got quite a kick out of it! He said in ‘79 he was hauling steel to New York in a ‘72 White Freightliner coe with no power steering, and if he could go back to them days it’d be only for that gal and her truck 😂😂😂
@@olvinyldude I collect RUclips music artist from around the World on my channel for a number of years. One YT uploader from the UK uploaded his vinyl record collections that are very rare. Some are first pressing albums. I listen to many genres of music even in other languages. Some are one of a kind found nowhere else including some concerts.
@@davidfromamerica1871 That is awesome! I have several of those also, some of only pressings known... I have a few up on the channel, & I do indeed love all genre music as well! Music is the great healer & soother.. I have the Original "Tombstone Every Mile" up on the channel, you may enjoy that one..it is so different, from the one we heard on Radio back in the day.. Happy Trails!
One of my lifetime dreams was to became a long haul trucker in north america.! 2009 i was fullfilling my dream and moved over from munich bavaria to a canadian company which one is servicing cross border. planned for one year finally it was a little more than 10 years and it was best time in my life. phantastic people,amazing customers and always nice officers and i be very proud and thankful that i have had the chance to spend the time in middle of all this great people. i never forget this phantastic times and always thinking back in a positive mind. to all the people my best wishes an stay safe out there
Oh Carolina flash a good ol boy. Drove with that man for 3 year's unfortunately never had the privilege to drive with yo yo. Thanks for sharing Mike really appreciate it the good old days
The good old days are gone an we the old school are fading away I'm proud I was way back when we there trucker had respect, morals and values God bless you all an keep the sunny side up
You’ve got that right, driver. Some young drivers I know enjoy sitting for hours and listening to my stories of those good old days. Others think I’m lying and look at me like I’ve got a third eye in the middle of my forehead. Drivers like you and I were members of the privileged few who got to experience a rare time in history when drivers had true freedom & independence,......and lord did we have fun doing a job we loved...
She was a fine looking woman! I noticed she pulled one of them walkin sticks out of her hat! Any bull hauler will know what I'm talking about Com'on. ;) ;) I started trailer trucking in '83. Man those were the days! I loved it! Bought my own truck and trailer in October of '88. Long nose Petercar with a shiny hiney. I miss that ride to this day. Had a bad motorcycle wreck in '94 and got stuck in a wheelchair for a while. Ahhh bygone days for the memory bank Lol.
Great job, and video here ! I remember seeing that show with Yo-Yo on as guest! She was great ... I have her record,with her singing, "Yo-Yo On the Side" ...Actually, I put it up on my channel several years ago. ... I love/breathe Diesel, drove several years, 70's, thru 90's ... Great times..Miss it often, always knew where to stop and eat ! Miss all those great Truck Music songs, also.. I have many, many of them on my channel as well ... Thanx so much, Yo-Yo for all your years of keeping America going, and supplied.."IF YOU OWN IT, A TRUCKER BROUGHT IT" ! ! ! Bless you, Yo-Yo.. and you also, Boston Trucker... Thanx for all you do.. Awesome video ! ! !
Oh yes back when we had real television. Real people was always one of my favorite shows and I remember watching this episode. Sarah Purcell was an absolute gem of a human being very beautiful and a great interviewer. Yoyo certainly did know how to fill out those jeans...lol.
Man I have 21 years under my belt I came in at the end of the golden era of Big Rigging I remember those old school guys they taught me the ropes, those days are long gone 😥😥😥😥😥😥😥😥😥
Right along with ya I've been out 21 years myself and was taught old school to far cry from today from the nit wits sterring wheel holders and weenies of today and the flip flop freddys u gotta look at over the summer there's very few of u and I out here anymore were the last of the real truckers
22 yrs out here pulling a skateboard, don't let the good times die fellas. Trucking is what we make it. Still gear jamming with my paper logs, no emissions, straight pipes and big hammer cb. Roll on brothers.
This video made my eyes swell up. I really miss those old trucks. That was the best time to be truckin. I started in 1985 and drove some of those old trucks...memories.
I did too. 1989. My first truck. 1985 International coe. Short stick. Super 10. You and I are the last of a generation of Truckers. Now. There are just people who drive trucks. I know you understand exactly what I mean. I have 31+ years. Growing tired. I long for the day when I can afford to drive my truck down that last mile to where "They" like Yo yo and all of the Truckers are waiting for me and welcome me home.
I started in 1981, The first machine I drove was a 73 freightliner with an old 290 cummins air over hydraulic wedge brakes, no power steering, no horses , and you had to drag your feet if you want to stop,, had a road Ranger 13 speed, I cursed that truck almost every day I was in it but when I look back at it that’s the truck that made me a driver machanic,, still working on diesel today, 59 years young,,
I had been infatuated with big trucks since I was 3 years old and was 15 years old when I watched this! I figured if she could drive those big rigs so could I and in 1991 my dream came true. Yo Yo was this little girl's inspiration! If she's still around I hope she's doing alright and I'd thank her if I could!
Thank you for sharing this. I really appreciate watching drivers from previous generations. As a 4th generation driver i wouldn't be here now without them.
Boy this video sure brought back memories. Even the truck stop. (been there, done that).started in the 70's until last year. Started with a 67 COE International coe 4000 with a 238 Detroit with a 10. No power steering , no air ride , not even seat. vacuum power windows wipers. Back then truck stops had great food, free coffee, some had full service fuel . Also truckers were more friendly to each other and would help each other. ON a side note saw a Midwest trailer. remember home of the 1 dollar down truck to become a o/o
I know an old man who's been trucking over 40 years, still going. He remembers back when very few of the truck stops had showers. It was nothing for a trucker to stop his truck on a bridge over a river or creek, get down in the water underneath and take a bath. Those guys were tough as nails!
When you could actually tell what kind of truck it was coming from a mile away.....and what was under the hood between the air cleaners when it went past. Great video!!!!
