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(@tornadokc247)
Posts: 1198
Master Chief Registered
 

At the risk of intimitdating some, here goes:

B.Sc. in Cell & Molecular Biology.

Spent a summer working in municipal sewage treatment plant...does that win me the most smelly job award?

M.Sc. in Virology

Several years working in a virus lab on a Ph.D. before I opted to start making money (so I could sail again 😉 and took a job at the leading Biotechnology company...Amgen in So.Cal. where I do science application support & training for the research staff.


 
Posted : February 3, 2008 7:36 pm
(@Fasterdamnit)
Posts: 532
Chief Registered
 

Currently,
Field Service Engineer, biotech company was called Chiron, now owned by Novartis.

I work on automated blood test systems, screening donated blood at blood banks to prevent disease transmission from transfusion. Quite the blend of electronics, automation, fluidics, chemistry, biochemistry and immunology. Always having to learn something new which keeps it interesting.


 
Posted : February 3, 2008 8:12 pm
(@billmullineaux)
Posts: 302
Member
 

Well I used to be an Electrical Engineer, but now I'm working as a Property Tax Consultant. But I'm one of the

good guys

; we help to get people's property taxes LOWERED. That's a very hot topic in Indiana these days. (The Governor was almost lynched by angry mobs of taxpayers recently.)


 
Posted : February 3, 2008 8:25 pm
 Karl
(@sogncab)
Posts: 3551
Member
 

I sure wish Mike Roe was a catsailor. My computer would crash loading that Resume.


 
Posted : February 3, 2008 8:39 pm
 wgb1
(@wgb1)
Posts: 100
Member
 

I am a construction inspector/project manager on highway (mostly bridges)construction projects for the Texas Department of Transportation.


 
Posted : February 3, 2008 10:22 pm
 Trey
(@NCSUtrey)
Posts: 813
Chief Registered
 

I are a college student...that sells a few boats and parts here and there.
May 2008 will bring a BS degree (and I don't mean bachelor's of science) in Business Management and Marketing.

So who in here is hiring? <img src=

alt=

/>


 
Posted : February 3, 2008 10:38 pm
 DHO
(@DHO)
Posts: 207
Mate Registered
 

I have a BS in Physics. I worked in the aerospace industry for a while on some mission control teams, then testing software. This dryed up, so now I'm in Nursing school. I have about a year to go in the RN program at the local JC.

D. Ho
TheMightyHobie18 1067


 
Posted : February 3, 2008 10:44 pm
 DHO
(@DHO)
Posts: 207
Mate Registered
 

Howdy Indywave,
What does that long Hawaiian name of your boat mean?

David Ho
TheMightyHobie18 1067


 
Posted : February 3, 2008 10:47 pm
DVL
 DVL
(@dvl)
Posts: 160
Mate Registered
 

A two year degreee in machine tool with a 4 year apprenticeship to become a tool & die maker. (Good for making custom parts for boats). I went back to school at night for a BS in Manufacturing Engineering. I currently work in the office furniture industry as a Engineer. I am volunteering as a machinest for the local First Robotics team and I am Past President of the local Toastmasters Club.


 
Posted : February 3, 2008 10:57 pm
(@Anonymous 13274)
Posts: 3111
Topic starter
 
Quote
Here's a kitchen I did in a 1.5m town home. One of my favorite/high paying projects.
[Linked Image]

I should have listed cooking in the hobby thread. Nice kitchen, Karl! Double convection ovens with a microwave and warming drawer, six-burner gas stove with custom hood and lighted glass-front hardwood cabinetry. Particularly like the tile backsplash and pot filler. Nice use of space, dude.


 
Posted : February 3, 2008 11:10 pm
popeyez7
(@popeyez7)
Posts: 515
Chief Registered
 

Worked at car washes, then a marina(that was good job),then a gov't job~~3yrs-Army.. 2yrs in Vietnam 69-71(pissed my pants a few times).. Hon. discharge, and odd jobs that sucked after military service. I now work in a steel mill making ''specialty'' steel~~valve,stainless,tool,and things like that. I'v been there 35 yrs with super benefits.It paid for my operations. I will be 59 in Feb. Can't retire yet <img src=

alt=

/> Work sucks~ sailin's Great. Oh well !!!


 
Posted : February 4, 2008 12:10 am
(@calebtar)
Posts: 756
Member
 

Starting boating on the Monongahela river in West Virginia, outboard racing at 11. later, B stock hydros and C runabouts. First real job, putting up hay and other jobs on Grandfathers Farm in the summers. BSME West Virginia University followed by 40 years at Johnson Controls in Sales and Sales Management, http://www.johnsoncontrols.com/publish/us/en/products/building_efficiency.html Concurrently, 2 1/2 years in the US Army on active duty, then 5 1/2 yrs Ready Reserve, left as Captain. Retired from JCI in 1999. Now giving back, volunteering at Sail Sand Point in Seattle, and several other worth while organizations.

