Fodor's Travel Talk Forums

Fodor's Travel Talk Forums (https://www.fodors.com/community/)
-   Europe (https://www.fodors.com/community/europe/)
-   -   What's your line? (https://www.fodors.com/community/europe/whats-your-line-475980/)

N2it Sep 22nd, 2004 04:28 PM

What's your line?
 
What do you do for a living and how do you find time to travel?

Kayb95 Sep 22nd, 2004 04:42 PM

Computer analyst - 27 vacation days and no kids to drain the vacation fund. :)

rex Sep 22nd, 2004 04:44 PM

Here you go with at least 122 answers from an earlier time:

http://www.fodors.com/forums/threads...p;tid=34518982

Best wishes,

Rex

P_M Sep 22nd, 2004 05:47 PM

Sr. Oil & Gas Analyst. I get 4 weeks vacation/year, which might be standard for many countries, but it is considered a lot of vacation time for the US. Also no kids.

Travelnut Sep 22nd, 2004 06:00 PM

Project analyst for a regional bank. Have hung on for 30 years (1974 to date) throughout several mergers. Now up to 32 days/year for vacation/incidental illness. Married 30 years as well, no children, no mortgage, no car payments. Thankful for my many blessings.

degas Sep 22nd, 2004 06:20 PM

Bootlegger, okra & peanut farmer and owner of catfish farms. I travel when there is any hard work to be done and return in time to mettle in the efficient operations of my disguntled workers.

tpatricco Sep 22nd, 2004 06:25 PM

LOL degas!

I'm a Commercial Interior Designer, 2 weeks vacation, newly married, new homeowner...no kids. Lots of house projects. Oh, and my husband has 3 hobby cars. We are challenged to balance our desire for travel with everything else. We try to manage 1 big trip and 1 smaller trip each year, and a few drivable weekend getaways in between.

Our years of 2 big trips a year are on hold for a little while. :(

jor Sep 22nd, 2004 06:52 PM

I'm a greeter at the Wal-Mart but make most of my travel money as an internet girl. Hours are flexible so I get in lots of travel.

StCirq Sep 22nd, 2004 07:13 PM

This was done to death in another thread, but: owner/manager of publishing/translation business plus do small group culinary and other tours in France on the side. Take as much vacation as I can, much of it related to business so it can't really be counted as vacation as I'm tied to the laptop.......but not complaining.

indytravel Sep 22nd, 2004 07:30 PM

Senior consultant for a small computer consulting firm.

BTW titles can be so bogus in the computer world. Maybe I should try to use my "Sr." status to get a discount. :-)

I'm paid what I bill. I can take as much time as I can afford and my clients will let me.

The last couple of years have been plush. 6 weeks each year. I've had past clients who would hardly let me take 6 days in a year.

FauxSteMarie Sep 22nd, 2004 07:41 PM

My favorite line when traveling is "Never stand when you can sit. Never sit when you can lie down. And--most important of all--never miss a chance to go when you find a clean toilet."

OK, I know it was not the "lines" you guys were talking about but my line is funnier.

diddl_maus Sep 22nd, 2004 09:04 PM

Librarian

I chaperone my kids' school and sport teams

baldrick Sep 22nd, 2004 10:05 PM

Architect for a University, 4 weeks/yr plus overtime, which can make up to 8 weeks easily. Why taking overtime as holiday, the work piles up, which is a new incentive to do overtime. You see, the 'perpetuum mobile' exists!

hanl Sep 22nd, 2004 10:13 PM

Translator.
And it's a good thing I live in France, as otherwise I'd never find the time to travel here!

caroline_edinburgh Sep 23rd, 2004 04:40 AM

Freelance in IT (although I've been at my current workplace 5 years), get as much holiday as I can afford (the permanent staff get 30 days + 9 days public holidays), no kids.

Jor, what is an 'internet girl' ?

mebanese Sep 23rd, 2004 04:56 AM

I'm a mom with four kids. Time off in the summer is not too hard, but if I travel during the school year, it takes weeks of logistical planning to cover the bases while I'm away.

