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Dogs in trucks: Who’s riding shotgun? Meet Sanza.

February 7, 2022
11 min read
Endrea and her dog, Sanza in front of their CFI truck

Endrea Davisson has known she wanted to be a long-haul truck driver since she was a child growing up in Cushing, Oklahoma, and road shotgun on long haul trips with her dad. After raising her family and sending them off into the world, now settled down with families of their own, Davisson turned to her husband, Jim, also a truck driver and said 鈥淗oney, I want to get on the road and be a driver.鈥 Right away he replied, 鈥淟et鈥檚 make that happen for you.鈥 After researching the different trucking companies she decided to settle in with a place that was comfortable and felt family-friendly 鈥撯 the company where her dad was a driver for over 20 years, CFI. Founded in Joplin, Missouri in 1951, CFI has a long legacy of caring for its drivers.

How does CFI show they care about their drivers?

鈥淐FI does freight of all kinds, and is one of the best companies to work for in the world. Yes, my dad worked for them, but of course I did my research before joining them as a driver. They had more of a family-oriented atmosphere. That鈥檚 what drew me to them. I remember that from when my dad was there.鈥 When I caught up with Davisson she was mid-trip on her way to Joplin, Missouri and was stopped en route due to a snow storm. Davisson said she called into her contact at CFI to describe the situation and their response was to make sure she was safe and to tell her to take care and just let them know when she was on the road again. When CFI puts the safety and needs of their drivers first in this way, it鈥檚 easy to see what Davisson means when she says she feels cared for by the folks at CFI. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e just great all the way around. They maintain a transparency keeping us aware of what the offices are doing, the communication is amazing 鈥 you need to know something, you just make a phone call and they鈥檙e going to find out the information you鈥檙e looking for and get it to you.

Sanza in her favorite spot, riding shotgun
Sanza in her favorite spot, riding shotgun

Who鈥檚 riding shotgun?

Davisson has a buddy she takes on the road with her, Sanza, a rescue pup she and her husband took in a little less than a year ago. 鈥淪he鈥檚 a one-year-old pit mix who we adopted when she was six months old. She had a bad setting when she was little. She was kept in a crate from the time she was born until I got her so I had to start from scratch with her. No human contact. I had to start from scratch with a six-month-old puppy.鈥

Raising a pup who needed a lot of TLC

When Davisson first brought Sanza home to her house in Sheridan, Arkansas, Sanza did not have the best of manners so Davisson and her husband had to train her starting with the basics. 鈥淪he didn鈥檛 know how to be around humans. She didn鈥檛 know how to interact with us. I had to teach her how to know when to go up to people and when not to. Other drivers don鈥檛 always want to be bothered by dogs. So we had to teach her to not just go running off to other drivers or people that she sees.鈥

Sanza when she first came home with Endrea
Sanza when she first came home with Endrea

Davisson said one of the keys was to have lots of toys and bones and treats to help socialize Sanza. She was immediately friendly with Jim, Davisson鈥檚 husband, but it took her a long time to warm up to Davisson. 鈥淪he takes to men easier than she does to females.鈥 When asked what tactics Davission used to gain Sanza鈥檚 trust she said 鈥淚 set it at her pace and let her decide when she was ready to feel comfortable.鈥 Eventually, Davisson won Sanza over: 鈥淣ow she cuddles all the time and gives me snuggles.鈥

At first, Sanza was unsure about meal times. 鈥淪he didn鈥檛 know what it meant to be fed regular meals. She was confused and didn鈥檛 know how to regulate her own eating.鈥 Davisson and her husband helped Sanza gradually adapt to a routine feeding schedule. 鈥淲hen I first got her whenever I鈥檇 put food down she would eat it all up in one bite like she was worried she wasn鈥檛 ever going to be given more.鈥 They taught her how to pace herself, but at first they went through a lot of dog food.

Prior to Sanza鈥檚 adoption, she had never in her six months of life been brought outside for a leashed walk. Davisson taught her how to follow alongside a person. 鈥淚 first got her started on a very short leash just so she understood that she couldn鈥檛 just go wherever she wanted to go. And then we graduated to a retractable leash and now she has a training collar but after ten months of having her with us she comes on command, she鈥檚 really good about obeying us.鈥 The first few times she bumbled around and didn鈥檛 know what she was supposed to do but once she got the hang of it she took to it. Now Sanza loves going on walks with Davisson.

What鈥檚 it like to be on the road with Sanza

Davisson loves Sanza鈥檚 company on the road. Sanza is expressive and Davisson can read her cues. 鈥淪he鈥檚 very smart. She鈥檒l talk to me. She鈥檒l tell me when she鈥檚 not happy or when she is happy. I know what she鈥檚 talking about whenever she鈥檚 barking at me or whining at me. I know what she wants. But it鈥檚 just having her there.鈥

They find time and places to get out and play on the road, often truck stops have parks nearby, or some even have dog parks attached to the truck stop where Davisson and Sanza will get out and play ball during their travels.

