Fully licensed and insured. Cal P.U.C. T-190267, US D.O.T. 149422 Book The Moving Crew today! Call (916) 730-8305
The Moving Crew - Sacramento Area, Northern California
  • A View from the Truck

    Andy Zuker, Co-ownerMy name is Andy Zuker and I’m a co-owner of the Moving Crew. I intend to use this blog to make moving better by explaining real life move situations to educate anyone who is reading on the many intricacies of moving.

    For example, back in my early days of moving I learned the hard way that the tape measure is one of the mover’s most valuable tools. I figure if I learn something about furniture, homes, appliances, or moving I should share it. Perhaps someone can take this information apply it to their move and have a better experience.

    I’ve learned so many things over the years moving offices, families, government agencies, churches, and retail stores, most of which I would not have known if I didn’t experience it.

    I will never use a name in this blog or any other personal or business information. All of my customer and employee information is strictly private and is never shared with anyone. Period.

    These are just tales and tips of interest, from myself and other movers, about an industry created for something everyone does, almost everyone hates to do, and nearly all people take for granted in some way.

    Thank you and enjoy.

To Far Away Lands

Sometimes I get calls where a person asks me, “How much will it cost to move to the East Coast?” and I often wish I had a simple answer. There is no simple answer to that question and no one-right-way to do an interstate or long distance move.

I often respond with something like, “Well… what would you be moving and how many miles are you going?” just to get the vaguest idea of what type of service they are seeking.

Moving cross-country is expensive and challenging, no matter if you move everything yourself or you hire movers to pack, move, unpack. With a local move, if it doesn’t all fit or isn’t all ready, it’s ok, you can take a few trips in your car with those last-minute items. When you’re going from California to Vermont, it all has to fit and it all has to be packed really well.

The most important step of any interstate move is planning and hopefully this blog can help you get started with this crucial step by outlining a few different methods of moving far away and some things to expect on a long-distance move.

D.I.Y.: The cheapest, most labor-intensive long move. This is the move for those who have strong backs, love adventure, and don’t tend to get sleepy at the wheel. You will need to rent the truck, rent or buy lots of moving pads, ropes, and likely rent a moving dolly.  Always be sure to budget for meals, hotels, and fuel. It is safe to estimate fuel at about $3.10/gallon and assume the lowest miles per gallon rating for planning. If you end up with extra fuel money it is better than running out of gas and cash a few states before your destination. The best way to stretch your fuel dollars when covering great distance is to keep to the posted truck speed limits of 55 m.p.h. I know, it feels slow but it can save lots of money over the course of a few thousand miles.

Also keep in mind if you are an A.A.R.P., AAA, or other large organization member, you are possibly eligible for hotel/motel savings, possibly even a deal on your rental truck. Be sure to ask!

Many states will require that you enter the weigh stations for commercial vehicles if you are driving a rental truck. It will usually be posted near the entrance if rental trucks are required to be weighed. Don’t be nervous, the officer’s and staff of the weigh stations don’t expect the average citizen to know all the trucking laws and if there is any problems with your truck’s registration, it will be directed to the rental location.

Though the truck is the property of the rental company, be sure to take good care of it. Before you try and drive thousands of miles in a rented vehicle with all of your goods, take a few minutes and read the manual. Learn how to check and add fluids if necessary. Some rental companies may not want you to do this and if so will provide this service at their locations nationwide should you need oil in Nebraska or something like that.

Drive-It-Yourself: This is like the first option, but you have a local service like the Moving Crew load your rental truck, and a similar local service unload it and place the items in your new home. The same advice applies to the transit, but for the load and unload you will pay an hourly rate.

When the Moving Crew does load or unload moves like this, we ask that the customer provides the moving pads and the tie-downs. These are always available at the truck rental location and are critical to a safe long-distance move. I know you need to save every penny you can when moving far away, but skimping on pads is a bad idea. There is a lot of bumpy road between here and there and though we’ll do a great job loading the truck, a lot can happen crossing 3 mountain ranges, deserts, plains, hills, and forests.

The “U-Pack” Trailer/ On-site storage units: This is a great option for long moves that is less-expensive than a full-service relocation and saves the driving for a professional licensed semi-truck driver.

