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    #16
    by the end of the year I'll have worked over 500 hours of overtime. I'm fucking exhausted.. but, I'm going to keep dancing until the music stops. like sleeve says, we're in a boom right now. in 2 years it could be completely dead. 80 hours a week sounds insane, but if you're out on a rig, what else are you going to do?

    I don't mind the odd trip but mine are usually short (3 days) and only a few times a year. it's almost like a vacation, lol.
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      #17
      how much money are we talking about here?

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        #18
        I know a few people that i graduated with that work on the rigs and supply boats in the gulf. Most of them seem to be month on month off. Ive been working as a ship engineer since graduating. Usually most of my shifts have been 90-100 days on working 10-12 hours a day. I have equal time off for vacations and pays well which keeps me doing it over a 9-5.
        Last edited by ttrousdell; 11-11-2014, 11:10 AM.

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          #19
          Originally posted by Dozyproductions View Post
          how much money are we talking about here?
          Hi there! Read sleeve's post above.
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            #20
            Originally posted by nando View Post
            by the end of the year I'll have worked over 500 hours of overtime. I'm fucking exhausted.. but, I'm going to keep dancing until the music stops. like sleeve says, we're in a boom right now. in 2 years it could be completely dead. 80 hours a week sounds insane, but if you're out on a rig, what else are you going to do?

            I don't mind the odd trip but mine are usually short (3 days) and only a few times a year. it's almost like a vacation, lol.


            Oh I get the pick while the pickings good mentality. I worked 6 days a week for 6 months at the end of '13 with the odd 7th day popped in there. It wasn't really that bad beyond a bit tiring. But, the family life suffered so much so that it honestly just wasn't worth it. Not to say things went to shit but you come to realize after a kid or two that the 500$ + a day OT just really isn't worth it to your kids when they don't ever see you. I realize I'm probably preaching at a lot of married w/o kids or single dudes so take it with a grain of salt. If I was a single dude I'd be putting in massive hours, heh.

            It comes down to priorities, I guess.

            I actually kinda like the manliness aspect of working oil fields. I just couldn't ever convince my wife to let me go make 100k + a year and be gone 9-12 months of it ;) Why be married at that point.
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              #21
              Hey nando you driving to billings or flying, or did you make that trip already?? I be home


              Buddy: you guys are still relatively new to the travel for work game. Yeah it sucks, no doubt about that. Its a big change when your used to being home every night (or in your case your wife being home) and it takes a while, a long while to for the separation to become the "new normal". Once it becomes normal it still sucks but you both figure out how to cope and deal with it both together and individually. Where I live I would be hard pressed to make even a 1/4-1/3 of what I currently make most years. I will have taken nearly 6 months off this year if I dont go back out and have still doubled what my earning potential would be near the house as my general skill set is very common here and we dont have that much industry out side of tourism anymore.

              Sure I could move to your neck of the woods and work locally, be home most night but still have to put in 70-90 hour 6-7 day work weeks it just the way the energy sector is. But who actually wants to live in OK or TX anyway ;)
              Last edited by mrsleeve; 11-11-2014, 03:11 PM.
              Originally posted by Fusion
              If a car is the epitome of freedom, than an electric car is house arrest with your wife titty fucking your next door neighbor.
              The American Republic will endure until the day Congress discovers that it can bribe the public with the public's money. -Alexis de Tocqueville


              The Desire to Save Humanity is Always a False Front for the Urge to Rule it- H. L. Mencken

              Necessity is the plea for every infringement of human freedom. It is the argument of tyrants.
              William Pitt-

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                #22
                Originally posted by ck_taft325is View Post
                Oh I get the pick while the pickings good mentality. I worked 6 days a week for 6 months at the end of '13 with the odd 7th day popped in there. It wasn't really that bad beyond a bit tiring. But, the family life suffered so much so that it honestly just wasn't worth it. Not to say things went to shit but you come to realize after a kid or two that the 500$ + a day OT just really isn't worth it to your kids when they don't ever see you. I realize I'm probably preaching at a lot of married w/o kids or single dudes so take it with a grain of salt. If I was a single dude I'd be putting in massive hours, heh.

                It comes down to priorities, I guess.

                I actually kinda like the manliness aspect of working oil fields. I just couldn't ever convince my wife to let me go make 100k + a year and be gone 9-12 months of it ;) Why be married at that point.
                I get what you are saying completely.

                I used to do a 7 day stretch of on-call, 24 hours a day, every 6 weeks. It made me enough money to buy my first "house" in our absurd housing market here, but once my son was born I had no interest in being away from him for that amount of time.

                I now just work my m-f 7:30-4:00 shift and go home to the family every night.
                Originally posted by codyep3
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                  #23
                  Ive been doing MWD and/or hotshot since I turned 18. Absolutely love it. Well, MWD at least. Hotshot sucks dick but I worked over the summer and made enough to cover my tuition for the year. But its like the rest of the jobs really. Get back from a run, maybe get a few hours of sleep then get called out on another. Boring as shit too. With MWD theres always new things to learn and room for growth. Not so much in the trucking department. And the truckers diet is terrible..