Caleb Tarleton


 
Posted : February 4, 2008 1:51 am
Mark
 Mark
(@qb2)
Posts: 140
Mate Registered
 

Deckhand on a scallop boat, bank clerk, car parts shop manager, radio announcer, news journalist, two stressful years (on the other side of the mike) as a political media advisor. The last 15 years, most enjoyably, doing science research based PR for a government department.

I hope to graduate this year with a Masters in PR, only 30 years late.


 
Posted : February 4, 2008 5:25 am
Jake Kohl
(@jake)
Posts: 11744
Three Star Admiral Registered
 
Quote
Cabinet maker. I haven't known another job since I was 17, I'm almost 27 now. I worked at an autoparts store, and a glass factory prior to the woodworking career. I've been self employed for 4 years with my own shop. My advice when it comes to starting your own business is to just let the American dream slide. Someday it will pay but at this point the pay doesn't make up for the long hours, the stress and the trouble. Especially in this crap housing market.

Here's a kitchen I did in a 1.5m town home. One of my favorite/high paying projects.
[Linked Image]

I really like the in-cabinet lighting and the color of those cabinets! I'm planning a kitchen remodel and that will be considered in the plan now. Thanks Karl!


 
Posted : February 4, 2008 8:42 am
(@Anonymous 11804)
Posts: 390
 

Caleb, I worked for Johnson for 10years. I ended up as a project manager. Then went to Trane for a few years, got recruited to be a sales manager for a HVAC rep firm, started my own rep firm, closed that(stress,taxes & slow payers).
I am now the Maintenance Superintendent for Onondaga County Parks. Much more secure, less stress(and money) and good benefits.
The general maintenance workers, carpenters,plumbers and electricians work for me. Their jobs are as important as any and day to day things would not run without them.
When the toilet won't flush, the water isn't on, the roof is leaking or the lights are out, they are the most important guys we have.
I to have spent time in sewage ejector pits fixing pumps <img src=

alt=

/>


 
Posted : February 4, 2008 8:50 am
 Karl
(@sogncab)
Posts: 3551
Member
 
Quote
I really like the in-cabinet lighting and the color of those cabinets! I'm planning a kitchen remodel and that will be considered in the plan now. Thanks Karl!

Get out your checkbook. I charged $15k for that kitchen just in cabinets.


 
Posted : February 4, 2008 9:42 am
(@Anonymous 38621)
Posts: 126
 

MSc. Geology: Work in construction dewatering and treatment.


 
Posted : February 4, 2008 9:51 am
(@billmullineaux)
Posts: 302
Member
 
Quote
Howdy Indywave,
What does that long Hawaiian name of your boat mean?

David Ho
TheMightyHobie18 1067

It's the state fish of Hawaii. I think it was chosen, somewhat as a joke, for its ridiculously long name. It's small, but very colorful (like a Hobie Wave). You can even buy t-shirts with the fish on them. My wife and I have seen several humuhumunukunukuapua'as while snokeling there.


 
Posted : February 4, 2008 10:29 am
(@terryback)
Posts: 1209
Member
 

Body Double


 
Posted : February 4, 2008 11:13 am
Jake Kohl
(@jake)
Posts: 11744
Three Star Admiral Registered
 

Also known as the Picasso Trigger Fish

[Linked Image]


 
Posted : February 4, 2008 11:26 am
(@Anonymous 39155)
Posts: 3112
 

Now there is an idea for a paint job.


 
Posted : February 4, 2008 11:32 am
(@_removed-account)
Posts: 15030
Four Star Admiral Registered
 

Well I used work on underwater explosives (mines) for the USNAVY, and built them up for war time (as needed)... but I hated the BS so I got out and went to school

Pre Law / Economics (with a minor in music). Which lead me directly into ... LOL apartment painting.... That is where I met a guy going to art school for Interactive Computer Design and animation. I absorbed everything he and his friends could teach me and went for a few semesters myself. I was recruited from school (during the DotCom explosion)and became a Search Engine specialist / production monkey.

That has leaded me to my current position (after surviving the dotcom bubble burst and many other jobs) as Marketing Director for 3 medical companies. that is a VERY glorified title for a webmaster/salesguy/designer/scapegoat.


 
Posted : February 4, 2008 12:27 pm
arievd
(@arievd)
Posts: 149
Member
 

I got my undergraduate degree in physical therapy in the Netherlands, and moved to the USA in 1989 with my wife Jacqueline, who also is a PT (no jobs there, plenty here!). While practicing here I went back to graduate school, first for a masters in PT and then for my doctorate in education. A couple of years ago a made the switch from clinical practice to full-time teaching in a PT program.


 
Posted : February 4, 2008 12:43 pm
(@Anonymous 39832)
Posts: 3281
 

I work in the pharmaceutical industry creating and maintaining databases to store and analyze clinical trial information.

