What about you @D R Oldfield, after all you started this thread
A great place to work and live but out of the blue an option to live and work in Cumbria came up The Shelands, now there's a place, stunning. Posted to RAF Saxa Vord on Unst in 1999, loved it.I was at awe aldermaston for a year, canny place.
I became a tattoo artist many years ago, fell out of love with it about 4 years back. I still do a few a year, choice pieces if it's something I'm interested in but nothing massive anymore.
Now I do decommissioning works at sites like awe. I've just returned from a few months on a rig in shetland.
I can think of worse places to live and workTraveled around the world fixing ship engines. Then lived in the Carbbean working for one of the power companies. Then moved to the UK where I manage ships.
A very important man, wrap him in bubble wrap for years to comeI am probably the youngest here I guess
I am a scientist making vaccines and gene therapy products. Finished uni 3 years ago
i was in civil engineering for around 45 years. Finished as director of a Tunnelling Company. As against talking about what we did — how about how we are going in the future. When I gave I was finding it a lot easier to get 20 graduates than one good tradesman. I found myself doing pub crawls to find people who could DO a job as against having a bit of paper to say they could supervise others who could carry out the work Sorry if a bit off subjectBeen in the construction industry for 36 years bricklayer for the last 30 had a break in the middle for 5 years as site manager
Hurricane Ivan in 2004. Lost half my roof but kept the house. No running water for two weeks and no electricity for over two months.Except on Hurricane days
Tony.
It’s an important issue going forwards for those of us who love to watch work. Industry itself is the problem. There is little or no investment in on-the-job training during courses. As a consequence students have little or no concept of how the real world works and things get done. They have zero practical experience or people skills either as workers or supervisors. Yet industry complains bitterly that colleges and universities don’t give them the right materials. For small companies it’s even worse. They don’t have the financial resources or investment in order to employ apprentices. It’s all cock-eyed if you ask me.i was in civil engineering for around 45 years. Finished as director of a Tunnelling Company. As against talking about what we did — how about how we are going in the future. When I gave I was finding it a lot easier to get 20 graduates than one good tradesman. I found myself doing pub crawls to find people who could DO a job as against having a bit of paper to say they could supervise others who could carry out the work Sorry if a bit off subject
I've been cutting my own hair during lockdown, does they mean I've qualified?I thought we were all hairdressers?
That was 20 yrs ago we have aged gracefully and have more street cred these days.I thought we were all hairdressers?
Hair?I've been cutting my own hair during lockdown, does they mean I've qualified?
Dont know, not seen it yet mate.I've been cutting my own hair during lockdown, does they mean I've qualified?