Miles long convoys were my favorite parts of childhood road trips in the 80s running up and down I65 and the connecting highways. We went to Michigan, Tennessee, Georgia, Alabama and Florida plenty from home in Louisville Kentucky
I started driving straights in '76 and 18's in '78....did 40 years. SO glad I got to drive real deal A-Cars and B Models and White Freightliners and cabovers. OH those cabovers! I left part of my left kidney in a Transtar 4070! Truckers today with their flip flops and sweat pants and headsets. UGH!!
I have 31+ years. Growing tired. I long for the day when I can afford to drive my truck down that last mile to where "They" like Yo yo and all of the Truckers are waiting for me and welcome me home.
Hi-jacked by the fringe, lunatics running the asylum, we was to polite for our own damn good, quiet when we should’ve been yelling, sleeping when we should’ve been fighting......... Complacency rolled this great nation on her side but it was you and me who kicked her into the grave! -poem by Adam Banta
When trucking was awesome with awesome trucks! Shes got the best one ever made Pete Ex hood 359 with Airplane dash!!! Better food at truck stops too they were mom n pop shops mostly!
Back when parking at the truck stops was free whether it was for an hour or a weekend on a 1st come - 1st serve basis. My only complaints were that 1) the vegetables were always over cooked, mushy, & tasteless, and, 2) fresh fruit was a rarity.
Now this was one GOOD video...showing good ole trucks, good truckers and people out there having fun! There were some nice lady truckers out there back in the 80s etc...you could see some pretty trucks and pretty ladies driving them. Good times. 🤩
An older friend of mine was a cross-country trucker from about the late 70's to the early 90's and said it was the best job and best time of his life. Only gave it up due to health issues
The good old days, long gone just a fading memory now. I caught the arse end of it here in Australia running between Melbourne & Adelaide between 1989 & 1995. Speed limiters came in 1990 onwards & those Perth runners hammer down once they crossed into SA in the middle of the night. 180 kilometers of single lane from the border to Tailem Bend, not even a overtaking lane. Everyone respected the call on the CB for overtaking it was a matter of life & death. No accidents, no boring drive, no mobile phones, 3 different licence, no point to point cameras, no seat shakers, no camera on you & no auto box. 425 hp was king, V8 Mack's doing 100 mph on the flats. I can go on & on & on. Love this video reminds of those long lost days when it was simple. Thank you for uploading 👍
My grandpa's handle was tinkerbell, drove over a million & a half miles...logged.... unlogged was another story. Military freight & who knows what else! Much respect to all those running our freight
Man I work at my buddy's shop, we got us a beautiful 86 Pete tandem dump. Real pretty blue. We got her running good, put some jakes on the old B model cat. Pretty chrome stacks. Boy she ran and was pretty. Sold it for twice the price we got it. She still works everyday. I felt humble to work and drive the old girl.
Awesome story,I love watching about peoples lifestyles on the other side of the planet,and being about truckers made it even better,,to yo yo and all truckers,my love and respect,best wishes to all,from,Auckland,New Zealand.❤😍🙂😉😉
Your so right. nowadays its all about hauling as much freight, and as quickly as possible to get that bottom line for the company. Trucking has turned to shit. Dont think ill ever go back.
My father started driving after WW2, I was raised in a truck for the first 5 years starting in 1973, his handle was "The Scalded Dog", Curtis Leroy Jones. This was a special time in America.
I’m old enough to remember the tail end of those great days of trucking. Got to drive with the greats. I was 18 in 86’ did it for 25 years. Unfortunately the industry is finished and so am I, for the last 15 years.
Essentially they're all modern cowboys in every sense of the word. I have such great respect for truck drivers. Particularly OTR drivers who do more driving in one week then most people do in several months. All in every kind of weather. Holidays. Even disasters. The men and women that drive Peterbilts and Kenworths are what keeps America going. For without such men and women, our country stops period. God bless them all. My favorite truck is a Peterbilt 359 conventional with oversized exhaust pipes. Lots of chrome from the Chrome Shop. Extended frame and a big nice roomy sleeper. Truckers!!! We Love Y'all, Keep Trucking🇺🇲🇨🇱🐎
I can’t help but wonder if my great uncle ever met Yo-Yo. He was one of the true legendary trucker outlaws. If he met Yo-Yo I could see him giving her his six shooter he use to carry and telling her to take no grief from anyone! Lol. The stories I heard from him were unreal. Weren’t just stories, he had pictures to back it all up. I’m lucky enough to have most of those pictures, postcards and letters that he sent home from 1950-1980. Would love to know more about Yo-Yo, I can only imagine her life story. What a pioneer she must have been for women in trucking!
This is the era i was born in, but still remember enough to know that I was born too late. I am the last generation that didn't have cellphones, Internet, or did much else on a computer than use it as a glorified type writer.
@@jasmineduran6731 if enough young people felt like you do and stuck together with that state of mind I believe things could be like that again. Don’t change your self we need more young people like you. 👍🇺🇸
Its 1978 and I'm trying to get some sleep in the coffin of a 75" W9. Over the sound of a screaming jimmy my brother was beating like it owed him millions. Its 14,000 degrees in here with the windows down and the coffin door held open with bailin wire just to get some relief from that August heat as we were rollin out of Laredo Tx. My brother says "you gettin any air back there? I said "did you know that ol gal you was with all night, is married to...THE SHERIFF!? He spun around in his seat and said "NO!!!" I said "drive faster son, you need the distance..... and I need the air!" ......
