Ice Road Truckers

HornyHenry

Horned Toad
Joined
Apr 20, 2004
Posts
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OK, I checked this out last year to see what it was all about. Interesting, but exciting to see old fat Canadians (Nothing against them - they are fine people) driving semis.
But the reasons and the logistics are informative.

But THIS year, they're on the Dalton Highway, 250 miles from Fairbanks, Al to Deadhorse on Prudhoe Bay oil fields.
And Lisa Kelly makes it worth watching again. She 28, 120 lbs, jumps bikes in the summer, and drives a truck.
When a guy asks what she does, she likes to tell them, "Oh I drive a truck"
"You mean, like a small one"
"No, an 18 wheeler"
"Oh, yeah. Where do you drive?"
"On the Dalton ice road in the middle of winter." and watch their jaws drop
http://www.history.com/content/iceroadtruckers-season-three/meet-the-truckers/lisa
 
New episode on now

Lisa's latest quotes:
"Well, bend me over and spank me."
"Holy cow, this sucker's LONG."

She's sweet.:D
 
Then she said "Crack that whip and I like being in the ground"

I cant believe they actually aired that....lol
 
Hmmmmmm

Blue tractor.....That means Carlile is getting some air-time. I remember when they were begging for business. Of course, now they've got a sweetheart deal with the oil companies now.....

Oh, and although the Dalton might be icy, it is not an ice road......
 
Part is

Hmmmmmm

Blue tractor.....That means Carlile is getting some air-time. I remember when they were begging for business. Of course, now they've got a sweetheart deal with the oil companies now.....

Oh, and although the Dalton might be icy, it is not an ice road......
They actually coat some of it with ice on top of the road, with sprayed on water!
And, there is a 60 mile stretch north west of Deadhorse that goes over the ocean and is a true ice road. Lisa took her long poles over it on the last episode.
 
They actually coat some of it with ice on top of the road, with sprayed on water!
And, there is a 60 mile stretch north west of Deadhorse that goes over the ocean and is a true ice road. Lisa took her long poles over it on the last episode.

Below zero, ice isn't that slippery of a surface to drive on.

The Dalton ends at Deadhorse. After Deadhorse, you are on oil company roads and ice roads. The stretch you are talking about is prolly the road from Oliktok Pt. to the Colville River and upriver to Alpine. The mileage doesn't add up to go to Oooguruk or Nikaitchuq but according to the ADN article, Oooguruk was the only destination where an actual ice road was required.

From the ADN:

"Alaska's Haul Road is the basis for the new season of the History Channel's "Ice Road Truckers." And drivers from Alaska-based Carlile Transportation Inc. are the stars.

"In the dark heart of Alaska, there is a road that's hell frozen over," according to the network's promotions.

The 13-part series features Carlile drivers working along the Dalton Highway, often referred to as the Haul Road. The isolated stretch is the only connection to the Prudhoe Bay oil fields, and is considered to be among the world's most dangerous roads.

The Los Angeles-based production company Original Productions spent three months on the Haul Road filming the series.

The 18-member production crew, all originally from California, enjoyed shooting the series, according to the executive co-producer.

"Carlile and the drivers were fantastic, we just can't say enough about what great material we got," said Dawn Fitzgerald. "Every mile of the Dalton was a new challenge."

The crews based their work out of Fairbanks and rode with different truckers to film the series.

"We started shooting in February, and finished up the shooting in April, and are editing the series right now," Fitzgerald said. "Fairbanks worked out wonderful for us; this was really much easier logistically than the ice roads in Canada."

Featured on the show are eight characters who have various roles in the series: George Spears, Alex Debogorski, Hugh Rowland, Carey Hall, Jack Jesee, Lisa Kelly, Cody Hyce and Tim Freeman.

"Its pretty good. I haven't seen all the episodes but the first ones they sent are all real stuff," said Carlile CEO Harry McDonald. "The filming of this didn't bother them (drivers) in the least. Most of the attention is to safety."

The series "Ice Road Truckers" is in its third year, and this is the second year that Fitzgerald field produced the program.

"This was not a flat road, but turns, valleys, hills and then Atigun Pass, a winding road over the Brooks Range and then down on to the snow-blown tundra of the North Slope. It was all pretty exciting," Fitzgerald said.

Fitzgerald said crews shot the real-life challenges that translate into a better show.

"We gathered enough good footage in the first three days that any place else would have taken three weeks to get," she said.

The production company was only allowed to film and go to one North Slope ice road on its way to Oooguruk Island, due to oil company security and safety issues.

The series centers on George Spears, nicknamed "The Veteran," a longtime driver who is set to retire soon.

The series also features the drama of state Department of Transportation crews clearing deep snow and avalanches from roadways and the drivers' reaction to traffic and road challenges.

"The drivers enjoyed the crews and it looks like the whole project was successful for both sides," McDonald said. "We were pleased that they chose our company and drivers. It worked out real well for both of us."

Carlile Transportation employs 400 drivers, and has 600 employees in Alaska, Washington, Texas and Alberta, Canada.

"This is the best show we've ever done," Fitzgerald said. "We'll be back."
 
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