Teen cleans up with shower business

Posted by on September 5, 2012 in Featured, Great Big World | 0 comments

Evan Jensen waits for customers at his mobile shower business, Better Showers, near Alexander, N.D. (AP Photo/James MacPherson)


It took little more than a day for 18-year-old Evan Jensen to smell opportunity in North Dakota’s booming oil patch.

The recent high school graduate got a whiff of himself and his 21-year-old brother, Justin. The two had been sleeping in a pickup while looking for work in the oil fields of western North Dakota.

“We smelled,” he said. “Bad.”

Thousands of workers have descended on the region to seek their fortune in the oil fields, and housing construction and growth of brick-and-mortar businesses haven’t kept up. The closest shower to Jensen was at a truck stop some 60 miles away. It was expensive, filthy and the wait was several hours long.

That’s when the idea for a mobile shower hit him harder than the reek of his own B.O.

“There are a lot of necessities that aren’t available out here,” Jensen said. “Like a place to take a shower and brush your teeth.”

An armada of food trucks and other roving enterprises was already catering to oilfield workers. The teen believed others also would value a hot shower nearly as much as a hot meal.

He pitched the idea to his parents back at their farm near Lake Preston in eastern South Dakota. His father and other relatives helped him convert a 53-foot semitrailer into a five-stall shower center with an office and laundry facilities.

A 6,000-gallon semi tanker alongside the trailer provides fresh water and collects the greywater.

The mobile venture, called Better Showers, rolled into an RV campground in the heart of the oil patch in June. A shower costs $10, with a half-price discount for residents of the RV park where the business is located. Towels and washcloths are $1 extra. The water pressure is strong, the soap is free and there is no time limit.

The business is parked along U.S. Highway 85, the busiest two-lane highway in western North Dakota, where about 100 trucks pass by every 10 minutes. The showers are open from 4 p.m. to 11 p.m., the time when most people are getting off work.

At least two dozen people stop daily, and Jensen said most are repeat customers. They come from around the globe, and he knows most of them only by nicknames, such as “Cowboy” and “Mondo.”

“It’s been a very educational adventure,” said Jensen, whose hometown has fewer than 600 people.

Jensen said he earned several thousand dollars this summer from the showers. He recently advertised the business on Craigslist at $95,000 and hopes to use the proceeds to pay for four years of tuition at McNally Smith College of Music in St. Paul, Minn.

Evan Jensen stands beside his mobile shower business, Better Showers, near Alexander, N.D. Jensen raised money for the facility, which caters largely to workers in North Dakota’s oil patch and hopes profits from the business will pay for his college tuition. (AP Photo/James MacPherson)

Reported by JAMES MacPHERSON of the Associated Press from ALEXANDER, North Dakota

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