30, HOME FREE AND UNEMPLOYED

Chevrolado

Cruisin'
Wow. What an adventure. I just went through it from the beginning! Looks like you've been experiencing a lot of great stuff! Very nice.

I often wish I could do what you've done here. Thanks for sharing the adventure with us. :D
 

NH Moto Expo

Adventurer
So will you be changing the title of this thread? "no longer unemployed"....Great read and great save on the lathe...you expressed excellent reverence for the man, the tool and the memories made. Good on you


Safe travels.
 

xjaugie

Adventurer
I wish you all the best in your future travels, One thing is sure, when you are old and grey, and yes we all end up there one day, you will have some great stories to pass along and can say, Yep, I did all I could with the time I was given. AMEN!
 

4whtundra

Adventurer
Spring fever and new endeavors

Hello everyone, it's been a while since I've posted but I feel this thread will soon come to an end because I'm quickly coming up on my 31st birthday and I am for now no longer unemployed. I landed a job out of California working as a Field Engineer for a company that supplies mooring equipment for floating offshore oil rigs around the world. The job is temporary but would be a good way for me to make some decent money and not have to pay for a place to live, food, transportation, etc. I started out flying back to California and worked in the shop at their headquarters in Goleta, CA. I spent 5 weeks there earlier in the year training, learning the ropes of the equipment and freshening up on my hydraulic skills (which is not much). I was required to take a BOSIET class down in Louisiana which is basically a marine survival course, plus they teach you how to escape a helicopter if it crashes in water. It was pretty intense as they have a simulator you climb into and they drop you in the water and you have to escape.

20130418_074832_2.jpg 2013041895112305.jpg

After my training sessions I came back east to New York for a couple months to wait for the work. I kept busy through the remaining of the winter and into the spring, helping out with spring cleaning and what not. Towards the end of April I started to get spring fever so I took off on a 7 day solo trip of Northern New York and Vermont, I hiked two of the 46 high peaks (Porter and Cascade), did some mountain biking and just overall exploring. The last weekend of my short trip was memorial day, so I headed out of Vermont back to the Adirondacks and met some friends at Lake Limekiln for the weekend. It down poured all weekend but it didn't matter because we made the best of it. I was reacquainted with an old friend from childhood, her name is Lyndsey, that was the best part of the weekend and you will be hearing more on that in the future.

IMG_20130614_140939_097.jpg IMG_20130522_190422_892.jpg

IMG_20130522_110914_578.jpg IMG_20130521_193512_984.jpg

I had received a call during my solo week from a friend looking for someone to work for his boss. I knew he worked for an industrial carpentry firm so I was hesitant to offer myself as I know nothing about carpentry. Come to find out his boss was looking for someone to help refurbish/restore his vintage dirtbikes. I knew I had to go to work sometime soon but didn't want to miss this opportunity so I jumped on it. I worked in his beautiful shop for 2 weeks before I had to head to work, it was a great time and I got to work on old Maico's, Suzuki's and a Kawasaki.

IMG_20130529_110633_429.jpg
 

4whtundra

Adventurer
30 Days in Nigeria

After the first week of working for the dirt bike guy I got a call from California, it was time to go to work. I explained my situation (working on dirtbikes) and got one more week extension to finish the job. On June 10th I flew back to California for two weeks of shop work and a briefing of the up and coming work overseas. June 21st I set out on a 30 hour trip from Santa Barbara, CA to LAX to Dulles, DC to Frankfurt, Germany to Lagos, Nigeria to finally Port Harcourt, Nigeria. Now, Nigeria is not the first destination on my list of places to see but it will be an experience, that is for sure. I met up with a fellow employee in Frankfurt, so even though this was my first offshore rodeo at least I had a senior engineer with me to show me the ropes. From the airport we were picked up by a transporter company with our very own Police escort truck. The ride from the airport to our compound was nothing short of a teeth grinding, gut wrenching, white knuckle ride. With a good amount of corruption in the country the oil companies do what they can to keep their employees (me and Jimmy) away from the pirates. We arrived at a compound around 9 PM, just after dark. We had a decent little house inside a guarded compound with our own bedrooms and running water, I was happy with that. The house also had cable tv and wifi that worked once in a while. The compound had a couple restaurants and a bar inside, the food was bearable but I wouldn't call it good by any means. We stuck around here for 3 days or so, chicken, rice and shwarmas were our basic meals, neither of us had the guts to try anything else. The morning of the 4th day we took off and headed to the heliport, sat there for 8 hours and had to head home because of thunder and lightening. Instead of going back to the compound we stayed at a different brand new hotel, I was impressed with this place and the food was pretty good (by Nigerian standards). In the morning we headed back and after only a few hours of waiting were able to get on a chopper.

