My first Italian trip…Now with part two
Postby newmercman » Tue Aug 21, 2012 8:56 am
Part 5.
The agent returned shortly before lunchtime and Jack and I said our farewells and went our separate ways, it would be many months before I would meet up with him again, such is the nature of driving trucks for a living. Without a blue line on my map that went anywhere near my delivery point I headed into the hills towards my destination of Collodi. I soon learned the hard way why it was not a good idea to get off the Autostrada, the roads were narrow and the villages they pass through were small and the bends were really tight. Slow the progress may have been, but it was every wasted minute, the villages were beautiful, none more so than Collodi itself, the author of the Pinocchio stories took his name from the town where he lived when he wrote them and every window had a monument to the little wooden boy in it. There were also gift shops galore, although they were not at all Disney-like and were very much in keeping with their surroundings. My delivery point was on the other side of the town and I pulled in and set about dismantling the Tilt trailer so that the forklift driver could unload the bales of waste packaging.
A Tilt trailer was the standard trailer for international transport; in basic terms it’s a giant rectangular tent which covers the deck of the trailer, it can be sealed by a cord that runs around its base so that you can satisfy Custom’s requirements. If you have ever put up a forty foot long, thirteen foot high and eight foot wide tent in the wind you have some idea of the work involved, if you haven’t, then thank your lucky stars, they may be very versatile, allowing you to transport almost anything, but they are a complete nightmare to work with. They also have rainmaking properties, it can be a nice sunny day when you pull up, but as soon as you start the process of dismantling one, you can almost guarantee that it will start to rain, I still shudder at the mere thought of one now.
The working day was almost over by the time I had reassembled the trailer after unloading, well for normal nine to five people anyway, mine was about to start in earnest. My next destination was Bassano del Grappa which was on the opposite side of Italy, just to the north west of Venice, I had a lot of driving to do before I got there so I stopped at the first bar and had a Latte Macchiato to help me on my way to the nearest big blue line in my map. I had no idea if I was going the right way, but the route I had chosen looked to be the most direct. I went east towards Florence, then North over the Apennine Mountains to Modena where I went north east to Verona and then east to Padova and finally north to Bassano del Grappa. My Tachograph chart would cost me a large coffee if I had to show it to the Polizia, but thankfully I escaped their clutches, the only coffee that happened was my own and those remarkable Latte Macchiato, and very late that night I pulled into my loading point and went straight to bed, ready for whatever the next day had in store.
To be continued…
Last edited by newmercman on Sat Aug 25, 2012 9:06 am, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: My first Italian trip…Now with part two
Postby newmercman » Sat Aug 25, 2012 9:09 am
If you haven’t already lost the will to live, here’s the next installment…
So here I am in Bassano del Grappa, I had unloaded on Monday, done a few hours up the road and stopped for the night. The next day I had made my way up here, but it was after Midnight when I arrived and my instructions were to call in on Tuesday morning. So after a nice meal in a little pizzeria I had found with enough room to park outside, I went to bed. On Tuesday I wake up and go for the first of the day’s Latte Macchiato, in the bar I use the payphone to call the company that’s loading me, they give me directions to their warehouse and I head off to see what’s next. The warehouse turns out to be smaller than I was expecting, it was an old abattoir, although that was a long time ago, I looked around for the office, but it was nowhere to be seen. Just then a seven series BMW pulled in and a bloke straight out of the Godfather gets out and heads in the direction of the big Daf.
Oh my God, here we go, I thought, but then the bloke started smiling and held out his hand, with some trepidation I stuck out my hand and Mr Mafioso introduced himself as Pierro, the boss of the firm that was loading me. My breathing son returned to normal and he beckoned me to his car and in broken English explained that the offices were on the other side of town and he would take me there. My heart started racing again as I got in the car, but I reckoned that as it was a left hand drive car, I could get enough power behind a right hander and yank the handbrake up and get out sharpish if he tried any funny business, unless he pulled a gun!