@@Dajuggernaut74 yes, I seen the link video. Thanks. She should know, there are a lot of us old CBers who remember her. And her story. My heart and prayers go out to her and her family. God bless. 🙏💝
@DC if you're referring to the cigarettes just a quick fyi not all smokers get lung cancer or cancer of any kind and people that have literally never even touched a cigarette get lung cancer for example my aunt who passed from lung cancer and complications stemming from the disease never smoked a cigarette in her life
@@TheBostonTrucker sorry to hear of her poor health. I’m sure she dreams of her prime time, living the American dream on the open road. A different time and generation fading away. I come from a truck drivers family and have been turning wrenches on big rigs for the past 20 years. I hope people carry on the passion in generations to come
I sure miss them days of truck'n .we used to take care of each other out here but no more Been driving for 38 years and it sure changed alot since then and not for the better.
Just get that load there and head back for another the owner would say, I'll pay the tickets.I got the horses just load that wagon. Yes sir them were the days.
Log books what are they. I worked for a wrecker company that had seven wrecker on the road. The boss know everybody in town getting a license was easy also drove over the road for him also. Stay away from the scales and get back home. Never used a log book until I moved to a different state and drove for a different company. Now every thing is e-log no thank you.
The funny thing is I knew all the hands in this video and even the shoeshine man. Big Jackie was well known and did your boots proudly. Ran with Special K and YO, YO and both were fun to run with more than once or twice. Like all drivers who ran together, we could tell stories about each other. I remember that race as it was the talk of the road and when it happened I was on the west coast doing a turnaround. I had a black 359 1978 Pete with a 3408 in it and Mississippi was still 73,280 pounds gross weight up till 1982 and Tenn would write you up for being 55'2 length and not 55'. $121.00 for those two inches. All changed when the 48' trailers came out and then if you had one it didn't matter your length more or less. Trucking back then was fun and hard at 9-15 cents a mile or 20% grows and all the miles you wanted to run. If you run the 20% grows you can bet that truck would run over 100 miles per hour and you were told you had better do it or find another job. A lot of the old truck makers are no longer like Brockway, FWD, and others like Ford CL 9000 who made one hell of a truck before their time with the air ride cab. A little note on: Special K, was known to sandbag with his truck and do and say some of the funniest things. YO, YO was a hoot and made some real colorful remarks to you after she got to know you. One hand I remember she told him he had a cute ass and fit those jeans just right. As an afterthought, she said, Pony you know your ass is alright too. (Or something to that effect) She could talk trash with the best of them.
What was the actual name of this Transport City Truck Stop and was it located in Villa Rica, GA or in town Atlanta near the convention center and airport because I've been out here since 1987 and i don't remember it?
@@StonedPony1 Thank You, I studied up on it and found out that Transport City was eventually bought out by TA and became the crazy old TA in Conley, GA that was eventually torn down but Transport City Drive still exists as an industrial park on the same site. I was so intetested in it because I've been out here 35 years, and counting, and I can't imagine that I would have missed such an iconic place.
Sooooo very glad to have made her acquaintance out there. She's got a really good heart, and cares about her family and fellow truckers out there. She'll tell ya what's what, if ya need to hear it too!! One special lady right there. ❤
Back in the good old days of trucking when my grandpa was trucking. My grandpa started about mid 60s and stopped in 95 he could pull that rig around like nobody’s businesses nothing but respect for truckers including this girl so proud of her in a time we’re a lot of people viewed this still as a mans job
My dad drove a coal bucket for 50 years. We lived right above the shop till I was 8. I also worked there when I got old enough. We were all outlaws! My dad was known as back road Bob. For over a decade he never went through a scale even if he was empty. I heard stories from guys he drug with him that he took on roads that made their hair stand on end. Rip dad!
Those coal trucks were something else ! I remember a fleet of them sitting beside the highway. Old Hayes . Front bumpers higher than the tailgate on a 4x4 , most of them no hoods , only half a windshield. I worked with a guy who had maintained them . He said the hoods and windshields were missing cause of rocks coming off the mountains , first thing everyone did was remove the doors , so the driver had better chance to jump clear if it was going over the edge of a mountain. They would rebuild brakes every six months, and new shoes lasted one trip then drivers had to use gears and retarders . Drivers never wanted to bail out till last moment cause they got paid by the load and didn't get anything if the truck went over the edge
@@outinthesticks1035 My dad hauled coal from time to time but they hauled everything you could put in a dump trailer. Stone,boulders,dirt, scrap,lime, demolition,golf course dressing, grain and lots of other stuff too! They travel as far as Maine to Florida and west as far as Arkansas. I remember my dad hauling potatoes out of Florida in a R-model day cab Mack when I was young! I live in Pennsylvania
We are a dying breed and no one respects what we do out here. I am a widow of a trucker and I drive. I am reminded about the hard work we do. To all my brothers and sisters you are making me proud to call you FAMILY
May God bless you while you're out trucking.
They never cared...
A lot of people have lost respect for EVERYTHING! I do appreciate truckers because I am a country boy and I know these things!
Keep on truckin’
That blonde interviewer said gas tank 😅😅😅😅😅😅, and she ensist its a gas tank , yo yo said well thats diesel engine 😊😅😅 im so alive now
I want to be a trucker when I’m older and I’ve always looked up to y’all
The golden days of trucking, and I was there! Drove from 69 to 89 until doctors pulled me out of my truck & off the road. That day was one of the worst days of my life but I've got enough memories to last a lifetime. They called me High-Gear...
Wayward Son over here I stepped out in 08 when I lost my eye but Daddy brought me up learning how he did
Gentlemen, I wish I could have been there!!! I didn't start driving till 07. Sometimes I think I was born during the wrong time..
The Average Quiz : I have a feeling you would've loved it. To be sure, driving back then had it's ups & downs but for the most part the good outweighed the bad by a long shot. Sadly you young drivers today will never understand the freedom & independence we had..it was a different world back then, and lord did we have fun...
One of my favorite past times were watching all the different paint schemes. Now? Shoot. Boring. Bland
Invisible. Kenworth. Peterbilt. Freightliner. My favorite in that order. 70-80s only.
