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Old 10-27-2005, 05:38 PM   #1
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Default What's your "real" job

As much as many of us would rather work with wood full-time; those of us who are not retired usually have a day job.

Mine's pretty obvious <grin>, but what do the rest of you do?

Bob
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Old 10-27-2005, 06:09 PM   #2
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Question real job

BobD-

So you want to know my real job. I am a Design Engineer I design Printed Circuit Boards. Been doing it for 30+ years. And yes I can't wait to retire so my real job will be scroll sawing.

See you at the Open House next October. Looking forward to that, too.

-Bill
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Old 10-27-2005, 06:46 PM   #3
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I have the good fortune of having one of the best jobs in the world.
How would you like a job that pays well and offers training opportunities.
You get to walk 10 to 15 km per day, literally stop and smell the roses as you walk along.
You get to work in a city and in rural areas, surrounded by scenic mountains and fields.
Get paid well and have reasonable job security, I have been withe the same employer 26 years.
I do most of my creative designing while I am working, packing a pad of paper and a pencil as I work.
I read water meters for the City. Not a job for everyone but it is great for me. 8 more years till I retire.
Then I will just change lines of work.
Although my job title is Meter Reader, I prefer Water Distribution Data Acquisition Technician....wonder if that warrants a raise?
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Old 10-27-2005, 11:45 PM   #4
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I'm a metal fabricator at a sign company. I enjoy it most days. I'm creating things with my hands and continuously learning new techniques for doing things that can cross over somewhat to my woodworking. Not to mention I have almost unlimited access to some alternative scrolling materials such as plexiglas, aluminum, and sentra. I can get the scraps which are perfect sizes for scrolling. Have a few projects in mind for those materials just haven't done them yet.
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Old 10-28-2005, 12:10 AM   #5
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I work at a chemical plant in South Texas as a process operator.
I work 12 hr. shifts. I don't have to much time for scrolling but
I try to get in a few hrs. per week.
Bill
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Old 10-28-2005, 02:57 AM   #6
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I was someone who yelled at other people to do their job as it relates to my needs instead of as it relates to the four other project managers who had calls on their time. That was the slow, drifting disintegration-through-promotion of a career in technology. Fortunately (and I don't mean that ironically), my job was sent to India (and I trained the guys over there who divided it up), and I looked to other things.

Armed with a decent severance package, I set out to become a luthier. Along the way I discovered scrolling, and somehow also teaching English as a second language.

So now. I work three partial days a week at a Woodcraft franchise, which gives me little money but a great discount on materials, a place to use machines I can't afford, and contacts with people who need custom register grates, false mullions, and other custom scrolled work. I work a few hours a week teaching English in workplace settings, and I make Mountain Dulcimers and market them at music and art festivals.

The rest of the time I scroll, teach classes on scrolling specific projects at the Woodcraft store, design patterns and market scrolled and turned objects on the internet, ebay, and craft shows.

Thank goodness I have the one most important tool a craftsman needs: a spouse who has a job with health insurance.
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Old 10-28-2005, 03:20 AM   #7
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My official job description would be Evangelist, but I'm also known as 'preacher' and 'minister.'
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Old 10-28-2005, 08:10 AM   #8
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I guess that I am lucky enough to be a full time woodworker.
I am not too sure what my real job was having started in 1956 as an apprentice carpenter and moved on through the trade to become a building inspector and then an urban valuer. In 1976 we as a family left New Zealand on our sailing yacht for a 3 year trip around the world and of course stopped on the way. In Australia I was a foreman of a joiners shop, in Israel I became a shipwright, in Cyprus I gained tickets as a ship master and finally became a salvage tug master.When we finally arrived back in New Zealand in 1996, having taken 20 years to sail aroud the world I could not get a decent paid job so I went back to my trade . It seems that I have done the full circle and ended up where I started.

Rhys H
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Old 10-28-2005, 01:53 PM   #9
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i'm an electronic technician. i fix and test devices that the US govenment uses .

Last edited by BobD : 10-28-2005 at 02:09 PM. Reason: A little too inflamatory for a scroll saw board with a strong veteran following
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Old 10-28-2005, 02:44 PM   #10
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I am a Fabrication shop manager. We supply cutom parts to the High Tech. industry and the Research Institutes.
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