My paranoia was compounded as we pulled up outside an apartment block, he parked the car and we got out, I followed him up the stairs to the first floor and breathed a huge sigh of relief when I saw the name of the company on a brass plaque on the door. My day was soon to get a lot better as once inside the office I saw that it was full of young, very fit, Italian birds, crazy, noisy lunatics they may be, but for a young man like myself, it was as close to heaven as you can get. I would’ve been slapped black and blue if they could read my mind!
One of the ladies, a slightly older one in her mid thirties introduced herself as Josie, she spoke perfect English, but with a ■■■■ accent, not quite Italian though, it turned out that she was from Montreal, Canada, but had moved to Italy to study and stayed, from what I had seen and experienced so far, I couldn’t blame her, I was falling in love with Italy, Italians and the Italian way of doing things, which so far I had worked out to be doing something as fast and as loudly as possible or doing absolutely nothing at all, there’s no middle ground whatsoever, they’re all or nothing.
Doing nothing was not on my agenda though, I had a collection to do in Carbonara, which was in the next province of Treviso, not too far away, but I needed to get my skates on if I was going to get loaded there and then on to my next collection in Piovenne Rochette, which was in the opposite direction and in the province of Vicenza. I got directions to both and the boss man took me back to the lorry. I filled out a tacho and off I went. It was a very nice drive, the roads were big enough, but only just, especially in the towns and cities I went through, the directions were spot on and I was soon at my first collection.
I was loading boxes of fancy carrier bags and they filled up the step on the trailer, the weight was about seven tons, so I had plenty of capacity left for the next collection. An hour or so later I was loaded and on my way, I retraced my steps, went back through Bassano del Grappa and on to Piovene Rochette, here I was loading pallets of rolls of film, it was going to a pharmaceutical firm, something to do with the manufacture of sticking plasters. During loading I was given a message to call Josie. I used the phone in the office and she asked me if I would also pick up some other stuff while I was there and take it back to their warehouse for them. This is highly frowned upon as it is cabotage, I brought that up, but was told that it is not a problem, nobody will find out. Eager to please I did as I was asked and when I returned to the warehouse the bloke on the loading dock called me over and handed me an envelope. I opened it and inside was a nice crisp 50,000lira note, not bad, I’d be making a point of offering my services again at those rates.
The extra pallets I had collected were taken off and I was given instructions to collect some more stuff the next day, this was a change of plan, I was expecting to be on my way tonight, but I was once again introduced to the Italian way of doing things. The loading point was a factory a couple of hundred yards away, so I stayed on the loading dock and went for a walk around town. Oh my God, this little city was beautiful, it was picture postcard Italy, I wandered around and found a restaurant for some dinner, and boy did I get a dinner, it was amazing and best of all it came with a bottle of red wine. I had already developed a taste for red wine after my weekend with Jack, so I had a good gargle and staggered back to the lorry late that evening.
I awoke the next morning with the mother of all headaches, it wasn’t helped by the red hot sun coming through the windows or the fact that in my drunken state I hadn’t managed to undress myself or close the curtains. I quickly looked in my wallet to see the damage done the previous night and was pleasantly surprised to see that I hadn’t spent anywhere as much as the headache made me think I had. It was time to get moving, so I set off the few hundred yards to the factory, not even bothering to close the rear flap on the trailer.
Next door to the factory was a bar, so I sneaked a quick Latte Macchiato in before I booked in. It did little to stop my headache, but tasted as good as usual, so I felt a little better, for a few minutes anyway, my day was about to start in earnest and after backing into the shed to load, I had to strip down the trailer to load some machines. As it turned out it was not as bad as I thought it would be, the machines were going on the back of the trailer, so instead of a full strip out, I only had to open about 20ft of trailer, the crane operator hooked onto the tilt cover and pulled that back with the jib, so I only had to take out the roof bars and superstructure of the last two bays in the trailer.
To be continued…