Snow Plow Guy
Air Date: Week of March 15, 2002
We sleep while they work. Without them, economic activity would freeze. Who are the night snow plow drivers? Robin White rides with one plowman who's written an ode that he reads over the CB radio, by request, to other drivers as they work.
Transcript
CURWOOD: It's almost the equinox, almost spring. But not so fast. In some places it's still snowing, which causes us to ask when was the last time you honored your snowplow driver? Robin White visited the town of Allegheny, California and met the man who keeps its 145 residents connected to the outside world.
MAN: Snow level dropping to around 3,000 feet this afternoon.
WOMAN: Chains and snow tires are required this morning on I-80 over Donner Summit, on 50 over Echo Summit--
[SOUND OF DRIVING]
MAN: A winter storm warning is in effect through tomorrow for much of the Sierra, including the Lake Tahoe region, where forecasters predict more than two feet of new snow could fall.
WHITE: "It's very misty outside. It's like some primordial forest out of a fairy-story." That's me, driving into the town of Allegheny, looking for Jim Buckbee, who's the keeper of the mountain roads here. Allegheny's a little gold-mining town, home of the oldest hard rock gold mine still operating in the United States. It's a ramshackle collection of houses and rusty old cars in a snowy landscape stuck on the side of a deep canyon. The road into town goes over a ridge 5,200 feet high. Jim Buckbee is a man with a belly and a twinkle in his eye, and he's the one who keeps it open.
(Photo: Robin White)
[SOUNDS OF MACHINERY]
WHITE : That's a mighty fine snowplow you have there. Nice to meet you.
BUCKBEE: Nice to meet you.
WHITE: How are you doing?
BUCKBEE: Good.
WHITE: So hey, here we are. This is fun. Is there a seatbelt there somewhere?
[SNOWPLOW DRIVING OFF]
BUCKBEE: We can look off in the canyon off of the side there, and it's pretty much straight down.
WHITE: You're telling me! Wow.
[LAUGHTER]
BUCKBEE: So when we have a warm spell like this, our berms all get melted away. This is when you really have to be careful. So we're plowing right on the edge of the road, and there's only about three feet of good, solid ground before it gets soft, and it can just pull you right on over.
[GETTING OUT OF PLOW, SOUND OF WALKING IN BACKGROUND]
BUCKBEE: Watch your step going down. When you're out there plowing snow there's certain things that you see constantly. And so they just start digging into your soul, you know? And when I wrote the poem, we were discussing all the different counties and how they do their snow removal. And the biggest thing is when you're working a day shift and then you switch to a night shift without any sleep. So the whole thing is geared towards surviving another night, and it just started clicking. I just started writing, and it was like, "Wow. Hey, that sounds pretty good."
[VOICES ON SCANNER RADIO]
BUCKBEE: One night I was just really bored and I was doing a back-to-back shift. It was snowing really hard and so I recited it over a radio. All of a sudden they had all these requests coming in from different areas that had picked it up on their scanners, wanting to know where it came from and if they could get a copy of it. So I started sending these people copies of my poem.
[READ OVER SCANNER RADIO]
"Another night"
By Jim Buckbee.
When the snow flakes fly and the wind blows so cold,
It's the sound of steel that curls my toes.
It's a long night ahead, and that's my foe.
As I drop my plow and head down the road
I only pray that my lights will be bright.
As the snow flakes dance
I strain at the sight,
But my chains bite deep into the ice
And I look for that guiding light
That makes everything all right.
The snow piles high,
But that's all right,
Because I'll just hit it
With all my might
And shove it over to the right.
The sky finally lightens
And I know it's all right,
Because I just made it through
Another night."
BUCKBEE: Just a small little town way up at the end of a road. What an office, huh?
CURWOOD: Our feature on Jim Buckbee, the snowplow guy, was produced by Robin White.
[MUSIC: Greg Brown, "Rexroth's Daughter," Covenant (Red House Records - 2000)]
CURWOOD: Thanks to Duncan Lively and Duncan Howitt at KXJZ in Sacramento.
Living on Earth wants to hear from you!
Living on Earth
62 Calef Highway, Suite 212
Lee, NH 03861
Telephone: 617-287-4121
E-mail: comments@loe.org
Newsletter [Click here]
Donate to Living on Earth!
Living on Earth is an independent media program and relies entirely on contributions from listeners and institutions supporting public service. Please donate now to preserve an independent environmental voice.
NewsletterLiving on Earth offers a weekly delivery of the show's rundown to your mailbox. Sign up for our newsletter today!
Sailors For The Sea: Be the change you want to sea.
The Grantham Foundation for the Protection of the Environment: Committed to protecting and improving the health of the global environment.
Contribute to Living on Earth and receive, as our gift to you, an archival print of one of Mark Seth Lender's extraordinary wildlife photographs. Follow the link to see Mark's current collection of photographs.
Buy a signed copy of Mark Seth Lender's book Smeagull the Seagull & support Living on Earth