There are a few different companies that provide services like this, the most recognized being ABF and P.O.D.S. In the case of ABF or similar services, the company drops off a semi-trailer and a ramp at your home, you or a local moving service loads it up. When your goods are all in the truck, you install a bulkhead (temporary wall), they pick up the trailer, and eventually it is placed outside your new home where you or a local service unloads it. You are charged by the mile and the linear feet of trailer floor used, and pay hourly for the labor at both ends.

For P.O.D.S., S.A.M.’s, U.N.I.T.’s (seeing a pattern here?) or other portable storage units the process is very similar. When the thing is full and your items are secured, the company picks it up and trucks it to your new home, or sometimes stores it for awhile in a secure yard until you are ready. With this service you pay for the unit, the travel, and any time it is stored.

Either of these methods of moving are great, but there are a few things to consider and be aware of. One concern is when it will arrive at your new home. Because of the vast nature of networks and the way logistics are arranged and coordinated, you might not know for sure exactly when your belongings will arrive. I’ve had a few clients who had to camp out in an empty home for a few weeks, unsure of when the trailer will arrive. This also makes it difficult to schedule the local unload service. The savings versus a full-service move could be a few thousand dollars so if you are cool with a sleeping bag on the floor for a bit, or have friends/family to stay with this could be ideal.

Another concern is the driving. You have no idea who’s going to be driving the truck or how smooth and cautious they are. Make sure whenever you are moving long distances that your items are well-packed in good boxes and that your items are loaded into the truck with care and thought.

The Van-Line Move: This is the most typical interstate move. This is a full-service relocation brokered by a local agent and fed into a national network of truck drivers, and completed by a local agent on the other end. These moves are bid using weight and mileage.

These moves are done professionally, and methodically, though like anything there are some horror stories from the industry. ANYTIME you hire a mover for anything you should check them out thoroughly before you commit. There are good and bad movers out there and in the modern world a business’ reputation is well-documented. Most local agents of Van-Lines, the drivers, the labor, and the management do a great job.

Though the local agent may have a company name like Joe’s Movers, if they are a Van-Line affiliate, they will also represent something more familiar like Mayflower, North American, or Red Ball.

The Van-Line affiliates offer an array of services from full-packing and moving, to just loading, driving, and moving. Often your goods will not fill the entire 53ft semi-trailer and it will be carrying a combination of different family’s goods separated by bulkheads. Because of this it is incredibly important (and the law) that the movers label your goods with numbered stickers and maintain an inventory log.

The other thing about this type of move is that there are seldom guaranteed drop-off dates. This is done for the sake of logistics only, or the routing of trucks. Say your goods are loaded in Sacramento, the truck may drive to L.A. and load another person’s goods. Then it may drive to Salt Lake City, unload the other belongings, drive down to Houston and load more, head up to Chicago and unload, before finally getting your items to your new home in North Carolina and then head to Detroit to load up again, and on and on.

The dedicated logistics professionals in this country are very impressive in my opinion. The shear amount of fuel, time, and money saved by route-planning is extraordinary. Though it may seem zig-zaggy and crazy to the average person, it is not.  We might not always understand the plan, but you can bet that it makes perfect sense in terms of moving tons and tons of freight and household goods around this vast nation everyday.

The “Exclusive Use” Move: This is where the movers arrive at your door in their own truck, load, drive, and unload your goods. This has the highest level of accountability, the most direct route to your new home, the least time spent waiting for your goods, and the most peace of mind of any interstate or long distance move. It should be expected that this is the most costly of the options for moving far away. The mover will also offer a packing service and supply the boxes, though this is not exactly cheap either.

These moves are bid based on weight, mileage, and “exclusive use of a ____ cubic ft vehicle.”  Packing or unpacking is usually done separately, bid on time and supplies used.

Unfortunately I have had many people call and ask for this type of move, only to be astounded by the price. One of the reasons this move is so costly, is because it causes the mover to either rent a truck and fly the movers back to home base, or drive back across the miles with an empty truck, paying the movers the whole way.

