fieldsportsman 107 Posted July 23, 2011 Report Share Posted July 23, 2011 hi all, does anyone know how the farming jobs are going at the momment for arable and live stock, as in pay, qualifications, how easy is it to get into etc etc Quote Link to post Share on other sites
moxy 617 Posted July 23, 2011 Report Share Posted July 23, 2011 A reasonable knowledge of the stock/crops your working with, all training will be provided on the job by a short tempered, over worked farmer. A good preparation for everything to be your fault so high self asteem is a must. You will be a useless tw*t no matter how hard you try! Long hours including lots of early mornings and late nights. A good and civil amount of common sense to use your initative to get the job done as every piece of machinery WILL break on you, (make do and mend!). Shite pay and a willing to put in more than you take out of the job. No or very little social life. A willing to stink of shit, diesel and stock ALL the time, no matter how much you bathe. A driving licence. And you must be prepared to go through the initiation and lenghty process of "45 thousand uses for bailing band" Unless you are willing to go through or undertake the forementioned apply elsewhere. Get a degree with mcdonalds Forgive me if i have forgotten anything, please feel free to add. 1 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
smithie 2,443 Posted July 23, 2011 Report Share Posted July 23, 2011 i think you just about covered it there :laugh: Quote Link to post Share on other sites
neil r 1,860 Posted July 23, 2011 Report Share Posted July 23, 2011 A reasonable knowledge of the stock/crops your working with, all training will be provided on the job by a short tempered, over worked farmer. A good preparation for everything to be your fault so high self asteem is a must. You will be a useless tw*t no matter how hard you try! Long hours including lots of early mornings and late nights. A good and civil amount of common sense to use your initative to get the job done as every piece of machinery WILL break on you, (make do and mend!). Shite pay and a willing to put in more than you take out of the job. No or very little social life. A willing to stink of shit, diesel and stock ALL the time, no matter how much you bathe. A driving licence. And you must be prepared to go through the initiation and lenghty process of "45 thousand uses for bailing band" Unless you are willing to go through or undertake the forementioned apply elsewhere. Get a degree with mcdonalds Forgive me if i have forgotten anything, please feel free to add. You must have worked for my old boss . The wages can look good on paper but the amount of hours you do for it makes it just not worth it . At times its a case of get up go to work come home go to bed , get up go to work etc . One upside is its easy to get permissions , the downside is you dont get much time to use it . 1 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Simoman 110 Posted July 23, 2011 Report Share Posted July 23, 2011 hi all, does anyone know how the farming jobs are going at the momment for arable and live stock, as in pay, qualifications, how easy is it to get into etc etc Very hard to get into and low pay generally. Afraid to sound like an old fart BUT nowdays most jobs require formal qualifications and you have a better chance of getting the job you want with them.......... Quote Link to post Share on other sites
JohnGalway 1,043 Posted July 23, 2011 Report Share Posted July 23, 2011 A reasonable knowledge of the stock/crops your working with, all training will be provided on the job by a short tempered, over worked farmer. A good preparation for everything to be your fault so high self asteem is a must. You will be a useless tw*t no matter how hard you try! Long hours including lots of early mornings and late nights. A good and civil amount of common sense to use your initative to get the job done as every piece of machinery WILL break on you, (make do and mend!). Shite pay and a willing to put in more than you take out of the job. No or very little social life. A willing to stink of shit, diesel and stock ALL the time, no matter how much you bathe. A driving licence. And you must be prepared to go through the initiation and lenghty process of "45 thousand uses for bailing band" Unless you are willing to go through or undertake the forementioned apply elsewhere. Get a degree with mcdonalds Forgive me if i have forgotten anything, please feel free to add. Now tell him the downsides Moxy Quote Link to post Share on other sites
just jack 998 Posted July 23, 2011 Report Share Posted July 23, 2011 the other year i took a job on a farm driving a tractor (tatties) as the roofing work was a bit slow, 1hr in the machine with another fella (training) and off you go it fooked my back more than roofing as your always looking behind at the trailer nice machine mind i lasted a day and fooked it off Quote Link to post Share on other sites
pip2 0 Posted July 23, 2011 Report Share Posted July 23, 2011 it can be sh#t pay but if u can put up with the long hours its fine ive been doing it for the last 25 years now a manager after doing all the cr#p the best bit of advice is get in with someone thats in the job and help him out as mutch as u can and more and dont moan about any shit job u may get Quote Link to post Share on other sites
tomburras 2,730 Posted July 23, 2011 Report Share Posted July 23, 2011 (edited) A reasonable knowledge of the stock/crops your working with, all training will be provided on the job by a short tempered, over worked farmer. A good preparation for everything to be your fault so high self asteem is a must. You will be a useless tw*t no matter how hard you try! Long hours including lots of early mornings and late nights. A good and civil amount of common sense to use your initative to get the job done as every piece of machinery WILL break on you, (make do and mend!). Shite pay and a willing to put in more than you take out of the job. No or very little social life. A willing to stink of shit, diesel and stock ALL the time, no matter how much you bathe. A driving licence. And you must be prepared to go through the initiation and lenghty process of "45 thousand uses for bailing band" Unless you are willing to go through or undertake the forementioned apply elsewhere. Get a degree with mcdonalds Forgive me if i have forgotten anything, please feel free to add. a perfect explenation 3 years of collage for me then 3 years of farm work then i had to make a job change for your above explenation but you forgot girls dont like tired, skint and smelly blokes Edited July 23, 2011 by tomburras Quote Link to post Share on other sites
CarraghsGem 92 Posted July 23, 2011 Report Share Posted July 23, 2011 A reasonable knowledge of the stock/crops your working with, all training will be provided on the job by a short tempered, over worked farmer. A good preparation for everything to be your fault so high self asteem is a must. You will be a useless tw*t no matter how hard you try! Long hours including lots of early mornings and late nights. A good and civil amount of common sense to use your initative to get the job done as every piece of machinery WILL break on you, (make do and mend!). Shite pay and a willing to put in more than you take out of the job. No or very little social life. A willing to stink of shit, diesel and stock ALL the time, no matter how much you bathe. A driving licence. And you must be prepared to go through the initiation and lenghty process of "45 thousand uses for bailing band" Unless you are willing to go through or undertake the forementioned apply elsewhere. Get a degree with mcdonalds Forgive me if i have forgotten anything, please feel free to add. a perfect explenation 3 years of collage for me then 3 years of farm work then i had to make a job change for your above explenation but you forgot girls dont like tired, skint and smelly blokes thats me fecked, i married a tired, skint, smelly farm boy and to think i turned down a couple of young rich farmers Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.