@@Shadowswordz71 me too brother.
Yo-Yo looks so beautiful, elegant, and sophisticated driving behind the wheel of her enormous big rig!
She still does!❤️🙂
I couldn't agree with you more, @@TheBostonTrucker! I'm absolutely certain Lesa "Yo-Yo" Worley's still wearing her oversized, ten-gallon cowboy hat, tight jeans, and cowboy boots to this very day while still looking beautiful, elegant, and sophisticated! Thanks for commenting, bro!
Lesa is one beautiful lady, inside and out. Soooo very glad to have met her years ago. A straight up gal, that I'm proud to call my friend. Just killin' me that her health is goin' down the tubes. "Eagle Claw" on the flip.
What an interesting story! I'm so delighted (not to mention a little bit envious) you got to meet Lesa "Yo-Yo" Worley many years ago! Despite her health woes, I'll definitely continue to pray for "Yo-Yo'"! Thanks for commenting, @@tombeyer375!
@@tombeyer375 I just looked her up on Facebook and she is sadly in bad shape. So sad. 😢
When trucks were trucks and drivers were drivers! No DEF , no shorts and sandals pure power, jeans and boots!!!
Hell yeah!
@Bedrock Miner Don diesel exhaust fluid. It’s supposed to cut back emissions expelled through the exhaust.
Last American cowboy!
Haven't bought DEF in over 5 years. W9 glider w/6nz. Started driving in 75, I remember the old days. Some of it was kinda rough, but we had a good time.
it's all foreigners now.
I remember growing up through the 80s and talking with truckers on the CB while we were driving on family trips... some of the best people out there, and they still are
Me too. The cared about the others in the road back then.
Damn ! , I was 17yr old back then , hitchhiking all over the place. YOYO I really wished you would have given me a ride lol😎
no stress days, freedom, no cameras, no cell phone, no computer, paper logs
And not a lot of traffic compared to today.
And them little white pills so long and round to a driver it was a west coast turn around 😄😄
Truckstop parking lots didn't smell like urine. Bags of 💩 were not all over the lot.
What logs? 🤣👍
@@Sdukes001 More like,which logs?
Lotta people don’t have a clue about what we mean when we say “ the good ole days,” here’s to the ones that do.
Sure don't thats when trucking was trucking
Yep,Transport City is just a parking lot and a body dump now. I retired from trucking last year,the trucking business has become unrecognizable from when I started in 79.
You got that right driver!
@@nutmagnet22 1979 haha year I was born. Just turned 42. My dad was a trucker. I have my CDL-A but only use it for local runs for road construction.
All hail,yes sir
Back in them days we'd have 4 or 5 licenses from different states. Run out of points on one license just use another.
😄👍🤠 I miss those days.
I used to buy log books 6 at the time at truck stops @ 25C a book and no one ever check them. We drove till we got tired, had 4hrs nap and went again. No fcucking stress, no cameras or aircon, just bloody mosquitoes ( Canadian North) and permits for every State or Province. @#&&%$@, other than that, no comment :-)
@@georgekusz4221 ya, the more complicated they made it, the more stressful that it got.
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
lol wtf
What an awesome video ! The golden age of trucking for sure , I sent this to my uncle and he got quite a kick out of it! He said in ‘79 he was hauling steel to New York in a ‘72 White Freightliner coe with no power steering, and if he could go back to them days it’d be only for that gal and her truck 😂😂😂
I'm happy you found this video and shared it. I'm sure he remembers those days.
Interesting segment from 40+ years ago. I truly wish we had a show like Real People again.
Prayers for Yo-Yo, I hear she's not doing well health wise. A truly beautiful woman, thanks for the video.
🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹
T.S. RACING
www.tenfourmagazine.com/2020/07/trucker-talk/fun-with-yoyo/
Cancer Sticks ..
Get well soon
As of today March 2024 she isn't doing well and is not in a nursing home. 😔
A wiggle when she walks and how fast them trucks go. Classic Pete and classy driver
A fella can't sit down and eat his ham and eggs or his bread and meat with a good lookin' woman like around and on the go...
LOL...Got ALL those old albums!!! Several on my channel... ( And the ORIGINAL Dick Curliss, Tombstone Every Mile !!!
@@olvinyldude
I collect RUclips music artist from around the World on my channel for a number of years.
One YT uploader from the UK uploaded his vinyl record collections that are very rare. Some are first pressing albums. I listen to many genres of music even in other languages.
Some are one of a kind found nowhere else including some concerts.
@@davidfromamerica1871 That is awesome! I have several of those also, some of only pressings known... I have a few up on the channel, & I do indeed love all genre music as well! Music is the great healer & soother.. I have the Original "Tombstone Every Mile" up on the channel, you may enjoy that one..it is so different, from the one we heard on Radio back in the day..
Happy Trails!
@@olvinyldude
Happy Trails.
I love it.
One of my lifetime dreams was to became a long haul trucker in north america.!
2009 i was fullfilling my dream and moved over from munich bavaria to a canadian company which one is servicing cross border.
planned for one year finally it was a little more than 10 years and it was best time in my life.
phantastic people,amazing customers and always nice officers and i be very proud and thankful that i have had the chance to spend the time in middle of all this great people.
i never forget this phantastic times and always thinking back in a positive mind.
to all the people my best wishes an stay safe out there
What an amazing life story and wow those memories will last a lifetime!
Oh Carolina flash a good ol boy. Drove with that man for 3 year's unfortunately never had the privilege to drive with yo yo. Thanks for sharing Mike really appreciate it the good old days
The good old days are gone an we the old school are fading away I'm proud I was way back when we there trucker had respect, morals and values God bless you all an keep the sunny side up
You’ve got that right, driver. Some young drivers I know enjoy sitting for hours and listening to my stories of those good old days. Others think I’m lying and look at me like I’ve got a third eye in the middle of my forehead. Drivers like you and I were members of the privileged few who got to experience a rare time in history when drivers had true freedom & independence,......and lord did we have fun doing a job we loved...