IMG_20130623_170308_564.jpg IMG_20130625_132536_831.jpg

IMG_20130626_093823_704.jpg

After a 45 minute chopper ride out to the middle of the ocean with 16 other guys crammed into a small space we landed on the "USAN FPSO", this is the main vessel I'll be doing all the work to while I'm here. The chopper ride was fun, it is really neat to see the small villages from the air, the "highways" are half concrete and half dirt. Also being able to see all the jungles and waterways that run into the ocean is pretty neat as well. A quick glimpse over my left shoulder I could see the smokestack in the distance, it was a pretty ************ feeling to be rolling into this place in one of these birds. After landing there was safety training and confusion all around trying to figure out where I would be living, plus I had no idea where I was and what was going on. Finally I was sent to the "Bar Protector" which is a diving vessel, this will be my home for the next 2 months or so.

IMG_20130709_113241_447.jpg IMG_20130702_150402_397.jpg

The first two weeks were pretty rough, I was waking up at 4am to catch a surfer (small boat) to head over to the other vessels for prep work and a lot of running around. It took me about a week to get my sea legs as I usually get sea sick, the first day was the worst but I never did lose my lunch. There are guys from all over the world here (no women), so it's nice to have a culture change and everyone speaks some sort of English so it's nice to be able to communicate. In order to leave and return to the vessels we have to climb down a ladder on the side of the ship and step off onto the hull of the surfer, it is a dangerous game as you have to time your steps by the timing of the waves. The first day I saw a guy almost get eaten up by the hull of the surfer, the waves were so bad the front end of the boat would slide 20+ feet up and down the ladder, he was lucky enough to pull himself close to the ladder and let the hull slide past him. After a couple weeks of runner work we started the main job, replacing UCSF's, which stands for Underwater Chain Stopper Fairlead. My main job is to help aid the divers and riggers in the removal and installation of the fairleads. These things are 20 tons a piece so we aren't talking a couple pounds.

IMG_20130701_175547_151.jpg IMG_20130629_154213_250.jpg

IMG_20130702_172307_383.jpg

The first couple weeks working in the dive shack was very stressful. There are lives in your hand as the divers are in the water and heavy equipment is being used to move everything around. The language barrier is the worst part of the job, I am American, there are guys from South Africa, Italy, Malaysia, France, etc. Plus everyone has their own ideas of how things should be done. After the first two weeks of being thrown to the dogs I've caught on to the job at hand, my confidence has grown and I'm fitting in to the crew out here. It seems like it has only been a couple weeks but I have been here for 30 days now, I miss my girlfriend, family and friends but this has been a great and once in a life time experience that I will always remember. Hopefully I will be here for another 4 or 5 weeks and then be sent home.
 

Wainiha

Explorer
Great experience going to Africa. That lathe is the the type of tools I dream about.

And I like Montana and Oregon both, a lot. In Portland I lived on Couch St. behind The Sandy Hut. Right where Burnside and Sandy split off going east.

Montana I 4x'd in Beartrap Canyon and Hyalite Resevior-I have never been so cold!

Keep up the thread:)
 

FKreider

Observer
Wow, amazing trip, very cool experiences, you have seen some things that many people will never see and not even know exist, cool trip.
 

ADVrider76

New member
Well, I hope you don't feel like you're talking/writing to yourself, many of us look forward to reading your post. I think most just like to read and enjoy the adventure and keep the commentary to a minimum. I’ve been reading your post for several months now, and have shared your story with others in my family while conveying the bit of envy I have about your travels and your ability to do so. I don’t need to tell you (but I will) that what you’re doing is something special, worthwhile and generally fantastic. Best of luck and keep all of us posted, we’re all reading it.


Compleatly agree. A lot of us are reading and living vicariously. Keep up the adventure and the pics. I really want to see that area now after your pics. I will on the way to Alaska (hopefully next spring).
 

alia176

Explorer
Really enjoying reading about experience of the off shore work.

I get recruiters for off shore work but I don't have the guts to be away from my family for that length of time or to work in those countries with political turmoil.

Looking for to your updates.

Sent from my Nexus 7 using Tapatalk 4
 
Last edited:

Forum statistics

Threads
185,945
Messages
2,880,092
Members
225,627
Latest member
Deleman
Top