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                    #24
                    I have been wondering about some of the Blue-collar jobs people on here have because I am 21 and I feel like I'm way behind the game because I still have no idea what I want to do with my life. I failed out of University and am going to try and go back next year but I have to figure out what I want to major in before I can do that.

                    I have always loved working with my hands and I have never been one to shy away from manual labor or long hours so I have been thinking that a more "skilled labor" type job would better suit me. I would like to avoid being an expendable, easily replaceable construction worker but if that is the only way to get anywhere in that type of industry, I wouldn't have a choice.

                    Do you guys have any suggestions? I was thinking of going back to school and getting a basic, general degree because honestly, my only motivation to go to school is to be on the bowling team, but after that, I have no idea what I want to do.

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                      #25
                      If you want into the trades college is ok, but can be skipped, try and find a good apprenticeship to get in with, but like any area that trains a skill be ready to leave that area when you break out a journeyman or you will not work much.... Just like with the tech schools for Auto/Motorcycle/Boat/heavy equipment etc... the labor rates in that area are low because many people dont want to leave after they finish school because they have spent 3-4 years establishing a life in that area. With apprenticeships the apprentices are cheaper labor and several can work under 1 journeyman so most jobs have more apprentices that journeyman. When you move to an area with a less established apprenticeship school/program your likely to work much more....
                      Originally posted by Fusion
                      If a car is the epitome of freedom, than an electric car is house arrest with your wife titty fucking your next door neighbor.
                      The American Republic will endure until the day Congress discovers that it can bribe the public with the public's money. -Alexis de Tocqueville


                      The Desire to Save Humanity is Always a False Front for the Urge to Rule it- H. L. Mencken

                      Necessity is the plea for every infringement of human freedom. It is the argument of tyrants.
                      William Pitt-

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                        #26
                        Originally posted by Todd Black 88 View Post
                        I get what you are saying completely.

                        I used to do a 7 day stretch of on-call, 24 hours a day, every 6 weeks. It made me enough money to buy my first "house" in our absurd housing market here, but once my son was born I had no interest in being away from him for that amount of time.

                        I now just work my m-f 7:30-4:00 shift and go home to the family every night.
                        . Im away from home alot as well and it sucks. Last year I was gone 50% of the time....it gets old. The plus for me is that I only work 14 days a month. Im transferring closer to home next year but taking a 60k pay cut. To me its worth it though to wake up in my own bed every morning. I cant wait.

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                          #27
                          Thanks for the quick reply. Not to derail the thread, but I have been looking into something like a welding apprenticeship and there is a welding school near me in Orlando that I was thinking of saving up for. I have always wanted to learn how to weld in the first place and from what I've read, they can make pretty good money if they are willing to travel and do the less favorable jobs. I have nothing really tying me anywhere other than all of my belongings and two cars so I wouldn't mind traveling for a good job and settling down a little later in life.

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                            #28
                            Anyone else work in the oil field?

                            Originally posted by TimbyMaTombo View Post
                            Thanks for the quick reply. Not to derail the thread, but I have been looking into something like a welding apprenticeship and there is a welding school near me in Orlando that I was thinking of saving up for. I have always wanted to learn how to weld in the first place and from what I've read, they can make pretty good money if they are willing to travel and do the less favorable jobs. I have nothing really tying me anywhere other than all of my belongings and two cars so I wouldn't mind traveling for a good job and settling down a little later in life.

                            Become an underwater welder. Your only allowed by law to work 2 weeks or something like that out of the month and a year ago when I had a guy come to my school to talk about the welding field he said the under water welder a can make up to 200k a year or something like that and starts out at right around 100k a year.


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                            1991 318i 4dr slick top


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                              #29
                              Originally posted by ThatOneEuroE30 View Post
                              Become an underwater welder. Your only allowed by law to work 2 weeks or something like that out of the month and a year ago when I had a guy come to my school to talk about the welding field he said the under water welder a can make up to 200k a year or something like that and starts out at right around 100k a year.
                              Yeah, I remember reading stuff about that. I have also always wanted to get a SCUBA license so it'd be the best of both it seems. It sounds like it would a pretty awesome job and I feel I would be comfortable enough with the risks that could be involved.

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                                #30
                                Originally posted by TimbyMaTombo View Post
                                Yeah, I remember reading stuff about that. I have also always wanted to get a SCUBA license so it'd be the best of both it seems. It sounds like it would a pretty awesome job and I feel I would be comfortable enough with the risks that could be involved.

                                Plus your in Florida that's a + and you only gotta work like half month but get paid the big bucks. I can see where the money is well earned though. Welding oil pipe 100ft deep in the middle of the gulf could get hairy at times.


                                1989 325is l 1984 euro 320i l 1970 2002 Racecar
                                1991 318i 4dr slick top


                                Euro spec 320i/Alpina B6 3.5 project(the never ending saga)
                                Vintage race car revival (2002 content)
                                Mtech 2 turbo restoration
                                Brilliantrot slick top "build"

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