Or rubber side down
She was a fine looking woman! I noticed she pulled one of them walkin sticks out of her hat! Any bull hauler will know what I'm talking about Com'on. ;) ;) I started trailer trucking in '83. Man those were the days! I loved it! Bought my own truck and trailer in October of '88. Long nose Petercar with a shiny hiney. I miss that ride to this day. Had a bad motorcycle wreck in '94 and got stuck in a wheelchair for a while. Ahhh bygone days for the memory bank Lol.
Twinsticks & toothpicks!
Yo-Yo got a bad 359
Her rear ain't bad either.
She's just altogether bad!
With an overdrive 15speed?
Corvette dash yessir
@237g BE nice. She's a really sweet lady, whose health is suffering real bad right now. Prayers goin' up, for dear Lesa "Yoyo".
Great job, and video here ! I remember seeing that show with Yo-Yo on as guest! She was great ... I have her record,with her singing, "Yo-Yo On the Side" ...Actually, I put it up on my channel several years ago. ... I love/breathe Diesel, drove several years, 70's, thru 90's ... Great times..Miss it often, always knew where to stop and eat ! Miss all those great Truck Music songs, also.. I have many, many of them on my channel as well ... Thanx so much, Yo-Yo for all your years of keeping America going, and supplied.."IF YOU OWN IT, A TRUCKER BROUGHT IT" ! ! ! Bless you, Yo-Yo.. and you also, Boston Trucker... Thanx for all you do.. Awesome video ! ! !
Cool video! I really miss those classic trucks from the 70's and 80's with those awesome paint jobs!
Good days gone bye. 😥
Those two tone paint jobs were the best
@@billydirt89 everything painted white nowadays
Oh yes back when we had real television. Real people was always one of my favorite shows and I remember watching this episode. Sarah Purcell was an absolute gem of a human being very beautiful and a great interviewer. Yoyo certainly did know how to fill out those jeans...lol.
Man I have 21 years under my belt I came in at the end of the golden era of Big Rigging I remember those old school guys they taught me the ropes, those days are long gone 😥😥😥😥😥😥😥😥😥
Made it just under the wire.
Right along with ya I've been out 21 years myself and was taught old school to far cry from today from the nit wits sterring wheel holders and weenies of today and the flip flop freddys u gotta look at over the summer there's very few of u and I out here anymore were the last of the real truckers
22 yrs out here pulling a skateboard, don't let the good times die fellas. Trucking is what we make it. Still gear jamming with my paper logs, no emissions, straight pipes and big hammer cb. Roll on brothers.
43 yrs I been out here. And son, you did'nt even get a little taste of the good ole' days
@@jonrichardson7848 Ten four Brother 👍🏾
This video made my eyes swell up. I really miss those old trucks. That was the best time to be truckin. I started in 1985 and drove some of those old trucks...memories.
I'm happy you found this video. I'm sure you've got plenty of stories.
I did too. 1989. My first truck. 1985 International coe. Short stick. Super 10. You and I are the last of a generation of Truckers. Now. There are just people who drive trucks. I know you understand exactly what I mean. I have 31+ years. Growing tired. I long for the day when I can afford to drive my truck down that last mile to where "They" like Yo yo and all of the Truckers are waiting for me and welcome me home.
@@TheBostonTrucker yes!!!
I started in 1981, The first machine I drove was a 73 freightliner with an old 290 cummins air over hydraulic wedge brakes, no power steering, no horses , and you had to drag your feet if you want to stop,, had a road Ranger 13 speed, I cursed that truck almost every day I was in it but when I look back at it that’s the truck that made me a driver machanic,, still working on diesel today, 59 years young,,
Got my start young back in 99 been driving a 79 pete ever since
I had been infatuated with big trucks since I was 3 years old and was 15 years old when I watched this! I figured if she could drive those big rigs so could I and in 1991 my dream came true. Yo Yo was this little girl's inspiration! If she's still around I hope she's doing alright and I'd thank her if I could!
She's still around and you can thank her! Here's an update on Miss YoYo! ruclips.net/video/NsY6VjR-k6s/видео.html
@@TheBostonTrucker I'd like to meet her. I'm serious. I was a teenager when this was made. I'd like to thank her for her service to the industry
You are not old
I really enjoy watching these old videos... Trucking ain't what it used to be way back then.
Sooo True
Wish I could’ve been there. Those were the good old days. I’ll still be one of last cowboys but unfortunately there are not not many left.
Thank you for sharing this. I really appreciate watching drivers from previous generations. As a 4th generation driver i wouldn't be here now without them.
Boy this video sure brought back memories. Even the truck stop. (been there, done that).started in the 70's until last year. Started with a 67 COE International coe 4000 with a 238 Detroit with a 10. No power steering , no air ride , not even seat. vacuum power windows wipers. Back then truck stops had great food, free coffee, some had full service fuel . Also truckers were more friendly to each other and would help each other. ON a side note saw a Midwest trailer. remember home of the 1 dollar down truck to become a o/o
I know an old man who's been trucking over 40 years, still going. He remembers back when very few of the truck stops had showers. It was nothing for a trucker to stop his truck on a bridge over a river or creek, get down in the water underneath and take a bath.
Those guys were tough as nails!
When you could actually tell what kind of truck it was coming from a mile away.....and what was under the hood between the air cleaners when it went past. Great video!!!!
Back in the day, when truckin was fun........
Exactly
Fun.... but Hard Work, as well.
I believe it can be fun now too! Haha it may look different but it is still alive!
Miles long convoys were my favorite parts of childhood road trips in the 80s running up and down I65 and the connecting highways. We went to Michigan, Tennessee, Georgia, Alabama and Florida plenty from home in Louisville Kentucky
Really enjoyed that, brought back good memories when it was fun to be with your friends out on the road. Different story today out there.
