What do you do for work/profession?

I’m an industrial income property broker and leasing agent.
I hunt about 40 days per year at my out of state lease in Alabama. New tech allows me to be out of town several weeks at a time.
I also hunt out of state in Ohio for a week after Thanksgiving. I love my job and never plan to retire fully. I’m 63. Business in in Florida. I am single , live in a mice but modest home. I can’t have it all.
 
Retired big city cop of 28 years. Mixed in with 18 years combined Army and NG Infantry. Used to enjoy it, most of the time. Current “retirement job” work at an elementary school for active shooter deterrence.

Currently I hunt once a year (4-5 days) in CA where I’m originally from. ( moved to Texas for family and cost of living for retirement) I hunt quite a bit here (30 plus days) but it’s not the same.

My old job used to allow me to have some week days off to hunt and fish. Also 10/12 hr shift work allowed for 3 or sometimes 4 days a week off, but I chose to work a lot of overtime. When I went back in the NG that ate up outdoor time also. I told myself I would make up for it when I retired, as I was staying in shape. That was a lie. Had major health problems upon retirement and it greatly affects my ability to hunt the mountains the way I used to. Chasing bad guys and dollars was great until it wasn’t. Get out and do what you love as much as you can now.
The cops by us (medium sized city) work a rotating 4 and 5 day on off schedule. They love it. 4 vacation days gets them 14 days off when they pick it right. They're definately busy when on duty, and its gotten worse, but pay and retirement is decent. Unlike years ago when it was difficult to get a police/fire/EMS job, their roster hasn't been full in years. Can't find people to hire.
 
Home service company, specializing in high end residential window cleaning.
Pure water/water fed pole system.
12th season coming up. No employees, just my wife and I.

The relationships developed with clients are the largest source of satisfaction from this job. Admin is mostly automated and the physical work is satisfying, though not very challenging, like the commercial fishing I used to do.

Work season is Late April till early Nov. I take off appx. 4-5 weeks during hunting season. (Aug-Sept), before a final push of 6 weeks of work. More time spent hunting in Nov/Dec. as well.
Dec.-April is travel, backcountry snowboarding, surf etc.

My hunting is definitely not hindered by my job.
 
Logistics 3pl, not bad but not what I want to do forever, good upside but being gone for 2 weeks at a time is a money killer
 
1. General Contractor (Commercial), in operations (Project Management). Coming up on 8 years in. Fun stat, worked on projects totaling ~2.16 Billion worth (our contract values) of work so far.

2. Sometimes yes, sometimes no. I consider shifting careers every year. Estimating, precon, owner's rep, work for a sub, etc. (If anyone in ID or MT is hiring...DM me...)

3. Two or three full weeks worth of PTO for hunting with plenty of weekends per year. Probably close to 30 days in the field between deer, elk, bear, predator, and turkey. Spend the other weekends shooting, fishing, and golfing.

4. I'd say it's in the middle compared to what other guys have said. We have "untracked" PTO, but that doesn't mean I can take 8 weeks off. Average 4-5 weeks off and a couple of those are for family. I book fall trips way in advance so it's hard for my project team/manager to say "no" to the time off.
 
I work in natural resources for a State Agency.

The job can be fun but time off can also be scarce. 3 weeks of PTO but very hard to be gone for a full week. But it allows me to live in an awesome place where I can maximize weekends.
Typically hunt 12 or so days a year. Try to scatter 3 day weekends throughout the year for backpacking, climbing, skiing, scouting, etc.
 
Software developer. Its been a good run for a long time but things are starting to get kind of dicey with AI of late. The tools are great but the job prospects are definitely starting to get a lot rockier.
 
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