Needless to say, we travel on a tight budget.

tcreath Sep 23rd, 2004 05:05 AM

I am an administrative assistant for a large health foundation. I've been here for almost 2 years and get 31 days of vacation a year (plus every other Friday off), which is wonderful and a huge reason why I took this job. My husband and I also do not have any children, which makes things a lot easier!

Wildfire Sep 23rd, 2004 06:02 AM

Local government. I just bring back a little gift for those who cover for me.
my own home.
no kids
I like to make travel a priority. I grew up travelling so the appetite has never gone away. One trip overseas a year normally and often one back out to the great southwest.

dan_woodlief Sep 23rd, 2004 09:05 AM

Well, I missed the earlier thread so here goes - I am a Marketing Analysis Manager (research, catalog analysis, etc.) for a mostly catalog company that sells to the education market. I started off with only 10 days vacation. I have worked up to 13 days now. Our company also gives an extra day off to people who contribute at a certain level to the United Way, so that gets me to 14. People here can eventually work up to about four weeks off. It is getting better now for me, and I do enjoy my job, but getting more vacation time is a big incentive for thinking about another job. My wife, who works with the Public Health Service, gets 6 weeks off, but she has a harder time taking all the days. I would never let days go unused. The toughest thing for me is now that my oldest child has become old enough to go with us on all trips (5), we have a one-year old. Thinking about a family excursion by air next year anyway, but it is harder to plan ahead now. I don't know how my youngest will behave a few months down the road (good traveler or not? - my daughter has always traveled well, but she has always been more content sitting than the youngest). It also complicates things that the oldest has just started school; I so loved traveling in the fall and spring. I guess life is about compromises for most of us.

sohara Sep 23rd, 2004 09:16 AM

I also missed the earlier thread. Full time mom with 2 teens now. Have been able to travel by combining a home exchange in a place I wish to visit, which frees cash to do excursions to nearby places. Time is not a problem with summers off, however, it is usually the most expensive time for airfare. Take short family holidays (from Canada) to Mexico during winters.

Kate Sep 23rd, 2004 11:14 AM

Creative Director of a design agency in London. I get 23 days (+ public holidays) and use up all my time and money travelling. It helps that I can nip over to Rome or Seville for the weekend on a whim.

ira Sep 23rd, 2004 11:16 AM

I quit.

Now I spend all of my time on this travel board. :)

isabel Sep 23rd, 2004 11:48 AM

And Ira we are glad that you do!

Have to say I feel a tad sorry for most of you poor guys. I get 13 weeks a year! Gotta love the academic calendar. (I teach nursing at a community college).

radiofanatic Sep 23rd, 2004 12:16 PM

attorney - used to have three weeks vacay but just got a new job with only 2 weeks so it's going to be a bit tougher - I travel around long weekend holidays to squeeze that extra day - thanksgiving, labor day, memorial day, columbus day - holidays that are american and not other countries' holidays - that way no vacation rates.

ira Sep 23rd, 2004 12:26 PM

Hi isabel,
>..Ira we are glad that you do!

Thank you.

>Have to say I feel a tad sorry for most of you poor guys. I get 13 weeks a year! Gotta love the academic calendar.<

As a former academic, I must ask you to please stop saying that. We poor teachers are "laid off" during the Summer months. :)

isabel Sep 23rd, 2004 05:15 PM

Well while it's true that as a teacher I don't make as much as I might working in private sector business, I'd rather have the time to travel for extended periods even if it does mean I have to do it on more of a budget than some people. I wouldn't trade my 3 or 4 week trips to Europe staying in 2 star hotels and eating pizza for one week in a 5 star for anything.

annesherrod Sep 23rd, 2004 07:08 PM

I never answered previous thread either. I sold realestate for 10 years and could scedule as much vacation as I wished. I woudl try , of course, to schedule it with DH. We usually tried to to go to Europe once a year and 2 or 3 domestic trips. Then I took a Director of Marketing position with a Senior housing community which allowed me only 2 weeks/yr. - Horrible - but we managed to get away.

RonZ Sep 23rd, 2004 07:33 PM

Personal assistant to m_kingdom2

indytravel Sep 23rd, 2004 07:36 PM

RonZ I feel for you.

I hope you're adequately compensated with all the fashion tips a man in your position would need. :-)


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 09:16 AM.