I've been in this business since 1987 and I'm still trucking. We sure did had a lot of fun back in the day.
36 years ago I started, this newer generation will never be what we are.
You're right
I started driving straights in '76 and 18's in '78....did 40 years. SO glad I got to drive real deal A-Cars and B Models and White Freightliners and cabovers. OH those cabovers! I left part of my left kidney in a Transtar 4070! Truckers today with their flip flops and sweat pants and headsets. UGH!!
I bet when YoYo talks her whole family is in pure awww about her trucking stories.
She was rocking that 359 conventional back in the day when most trucks were cab overs. She was ahead of her time for sure
How cool is that!? Boy, what I’d give to have that 359...looks like it had the 15spd against tha dash. Just beautiful.
I noticed it was against the dash too. Made me smile 😃
I have 31+ years. Growing tired. I long for the day when I can afford to drive my truck down that last mile to where "They" like Yo yo and all of the Truckers are waiting for me and welcome me home.
I'm on year 31 too. I'm not tired of it yet but I think about the time when I'll slow down and do this part time so as to enjoy life.
Wow that's a long haul.
I started trucking at 53. Now I'm 62 and will have to keep going till I can't pass the physical.
Get home safe brother.
Those really were the good ole days, I’m thankful i was part of them!
She master the art of wearing those jeans.
True story, hard to look away!
Yes she did she surely did😊
I enthusiastically concur! And her ten-gallon Stetson looks absolutely gorgeous on her!
I know it goes back years and years but, YoYo's backside is fun to watch.
I pray all is well with you and yours.
Damn I miss our country
Hi-jacked by the fringe, lunatics running the asylum, we was to polite for our own damn good, quiet when we should’ve been yelling, sleeping when we should’ve been fighting.........
Complacency rolled this great nation on her side but it was you and me who kicked her into the grave!
-poem by Adam Banta
When trucking was awesome with awesome trucks! Shes got the best one ever made Pete Ex hood 359 with Airplane dash!!! Better food at truck stops too they were mom n pop shops mostly!
Back when parking at the truck stops was free whether it was for an hour or a weekend on a 1st come - 1st serve basis. My only complaints were that 1) the vegetables were always over cooked, mushy, & tasteless, and, 2) fresh fruit was a rarity.
Yeah, back then trucks had 3 pedals. A lot of the new ones now only have 2 pedals. (Sissymatics)
Great memories when trucking was different and all your friends talked on that CB "DAMMIT BOY "
God I remember that...
Now this was one GOOD video...showing good ole trucks, good truckers and people out there having fun! There were some nice lady truckers out there back in the 80s etc...you could see some pretty trucks and pretty ladies driving them. Good times. 🤩
The best of times just didn't know it then.
Fun on the road stopped in NZ October 87 when log books came in. E Road in now. Now they keep upping road tax with new regs to tig
To tighten the noose. STL runs all American gear. Spectacular when lined up.
An older friend of mine was a cross-country trucker from about the late 70's to the early 90's and said it was the best job and best time of his life. Only gave it up due to health issues
It's good for your soul.
God bless her, we need more beautiful female truck drivers like her in this world. Good luck to you girl and keep on trucking.
Dude what are you talking about there are better looking female truckers today if you ask me. And a lot more of them.
The good old days, long gone just a fading memory now. I caught the arse end of it here in Australia running between Melbourne & Adelaide between 1989 & 1995.
Speed limiters came in 1990 onwards & those Perth runners hammer down once they crossed into SA in the middle of the night.
180 kilometers of single lane from the border to Tailem Bend, not even a overtaking lane. Everyone respected the call on the CB for overtaking it was a matter of life & death.
No accidents, no boring drive, no mobile phones, 3 different licence, no point to point cameras, no seat shakers, no camera on you & no auto box.
425 hp was king, V8 Mack's doing
100 mph on the flats.
I can go on & on & on.
Love this video reminds of those long lost days when it was simple.
Thank you for uploading 👍
Man! What an awesome career! Thank you for sharing this with us!
Love this old stuff. Thank you,put a smile on my face
This make me happy 😃
Cheers to you for putting this video out. Thank you for this. Keep On Truckin'... {Weather Man}
10-4 Weather Man! I appreciate the comeback!
My grandpa's handle was tinkerbell, drove over a million & a half miles...logged.... unlogged was another story. Military freight & who knows what else! Much respect to all those running our freight
Man I work at my buddy's shop, we got us a beautiful 86 Pete tandem dump. Real pretty blue. We got her running good, put some jakes on the old B model cat. Pretty chrome stacks. Boy she ran and was pretty. Sold it for twice the price we got it. She still works everyday. I felt humble to work and drive the old girl.
Awesome story,I love watching about peoples lifestyles on the other side of the planet,and being about truckers made it even better,,to yo yo and all truckers,my love and respect,best wishes to all,from,Auckland,New Zealand.❤😍🙂😉😉
Thank you so much.
I drove back then, best days trucking ever. Trucking today is a job. Oh yes I remember them toothpicks..
Your so right. nowadays its all about hauling as much freight, and as quickly as possible to get that bottom line for the company. Trucking has turned to shit. Dont think ill ever go back.
Wish we were back in those days
My father started driving after WW2, I was raised in a truck for the first 5 years starting in 1973, his handle was "The Scalded Dog", Curtis Leroy Jones. This was a special time in America.
God bless the Scalded Dog!
Country musicians and truck drivers; there is no way to separate the two, of which I belong to the former.
You go girl, and may you always be free.
wish i was born then so i could experience this awesomeness
I experienced it as a kid.
Bring back the old days when this is how and was the way trucking should be.
When this was AMERICA
10-4 on that. Now look what we have! Sure do miss the old days.
