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Don't worry, I'll be ok... I'm finishing up my degree (I'm eligible to graduate at the end of this semester, but want to take 2 more classes next semester for a double-major in addition to my minor) and was planning on looking for an internship this summer. I already have another job at my university, and an old coworker of mine has some contract work I can do.
Really, I was working this job for two reasons: Free travel, and I absolutely love working with airplanes. Even if I really didn't feel like cleaning a plane out an hour before my shift started, I always got really excited when that plane approached and I'd be in charge of marshalling it in, climbing into the cargo bin, etc. There's something about the whole experience that's indescribable... but I'm sure most of you know what I mean. Eventually I hope to work for an airline as a programmer or maybe a GIS (computer mapping) job of some kind.
Edit: Also, I just wanted to say as well that SkyWest has been absolutely fantastic for me. Maybe it's because we're a close-knit station with only a dozen employees (about half of them I worked with every weekend) but the people I'd work with were always phenomenal and I'll probably miss that the most. Things like hiding behind a deice truck with my supervisor, snowballs in hand, while one coworker would trick another into walking by us so we could get him when he didn't expect it.
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Yeah I miss a fun workplace...
I read an article in Time last week about Singapore, and it ended with the line - "In Singapore, even fun is well managed".... too true
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A fun work place can run dry too. I find that I like to move around "Bidding wise" to other locations. It's fun at first but then, after a while, it becomes monotoned and its TIME TO MOVE ON. Some prefer to stay with the same faces forever. That's good for them but not for me. I always pull my tour of duty, like usually a year in a department, sometimes two years, then its time to move on for me. Sometimes I return to my old place of duty, and notice that the folks have aged. Like for example, guys wearing glasses that didn't before. That's a trip. And its never really how you remembered it except for the job. For me, I think its "Healthy" to move around for the mind.
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Well, I can't sleep right now, and my flight is in about 5 hours. Thankfully, I can sleep pretty much all day tomorrow on the planes. Because of heavy ORD-IAD loads, my current plan is MSP-ORD-BTV-IAD-MAD. Lucky me, eh? Aw well, I was prepared for something like this, and at least I don't have to work the night before (I'd be getting off work right now in EAU, 100 miles away) as originally planned.
Wish me luck!
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Good luck, wow that is quite the scenic tour having to get from MSP to IAD via ORD and BTV. Anyways enjoy your time in Espa~a.
Regards,
Chepos
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Dammit... here I am in DC. I would have had absolutely no problem whatsoever getting to Madrid, if the plane decided to come from Madrid to Washington first. Unfortunately, it did not, so that flight cancelled. Tomorrow is quite full, and it's not really worth it when I have to be back in MSP by Wednesday. Because of that, and other load factors, my Spring Break is going to be spent in DC. Could be worse, it's a city I've been meaning to revisit for a while (haven't been here in 10 years, and I was too young to care about much at the time)
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That was on top of the list, but UA only has weekly flights, so I wouldn't be able to get back in time :(
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Oh yeah, the best laid plans of mice and men. On the plus side there’s always the National Air & Space Museum and the Udvar-Hazy Center - admission free
Spongebue, your "almost" trip will stand as an example to others. *wink*
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So, funny story...
I wanted to go to MSP, since that's where my girlfriend's car was (the same car used to get to MSP) but all ORD flights were horribly full, and the cancellation they had didn't help things either. Because of that, we decided to go straight home to EAU instead and figure something else out with the car. Got on an EAU flight really easily, and I joked to my girlfriend that it would be funny if we diverted to MSP. A few minutes later, the pilot made an announcement that they didn't have the visibility to land, and that they'd have to try again else go to MSP. Sure enough, after circling around the airport, the plane suddenly increased speed and altitude and we were on our way to Minneapolis. One of my professors happened to be sitting behind us, and he wanted to be sure he got back to EAU for a family gathering, so he ended up paying our cab ride to my parents' house to pick up the car (couldn't find anyone to do it) and I gave him a ride back to his place.
Ultimately, the plane made it to EAU before we did, but the car wasn't stuck in MSP any longer :) . It was also nice to have a more certain option for my prof.