For me it was welding. Skilled welders can go just about anywhere in the USA when the economy is good.
Shipyards seem to hire when they get a huge contract while oil industry hires when fuel prices are high. For oil industry it's simple welding on new tanks or repair. For me, I love repair as it's much less work and more welding. What I don't like about new tanks is that as the ring is stacked up by the time you get to the upper rings it's scary as hell moving the scaffolding up. There's nothing to hang onto or to attach your safety harness to and one wrong move and down you go 40 feet to the steel bottom. Fuck that. Also, at my age my shoulders are fucked up and I can't lift the boards very easy so the younger guys give me shit about it. On repair you don't have that hazard as it's mostly replacing a rusted out steel floor.
Shipyard welding is just weld, weld, weld all day or all night depending on your shift. Simple, easy work so you have lots of time to think about things and let your mind drift because the process becomes sort of automatic after a few years. Also, I enjoy the camaraderie of working with a crew. Some stupid, some smart, some funny and some as much or even better skilled than I am. Mostly in my later years I came to be the expert and got the more technical welding jobs like running a subarc. Management loves a guy who can run a sub arc welding machine.
thats so fucked up...if I saw an older guy struggling I would offer help.
the problem is the zoomers.
they are heartless fucks, and will eventually (hopefully not) be management of these shit hole companies. those fuckers are heartless AND they fuck up everything while being heartless.
we are all grown ass kids just tryna find out spot in life.
Great story, thanks!
He followed my gaze over at the other guys on the other side of the tank and then looked at me even more embarrassed.
Aww. Should've sent him back to the first guy to ask for a "long-stand."
He called me outside to show me how he coiled up my welding cable just outside where I was welding.
Ohh, so it was like an inductor? Isn't that dangerous though?
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