Dang she was putting er in the wind on the racetrack!110 mph!woop woop!
You mean A.M.E.R.I.C.A
Na merica
Sticks is sticks and hicks is hicks
I’m old enough to remember the tail end of those great days of trucking. Got to drive with the greats.
I was 18 in 86’
did it for 25 years. Unfortunately the industry is finished and so am I, for the last 15 years.
I bet Yo Yo was fun as hell to roll around with.
Just posted an update!
That was a great show. The video was great as well. Thanks for sharing!!
Thank you 😊
Nothing Finer than A 359er. V8 Cat 6/4 2 stick. Roller Coasting. Those were the days.
Essentially they're all modern cowboys in every sense of the word. I have such great respect for truck drivers. Particularly OTR drivers who do more driving in one week then most people do in several months. All in every kind of weather. Holidays. Even disasters. The men and women that drive Peterbilts and Kenworths are what keeps America going. For without such men and women, our country stops period. God bless them all.
My favorite truck is a Peterbilt 359 conventional with oversized exhaust pipes. Lots of chrome from the Chrome Shop. Extended frame and a big nice roomy sleeper.
Truckers!!!
We Love Y'all, Keep Trucking🇺🇲🇨🇱🐎
Thank you so much for your great commentary.
Wonder how many flip flop wearing steering wheel holders were insulted by this much testosterone.
Hahaha
Lol my dad brought me up to them days he drove 43 years passed away stepping out his ol W9 I have been doing it 18 years now ...
Bro, they are comfortably safe in their new automatic transmisson power steering units with company trackers and inside cab cameras facing them
LMFAO, brother, this was way the fuck over their heads !!
lol
Looked like a classy and sassy lady! And damn them jeans sure fit nice!
Awesome video, Sarah seems to be genuinely interested and sincere! Keep on trucking YO YO Let's have hand for the little "Lady"
YoYo said she was really sweet.
Thank you for excellent video I really miss good old days
You're welcome 😀
I can’t help but wonder if my great uncle ever met Yo-Yo. He was one of the true legendary trucker outlaws. If he met Yo-Yo I could see him giving her his six shooter he use to carry and telling her to take no grief from anyone! Lol.
The stories I heard from him were unreal. Weren’t just stories, he had pictures to back it all up. I’m lucky enough to have most of those pictures, postcards and letters that he sent home from 1950-1980. Would love to know more about Yo-Yo, I can only imagine her life story. What a pioneer she must have been for women in trucking!
www.tenfourmagazine.com/2020/07/trucker-talk/fun-with-yoyo/
@@TheBostonTrucker thanks for sharing!
@@TheBostonTrucker 🇬🇧 Thanks from a retired trucker I’ve just read the bit about yo-yo and all I can say is she’s one hell of a woman. God bless her.
@@fredblogs 😉
Yo yo is one tough cookie, with a heart of gold, that'll have your back also. One wonderful person, all in all. Much respect for her. ❤
My pop pop was a driver for all of his life I got my love of driving for him miss him so much memories
This is the “Merica” I grew up in. Now I feel like a foreigner in a strange land! Y’all remember when things made sense?
I feel the same and I ain’t liking it 🇺🇸
This is the era i was born in, but still remember enough to know that I was born too late. I am the last generation that didn't have cellphones, Internet, or did much else on a computer than use it as a glorified type writer.
@@325aliceI wouldn’t trade those days for the world. Good times. 👍
I’m 20 and I wish this was the America I could live in. Hopefully we’ll come around to this soon.
@@jasmineduran6731 if enough young people felt like you do and stuck together with that state of mind I believe things could be like that again. Don’t change your self we need more young people like you. 👍🇺🇸
Its 1978 and I'm trying to get some sleep in the coffin of a 75" W9. Over the sound of a screaming jimmy my brother was beating like it owed him millions. Its 14,000 degrees in here with the windows down and the coffin door held open with bailin wire just to get some relief from that August heat as we were rollin out of Laredo Tx.
My brother says "you gettin any air back there?
I said "did you know that ol gal you was with all night, is married to...THE SHERIFF!?
He spun around in his seat and said "NO!!!"
I said "drive faster son, you need the distance..... and I need the air!" ......
Man, those were the days.
Hope Ms. Yo-Yo is doing fine and still jamming gears.
10-4
www.tenfourmagazine.com/2020/07/trucker-talk/fun-with-yoyo/
She’s not well at all. There is a gofundme for her.
@@Dajuggernaut74 yes, I seen the link video.
Thanks.
She should know, there are a lot of us old CBers who remember her. And her story.
My heart and prayers go out to her and her family.
God bless.
🙏💝
@@TheBostonTrucker thanks for sharing. Good read.
@DC if you're referring to the cigarettes just a quick fyi not all smokers get lung cancer or cancer of any kind and people that have literally never even touched a cigarette get lung cancer for example my aunt who passed from lung cancer and complications stemming from the disease never smoked a cigarette in her life
That’s American Trucking right there. Huge crush on Miss Yo-Yo 😍
www.tenfourmagazine.com/2020/07/trucker-talk/fun-with-yoyo/
@@TheBostonTrucker sorry to hear of her poor health. I’m sure she dreams of her prime time, living the American dream on the open road. A different time and generation fading away. I come from a truck drivers family and have been turning wrenches on big rigs for the past 20 years. I hope people carry on the passion in generations to come
I got itchy pants and wanna see what’s on the other side of the hill. Love it.
Must have been polyester!
Man this brought back some good memories
www.tenfourmagazine.com/2020/07/trucker-talk/fun-with-yoyo/
These are awesome mike I hope you find more of these old videos!!!
I've got a couple lined up, glad you enjoyed it.
Seems the best day of trucking, television, music and most anything were all reached in the 70's & 80's and have only been on a steady decline since
Sad but true.