Sounds more exciting that it really is.

Before that, I was a IT Support type dude at the university, a building facilities/events worker (setup tables and chairs for functions), a grocery store store accountant, a landscape worker (yes I did dig ditches), a bicycle repairman, a busboy at a restaurant, a school tutor... what else... I can't remember anymore.


 
Posted : February 4, 2008 12:47 pm
peter_nelson
(@peter_nelson)
Posts: 122
Mate Registered
 

My first stab at entrepeneurship was dealing drugs in the 70s. Small stuff -- just enough to live on. That worked till I got busted! Through the 80s and 90s I tried a few

real

jobs but couldn't get the hang of it. Even tried one gig for 5 years with a corporation. What a waste of 5 good years!

I've always made just enough money to

get by

on our relatively simple lifestyle. Early on I realized that there was an infinite amount of money, but only a finite amount of time. I decided right then and there that time was way more valuable than money, and went off pursuing experiences at the expense of making money! If I had to do it all over again, I'd keep it just that way.

I take personal responsibility for getting my crew to quit her job of 40 years! And a good percentage of my friends are either unemployed or unemployable...or both!

When it is all said and done and you are lying there on your bed watching the lights go out, you gotta ask yourself are you gonna be grateful for that extra sale your closed or that extra gig you landed, or are you gonna wish you had spent more time with your kids or more time on the sailboat. I choose the latter...every day!


 
Posted : February 4, 2008 2:33 pm
(@_removed-account)
Posts: 15030
Four Star Admiral Registered
 

Very true Peter!


 
Posted : February 4, 2008 2:39 pm
NACRADUDE
(@nacra1267)
Posts: 38
Member
 

I'm a semiprofessional race car driver and an amateur tattoo artist.
Actually I’m a Mechanical Engineer PE designing building systems.


 
Posted : February 4, 2008 2:46 pm
MaryAWells
(@maryawells)
Posts: 5485
Member
 
Quote
My first stab at entrepeneurship was dealing drugs in the 70s. Small stuff -- just enough to live on. That worked till I got busted! Through the 80s and 90s I tried a few

real

jobs but couldn't get the hang of it. Even tried one gig for 5 years with a corporation. What a waste of 5 good years!

I've always made just enough money to

get by

on our relatively simple lifestyle. Early on I realized that there was an infinite amount of money, but only a finite amount of time. I decided right then and there that time was way more valuable than money, and went off pursuing experiences at the expense of making money! If I had to do it all over again, I'd keep it just that way.

I take personal responsibility for getting my crew to quit her job of 40 years! And a good percentage of my friends are either unemployed or unemployable...or both!

When it is all said and done and you are lying there on your bed watching the lights go out, you gotta ask yourself are you gonna be grateful for that extra sale your closed or that extra gig you landed, or are you gonna wish you had spent more time with your kids or more time on the sailboat. I choose the latter...every day!

I'm fascinated, Peter! How did you convince your crew to stop working?


 
Posted : February 4, 2008 2:56 pm
peter_nelson
(@peter_nelson)
Posts: 122
Mate Registered
 

The corporation she was working for -- a manufacturer of airplanes here in Seattle (but who shall remain nameless!) -- was just like most corporations. They get the workers thinking that they absolutely have to keep working until they die or are no longer needed by the corporation. Usually it is the latter!!

I just started pickling her thinking into a different direction. Basically she and her husband already had plenty of money to live on the rest of their lives. It was pretty obvious to me. She started doing some research, and the more she dug, the more she realized I was right. I mean after that many years in the 'system', there better be a nest egg!!

So she up and quit. Actually she arranged a 3-year temporary leave of absence so she could officially 'retire' without losing any benefits. Two months later her husband did the same thing!

She is stressing right now as she adjusts to living without a regular income. This is a pretty typical stage I have seen lots of retired folks go through. It usually lasts about 6 months. Heck, I went through it, and I didn't even have a regular job!

But in a couple of more months she'll come back out on the other side and wake up one morning realizing she is just fine. The sky ain't gonna fall. She ain't gonna end up in a ditch. And her lifestyle is gonna take a huge leap forward! Actually, that part has already happened. She is waaay more relaxed (even as she stresses!), and is much happier.


 
Posted : February 4, 2008 3:08 pm
(@stewart)
Posts: 927
Chief Registered
 

started my first company at 15 sold it to go to University!! <img src=

alt=

/> Ended up in Medicine but swiftly jumped into developmental neurology and research. Left that after the paperwork time became more than the surgery time. Started another business and gave it to my sister and brother after listing on the Au stock market?? <img src=

alt=

/> <img src=

alt=

/> <img src=

alt=

/> so I am now currently listing 3 multinational businesses..

Hey never said I was smart!!


 
Posted : February 4, 2008 3:22 pm
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