This move has the highest fuel and labor costs, but what the person moving gets is the assurance that their belongings will be handled with care, driven directly to the new location, and unloaded promptly by the same people who loaded it. This is the Cadillac of moves, but depending on the situation can be the best option, especially if you are moving artworks, heirlooms, and other items of exceptional value.

Getting to the Point Finally: If you’ve read all the way to this point, thank you. You are a trooper. Ultimately the point of this entry was to inform about the different methods and means of getting your life’s gatherings from point A to point B. With any big change in life there is much to think about and much to plan.

Regardless if you’re moving to the house next door, or the most northern point of Maine, ask questions, get info, plan ahead, and have a garage sale before you get an estimate.

Please contact me with even the smallest question about moving. If my company cannot be of service on your move, maybe I as a mover can offer suggestions and insight on how to have the smoothest move possible.

-Andy Zuker, Co-Owner of The Moving Crew

andyz@calmovingcrew.com  (916)730-8305

Posted in Talk of the Trade | 3 Comments

Outside the Box- The Tape that Binds…

Household Goods relocation is not a one-size-fits-all service and it never will be.

There are so many factors that go into a move that to name them all would be absurd but some key ingredients of all moves that can be very different from family to family include:

Number of boxes, number of pieces of furniture, size of home, distance between homes, specialty items, quality of packing, preparedness of home, amount of fine art, specialty items, extraordinarily heavy items, access to the home, what is kept in the garage, appliances, etc.

One thing I cannot stress enough is the importance of packing properly and sealing up the boxes with good tape. Trust the man who moves boxes everyday when he says don’t get cheap or lazy when it comes to packing and packing supplies. After all, it is everything you own that is going into those boxes, then on to that truck and then into your new home.

Sometimes I am genuinely surprised at at the condition of boxes, but I know packing is stressful, especially when trying to live your normal life and coordinate a new home, new schools sometimes, job changes, life. However, if you take the time to wrap all your finest china in paper and pack it carefully in a box, at a minimum you should tape the top and bottom of that box closed.

Recently on a move I picked up a box of fine dishes from the china hutch, packed by my customer, and they all fell out the bottom which was only folded closed. 30 pounds of nearly irreplaceable dishware from a lifetime and no tape on the box! Luckily I only got the box a few inches off the carpet before the avalanche began and nothing broke.

I love what I do and I take care of people’s belongings very well. In order for me to do a great job, we need to work together.  I have packed many homes and all sorts of peculiar items, fine art, dishes, urns containing passed family members,  you -name-it, and I would be happy to answer any question about packing, no matter how mundane.

One thing I will tell everyone who moves is to get good boxes and don’t buy the cheap tape from the big home improvement warehouse store.

Good moving boxes can be flattened and stored for multiple uses which helps mitigate the cost of cardboard that can seem staggering at first.

The tape is a one-time investment but it is so worth it. The different between well-sealed, sturdy moving boxes and open-topped, dilapidated boxes is night and day.

If you have any trouble finding moving supplies and good tape, or need help knowing how to begin packing or have any questions, please call me.We offer a world-class packing service, too.

If there is any one thing I’ve learned about moving in my years it is that great preparation is the key to a move that is affordable, safe, timely, successful, and perhaps even enjoyable!

Posted in Talk of the Trade | 2 Comments

Getting out the Door

People often comment to us while we’re moving furniture that we must not need to work out much with a job like ours. In a way it is true, at least in the summer when you’re doing moves all day everyday and are fit and strong.

In the winter it can get slower and its easy to get lazy. I used to be on a professional paint crew in Michigan and we would basically close every winter. Then I would get really soft and lazy.

It seems very easy to spiral downward with any bad habit and I think laziness is the gateway bad habit for its effect on total physical and mental health. When I get in a rut of being lethargic it seems to always bring malaise. When I eat junk food because I’m too lazy to cook I just feel lazier.

Several weeks ago I bought a used bike for absurdly cheap on Craigslist and I think it may be the best thing I have done in ages. If riding hills in Auburn wont make someone fit and strong I don’t know what will.

I’ve heard so much diet and exercise talk in my life and seen so many infomercials for product after product its ridiculous. We’ve all seen the lengths some will go to surgically to achieve their fitness ideals.