How bout that. Thanks for posting Mike. Was a fun watch
Glad you liked it.
This is alot of fun rote here! Thnx so much. . .
www.tenfourmagazine.com/2020/07/trucker-talk/fun-with-yoyo/
What was that I heard !
Oh that is something they did back then
it's called laughter and fun !
Yo-yo glad to see you keeping the family generation (tradition) alive
www.tenfourmagazine.com/2020/07/trucker-talk/fun-with-yoyo/
I have been in love with the Pete’s my since I was a kid.
I sure miss them days of truck'n .we used to take care of each other out here but no more Been driving for 38 years and it sure changed alot since then and not for the better.
www.tenfourmagazine.com/2020/07/trucker-talk/fun-with-yoyo/
In 1983 I started with a 1959 H model Mack.
Dang man!
Great!!! WE NEED BACK that Time or the Spirit of it-I Love that trucking Lady YoYo-She's Great!! What a great Time
Days gone now, sad. Glad I was around even before cb. We had hand signals. Man we had fun.
Man, If I have would saw Yo Yo back in the day, I think I would had fallen in love. 😍
www.tenfourmagazine.com/2020/07/trucker-talk/fun-with-yoyo/
Just get that load there and head back for another the owner would say, I'll pay the tickets.I got the horses just load that wagon. Yes sir them were the days.
Log books what are they. I worked for a wrecker company that had seven wrecker on the road. The boss know everybody in town getting a license was easy also drove over the road for him also. Stay away from the scales and get back home. Never used a log book until I moved to a different state and drove for a different company.
Now every thing is e-log no thank you.
Back in the day. When TRUCKERS were TRUCKERS. After 43 years still DOIN it.
Hats off to you driver!
That was real trucking back then, I really miss those days
I really miss that. Lots of memories on the road...
The funny thing is I knew all the hands in this video and even the shoeshine man. Big Jackie was well known and did your boots proudly.
Ran with Special K and YO, YO and both were fun to run with more than once or twice. Like all drivers who ran together, we could tell stories about each other. I remember that race as it was the talk of the road and when it happened I was on the west coast doing a turnaround. I had a black 359 1978 Pete with a 3408 in it and Mississippi was still 73,280 pounds gross weight up till 1982 and Tenn would write you up for being 55'2 length and not 55'. $121.00 for those two inches. All changed when the 48' trailers came out and then if you had one it didn't matter your length more or less. Trucking back then was fun and hard at 9-15 cents a mile or 20% grows and all the miles you wanted to run. If you run the 20% grows you can bet that truck would run over 100 miles per hour and you were told you had better do it or find another job. A lot of the old truck makers are no longer like Brockway, FWD, and others like Ford CL 9000 who made one hell of a truck before their time with the air ride cab.
A little note on:
Special K, was known to sandbag with his truck and do and say some of the funniest things.
YO, YO was a hoot and made some real colorful remarks to you after she got to know you. One hand I remember she told him he had a cute ass and fit those jeans just right. As an afterthought, she said, Pony you know your ass is alright too. (Or something to that effect) She could talk trash with the best of them.
What was the actual name of this Transport City Truck Stop and was it located in Villa Rica, GA or in town Atlanta near the convention center and airport because I've been out here since 1987 and i don't remember it?
@@relaxationstation7374 Transport City is all I can remember, and it was on the East side of the loop on the right going North before I85.
@@StonedPony1 Thank You, I studied up on it and found out that Transport City was eventually bought out by TA and became the crazy old TA in Conley, GA that was eventually torn down but Transport City Drive still exists as an industrial park on the same site.
I was so intetested in it because I've been out here 35 years, and counting, and I can't imagine that I would have missed such an iconic place.
Love to talk to yoyo,70 year old retired 359 driver many years
I just spoke with her the other day. She'll be the first to tell ya, "being this side of the dirt is a good day".
Sooooo very glad to have made her acquaintance out there. She's got a really good heart, and cares about her family and fellow truckers out there. She'll tell ya what's what, if ya need to hear it too!! One special lady right there. ❤
Back in the good old days of trucking when my grandpa was trucking. My grandpa started about mid 60s and stopped in 95 he could pull that rig around like nobody’s businesses nothing but respect for truckers including this girl so proud of her in a time we’re a lot of people viewed this still as a mans job
www.tenfourmagazine.com/2020/07/trucker-talk/fun-with-yoyo/
@@TheBostonTrucker her biography was great to read
As soon as I seen this I thought of you Boston Trucker. Dan she was a badass in a clean 359! Nice video!
😁
Love Yo Yo’s 59 brand new still had the paper tag in the window !!!!
My dad drove a coal bucket for 50 years. We lived right above the shop till I was 8. I also worked there when I got old enough. We were all outlaws! My dad was known as back road Bob. For over a decade he never went through a scale even if he was empty. I heard stories from guys he drug with him that he took on roads that made their hair stand on end. Rip dad!
Those coal trucks were something else ! I remember a fleet of them sitting beside the highway. Old Hayes . Front bumpers higher than the tailgate on a 4x4 , most of them no hoods , only half a windshield. I worked with a guy who had maintained them . He said the hoods and windshields were missing cause of rocks coming off the mountains , first thing everyone did was remove the doors , so the driver had better chance to jump clear if it was going over the edge of a mountain. They would rebuild brakes every six months, and new shoes lasted one trip then drivers had to use gears and retarders . Drivers never wanted to bail out till last moment cause they got paid by the load and didn't get anything if the truck went over the edge
@@outinthesticks1035 My dad hauled coal from time to time but they hauled everything you could put in a dump trailer. Stone,boulders,dirt, scrap,lime, demolition,golf course dressing, grain and lots of other stuff too! They travel as far as Maine to Florida and west as far as Arkansas. I remember my dad hauling potatoes out of Florida in a R-model day cab Mack when I was young! I live in Pennsylvania