Sanza when she hears the alarm clock
Sanza when she hears the alarm clock

Waking up in the morning mid-route, it’s a special treat to have Sanza along for the ride. 鈥When she hears my alarm clock she will come over to me, give me hugs and kisses so I wake up and what she wants is to hear me tell her 鈥楪ood Morning, Sanza.鈥欌

Over the last year, Davisson has gotten to know Sanza while they鈥檝e been on the road together. 鈥淪he鈥檚 curious. Very curious. She鈥檚 got to sniff and smell everything. I can be bringing groceries into the truck or go grab a new t-shirt or something at a truck stop and she has to smell it. Or if somebody comes up to the truck and I鈥檓 in the driver鈥檚 seat and a security guard or somebody comes to chat at my window Sanza climbs over me to get access to the window so she can scope out the situation. She wants to know what that person is wanting and why they鈥檙e there.鈥

Sanza has access to walk all over the truck when they鈥檙e on the road. 鈥淭his is her truck and she does whatever she wants. She has her own special pillow and her own blanket on the bed and all kinds of toys and bones and treats.鈥

Comfort and security of having a dog with you as a truck driver

When Davisson and Sanza are on the road together, Sanza plays the role of guard dog and protector. 鈥淚f I don鈥檛 have the blinds closed and somebody comes within ten feet of her truck (and this is her truck now) she will go crazy barking and letting me know. If she hears a noise in the middle of the night 鈥 even if it鈥檚 just somebody climbing into their own truck next door 鈥 she鈥檚 barking to let me know somebody鈥檚 out there.鈥

What draws someone to long haul trucking?

Davisson loves the life of a long-haul truck driver. She loves getting out and seeing the world. She remembers traveling with her dad when she was 14-years-old and getting a taste of his life of adventure. He went somewhere new every day.

A day in the life of a long-haul truck driver

A typical trip for Davisson takes her on the road for 6-8 weeks at a time. 鈥淚 try to go about 500 to 550 miles a day. Sometimes I do more, sometimes I do less, but that鈥檚 my average.鈥 She will come home for 4-5 days and then back on the road she goes. Davisson describes a recent trip: 鈥淚 went from Tipton, Pennsylvania to Lancaster, California in one trip. 2,518 miles from the Eastern U.S. to the West Coast.鈥

When Davisson finishes a 6-8 week trip she takes her truck home with her to Arkansas. When she leaves her home for the next jaunt, she鈥檒l sometimes start by picking up freight locally in Arkansas, as she did on her last journey. 鈥淭hen I took that freight to Kentucky, and then from Kentucky I went down to West Memphis and then to Pennsylvania, then to Ohio, so it just goes wherever the loads need to go and for whomever is available to run those loads in that area.鈥 Sometimes when making a delivery, the receiving business will have a load for Davisson to pick up, but not always. 鈥淪ometimes we鈥檒l go maybe just down the road or the next town over.鈥

Being a truck driver means getting to see the beauty and vastness of the American landscape

For Davisson, the excitement of her job lies in the surprise of what she鈥檒l see on the road. She doesn鈥檛 plan to visit monuments or cities on her route, she lets what she might see unfold for her naturally. 鈥淚f I pass by a sign for something that鈥檚 a site I want to see I鈥檒l often swing by and see it on the way, if time permits on my route.鈥

Endrea and her dog, Sanza on the road delivering freight for CFI
Endrea and her dog, Sanza, on the road delivering freight for CFI

Davisson treasures the sights she gets to see while out on the road and is full of gratitude for the life she鈥檚 living. 鈥淧ictures are worth a thousand words, but actually getting to see these beautiful sights is so much better. The arch over St. Louis or the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco, seeing them up close is way different from seeing them in a photograph or in a movie.鈥

Some landscapes she鈥檚 been fortunate to see stand out to Davisson. The Utah desert and the lush mountains and forests of Montana are highlights for her. 鈥淚 got lucky to be able to go through Utah in the summer, and it was just gorgeous out there and then I got to go through there in winter right after it had snowed and I鈥檇 actually been on a two-lane highway behind Salt Lake City and came around a corner to see this huge lake with the mountains just right there and it was a gorgeous sight. I had to pull over and take a picture.鈥

Davisson鈥檚 travels follow no routine. Every route is different and takes her to new places. 鈥淭he other day I dropped off in Pennsylvania, picked up in a different spot and then went and dropped off in New York, picked up in Connecticut and dropped off in Indianapolis. Picked up in Indianapolis, and I鈥檓 on my way to Missouri.鈥 Her routes change but the way she spends her days she has routines, 鈥淚 like doing the same thing but in different places.鈥

Who鈥檚 back home when you can get there and check in?

Davisson and her husband have a bunch of buddies for Sanza for the days when she and Davisson get to come home for a stretch. 鈥淲hen we go home there is my beagle mix, Sissy, and then my American Bully, Rigley. And my husband just informed me last week that we have a new Pit mix puppy in the household now. When I tell Sanza we鈥檙e going home she gets excited because she knows she鈥檒l get to go play with her sibling pups.鈥

Davisson feels grateful to have Sanza riding shotgun: 鈥淪he鈥檚 just a good dog. She really is. She鈥檚 got a personality and I just love having her on the road with me.鈥

If you want to read more about dogs in trucks, check out this story about Jameson.

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