Weekly Truss Deliveries March 23-27, 2026
A Ramble Through Washington’s Rooftops:
The Week Truss Components of WA Went Calling
Some jobs announce themselves with trumpets. Others arrive quietly on the back of a flatbed truck, at dawn, with nothing but good lumber and honest intent. Last week, Truss Components of WA belonged firmly to the second sort.
From March 23 through March 27, 2026, a procession of roof truss packages set off across Washington like a well‑organized migration—timber travelers bound for towns with names that sound as if they were invented by poets or prospectors, and occasionally by both.
The Journey Begins: Napavine and Winlock
The week opened on March 23 in Napavine (98565), a place that has never been accused of haste. The roof trusses arrived there first, as if to politely test the waters before venturing onward. That same day, another load rolled into Winlock (98596)—a town sturdy enough to appreciate a straight beam and patient enough to wait for it.
Tumwater, Elma, and a Return Visit or Two
By March 24, the roads grew friendlier with familiarity. Tumwater (98502) received a delivery, followed closely by Elma (98541). Port Angeles also made its first appearance that day, tucked up against the Olympic Peninsula like a thoughtful listener at the end of the table.
It is worth noting that some towns, being sensible folk, requested more than one visit. Tumwater welcomed another load later in the week on March 26, this time at 98501, proving once again that progress rarely arrives just once and leaves satisfied.
Olympia: The Center Cannot Hold Just One Shipment
No Washington journey worth its fuel skips Olympia, and Truss Components of WA did not attempt the offense. Roof trusses found their way there on March 25 (98503), again on March 26 (98516), and once more on March 27 (98516).
If this seems excessive, it is only because Olympia understands roofs the way farmers understand weather: you prepare properly or regret it later.
Enumclaw, Shelton, and the March of the North
Midweek brought deliveries to Enumclaw (98022) on March 26, a town that stands with one foot in the mountains and the other in good sense. Shelton (98584) followed on March 25, no doubt eyeing the trusses like a carpenter eyes a straight level—approving, but quietly so.
Port Angeles: Twice Over, and None the Worse for It
Port Angeles (98363) received roof truss packages on March 24 and again on March 27. Some places earn a return visit by being difficult; Port Angeles earns it by being worth it.
Why These Deliveries Matter
Each of these roof truss packages represents more than lumber and fasteners. They are the unseen future of homes, shops, and structures that will one day keep out rain, snow, and the occasional poor decision. Truss Components of WA delivered not just materials, but precision‑built roof trusses, timed routes, and the quiet reliability that contractors depend on but rarely praise aloud.
The Moral of the Story (Because There Always Is One)
A roof, like a reputation, is only as good as what holds it up. Last week, across Napavine, Winlock, Tumwater, Elma, Olympia, Shelton, Enumclaw, and Port Angeles, Truss Components of WA did its part to keep Washington well‑covered.
And if Mark Twain himself were watching from the roadside, he might have said nothing at all—only tipped his hat as the trucks passed, satisfied that honest work was still traveling good roads.