Yet I find to my unexpected amazement that when I simply avoid junk food and fast food and get on my bike more days a week than not, I feel incredible.

Sometimes the hardest part, though, is getting out the door. Getting up from the warm bed, driving to the gym, whatever, sometimes you just do not want to exert. But at least when you find something that you like to do, that is also great exercise, it only takes a few minutes to start loving it again.

Then before you know it you’re all pumped full of endorphins, feeling great, breathing clearly with no stomach aches, no back aches, no headache and you’re smiling all day long for no reason.

Posted in The Rest | Leave a comment

One Mover’s Love/Hate Relationship with Scandinavia

In the last ten years or so in America there has been a furniture revolution with the steady stream of stylish, inexpensive imports from Scandinavia. This has been great for so many people in myriad ways.

For one, the majority of these furnishings are lightweight which is good because not everyone out there is a mover. Most of the items you tote home in a box and build yourself which is also very convenient. Places like Ikea have great prices on attractive home wares, so much so that people who could not normally afford nice, new furniture can now fill a home or apartment with quality goods.

Personally, I like this stuff. I think it looks great and as a twenty-something I know many people that have put together beautiful homes with inexpensive Scandinavian wares.

As a mover, I tend to get exposed to the darker side of this hip craze and I have one major complaint about this type of furniture: It was not made to be moved- especially wall units and wall-mounted cabinets. Cabinets do not partially disassemble. They must be taken completely apart. I had a move experience where the family had built (in the room) 6 floor to ceiling cabinets which were really nice and looked great. When we went to move them, first we couldn’t tip them over to get them out the door because they went all the way to the ceiling so we took the legs off. Then they were too tall for the truck we had which was smaller to navigate a treacherous driveway. We ended up spending more time than we should have messing with those cabinets alone which added cost to the move.

One of the more common problems I have encountered in moving Scandinavian furniture or any build-at-home furniture is that it was built in a room but must now be taken out a door and down some stairs. If it won’t fit it must be disassembled which can wear out screws, cams, dowels and hinges. Often times there is a basically cardboard back that is tacked on with little staples or tiny finishing nails.

Sometimes it is just complexity.  I recently struggled to break down a bed, despite the many beds that I have moved,  because it was an overly complex structural system that held it all together. Once assembled it is a beautiful platform bed with modular head rests, but taking it somewhat apart to move it and putting it back together is really rather involved.

If the person who put it together doesn’t follow exactly all of the steps or, say, use all of the parts, the piece may look and function perfectly, but may not go back together correctly after moving.

As a mover I do love furniture like this because it is lightweight, but sometimes it is more challenging to move than heavier, more solid items. Overall the benefits outweigh the difficulties. I am glad that Scandinavian furniture is popular in America because I think people feel happy when they can take pride in their homes. The fact that more people can afford to do that is a good thing in my opinion. It is good, though, to be aware of the potential problems some out-of-the-box furnishings can have in regards to moving.

Posted in Talk of the Trade | Leave a comment

A View from the Truck

My name is Andy Zuker and I’m a co-owner of the Moving Crew. I intend to use this blog to make moving better by explaining real life move situations to educate anyone who is reading on the many intricacies of moving.

For example, back in my early days of moving I learned the hard way that the tape measure is one of the mover’s most valuable tools. I figure if I learn something about furniture, homes, appliances, or moving I should share it. Perhaps someone can take this information apply it to their move and have a better experience.

I’ve learned so many things over the years moving offices, families, government agencies, churches, and retail stores, most of which I would not have known if I didn’t experience it.

I will never use a name in this blog or any other personal or business information. All of my customer and employee information is strictly private and is never shared with anyone. Period.

These are just tales and tips of interest, from myself and other movers, about an industry created for something everyone does, almost everyone hates to do, and nearly all people take for granted in some way.

Thank you and enjoy.

Posted in Who's The Moving Crew? | Leave a comment
  • The Moving Crew is a licensed and professional moving company with an emphasis on safety and satisfaction. We can accommodate all sizes of moves, from a small apartment across town, to a corporate relocation across the state.