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The magic of marker lights snaking
down a highway or freckling a truckstop parking lot is
what photographer Bette Garber sees through her lens.
She calls them "land stars."
It's the romance of trucking the stories behind
the drivers that keeps her shutter firing. Bette
clearly knows what it is to be a woman in trucking, but
it's not an issue for her. Her life's work is following
the land stars down the highways and byways of America,
discovering the tales that drive the drivers, and telling
them through pictures and stories.
At the MidAmerica Truck
Show in Louisville, Real Answers flagged down Bette and
her "Truckers News"-bedecked van to hear her tell her
own tale this time in words.
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What is it about trucking that attracted you as a photographer?
"I see romanticism that some people don't believe exists,
but it's there. It's what I try to capture.
"On the CB, some guys badmouth their job, but
not all truckers feel that way. They enjoy the work. They
make a good living. They see the beauty and the great
outdoors.
"Here's the magic, and it's a hidden magic only
truckers see: trucks at dawn. And at night, there's a
snake of gold marker lights it's beautiful
or, at a truckstop, there's a sea of trucks from everywhere
in America.
"There are just certain images of truck life you
can't see anywhere but on the road. It's a great way to
make a living."
Have you always been a photographer?
"Professionally, I've been a writer all my life.
"I graduated from the University of Illinois,
and I've actually done a lot of different things. I was
even a fashion coordinator in Cleveland for a while. I
have a real love for fashion which nobody knows
about me.
"Everything you do in life is a stepping stone.
I did a lot of writing and hopped around. I was traveling
while I did some writing for a scientific company, and
I got a CB just to ask for traffic reports.
"At a trade show, I was talking to a guy from
a lab that did diesel oil analysis. I wrote an article
about it and went to truckstops looking for trucking magazines
to sell it to. One couldn't use it, but another could,
and I sent along photos of trucks on the highway."
"You know, trucks are like trees to some people.
They're there, and they're big, but nobody cares where
they're going. Being a writer, I wanted to know more.
I was always questioning, questioning."
Was that your first "stepping stone?"
"I started taking more pictures in 1976, and a friend
taught me darkroom techniques. In 1977 I took a big box
full of photos to Kansas City for a truckers' magazine
convention. The editors loved them and came out and hugged
me.
"Later that year, during a convoy to block I70
at the Kansas/Missouri line, I was asked to take pictures
there, and that, to me, was the defining moment. "I began
to sell photos to American Trucker, which was a great
magazine and where I did all of my work in the 80s. At
the start of the 90s, I got hooked up with Trucker's News
and editor Deborah Whistler. I've never worked with anybody
like her. She tells me 'If you find it interesting, write
about it.'"
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Women drivers have always been a hot topic in trucking.
Do you look for them to photograph?
"I don't actively look, but they pop up because I see that
they're there.
"There's a show in Gallup, New Mexico, I went to once.
I never stop moving when I'm working, and the scenery always
changes. On one go-round I found a bubblegum colored
Freightliner with 'Thelma & Louise' on the bug screen.
"I said 'Wow!' and knocked on the door. A woman answered
and when I told her who I was she jumped right out of the
truck. She and the other woman in the truck were exwaitresses
at Sizzler who sent themselves to trucking school. They left
behind their old lives in search of life on the road
that's how they came up with Thelma & Louise.
"There are plenty of women just like them and plenty
of stories. Everywhere. I talk to women drivers all the time."
Are there different issues and challenges
women drivers face?
"The issues aren't the same as what men face, but it's not
as bad as it used to be for women drivers.
"I went to a truckstop with a driver once, my friend
Kim Grimm, with no makeup on and our hair not done. Nobody
would wait on us, but when her husband, Rod, came in, a waitress
showed up in seconds.
"There are still a lot of issues out there that aren't
resolved, but I'm not an expert on that.
"With the driver shortage, all drivers are treated
so much better now, and it's been really good for women drivers."
How have you mastered your skills?
"Part of my learning curve has come after 20 years. I see
where things come from, and where they go.
"I've seen lettuce farms and truck loads of pigs with
a sea of noses all looking right at me. I've been bitten by
cattle flies (I always carry bug spray with me, now), been
to a printing company, and seen iron pipe headed for oil fields.
"In trucking, everything is destined to go somewhere
and be part of America the big picture. I've gotten
a taste of that and I try to communicate that through my work.
"Late at night, you can see long lines of trucks from all over
headed to all over. They never stop. It's alive in my head,
and I can 'see' the freight moving. The lines on the maps are
all lit up by marker lights. I hope that comes out in the pictures."
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How does it make you feel to tell the stories you find?
"I get a lot of feedback, and when people call, it's
fabulous. To hear I 'got it right' is really important
to me.
"Truckers don't always have a chance to be in
the spotlight, so it's very important to me to get their
story right and it makes me feel good when I get that
call.
"I did a story once on Johnson Towing and Trucking in
Scranton, PA. It was a neat story because the business
has passed through four generations, and each had put
its stamp on it. My photo of the father made the magazine
cover.
"Years after writing about a trucker, I visited
his home and the story I did was framed on his living
room wall.
"These stories touch people in a good way, and
they live on as part of their family. It all boils down
to that. It's their talent that makes the stories, not
my pictures.
"I think it's real important that you can look
back and say you've touched people in a way that's permanent."
What would be your favorite situation to shoot?
"I'd say a bright, sunny day, somewhere in Utah on a
winding road with a bright, red conventional and a white
trailer rolling down the highway no cars! It would
be isolated and a lot of nice contrast in the light.
"I've spent a lot of my life waiting by the side
of the road for a truck to come along, and a lot of times
they don't. It's frustrating, it really, really is. I
may be there for hours, or I luck out and somebody comes
along quickly.
"Sometimes the scenes are so gorgeous you just
know it'll be a great picture, but it doesn't happen because
no truck comes along."
A lot of drivers carry cameras with them.
Any advice?
"I carry a 'pointandshoot' camera with me
all the time.
It looks simple, but it's very sophisticated.
"The first thing I would tell anyone would be
to understand the limitations of what their camera can
and cannot do. Work with it, and you can take beautiful
pictures.
"Secondly, be patient. There are techniques it
took me years to learn. My studio is littered with pictures
that failed."
You've been shooting trucks for 20 years.
Any plans to shift gears in the future?
"I'm working with a computer program to take my photos
and turn them into artwork, and I have a Website, www.highwayimages.com.
People can find some very romantic images of trucking
there, and even learn a little why someone has devoted
their life to taking pictures of trucks.
"This is it for me. I'm having a blast. How many
people go through life and don't find their niche?
"I found it, and I'm happy and I'm going to stay."
Visit Betty's Website:
www.highwayimages.com
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