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Tink 08-17-2009 03:53 PM


Originally Posted by rickair7777 (Post 663983)
Military reserves (usually fun often with travel), real estate, and consulting. The military is more interesting, but the consulting can usually done anywhere I have wifi. I'm looking into a (well paid) moderator/adviser gig for a distance-learning program.

I'll have to pitch military reserves... The pay is not great at first (better than a regional FO), but if you serve long enough it becomes significant.

If you serve long enough it will help to develop your general professional skills, should you ever need to get a white-collar job. Plus there are education benefits, some of which can be applied to flight training.


Also has flexibility advantages:

-The airline has to let you go, no questions asked.

-You can often go full-time for 1-3 years at your own discretion.

-Your seniority/longevity/etc accrues while you are gone.

-If you get furloughed, you can probably go full-time..good pay and great bennies.

Many young airline pilots would be a good fit. Age cutoff is usually 28-30 for pilots, 35 for non-pilot officers.

Officers need a degree. You can have a lot of fun enlisted, but the long-term problem there is that your civilian income growth will probably outpace your military payscale...if you got mobilized, you might take a big paycut. An officer would probably not take a paycut. A widebody CA could make more than a senior military officer, but you will probably be retired from the military by the time you get there.

Disclaimer: Yes you need to be interested in and willing to serve your country, possibly in combat. You will likely get sent to the desert at least once, but that's not that big of a deal. The hard part is waiting to go...once you get there and get into the groove, the time goes by. Going forward, hopefully there will be more nation-building and less combat. Note that most services do not use reserves in direct-action combat roles...you might see action but you will not go looking for it. Exception would be USMC and those qualified in special operations while on active duty.

I'd have to disagree somewhat...If you are noncombat arms, then you are correct. If you are in a combat arms MOS do not expect to be kept out of the fight.

Counselor 08-17-2009 03:54 PM

I've heard that UAL has dentists, accountants, and lawyers. Realistic?

rickair7777 08-17-2009 04:20 PM


Originally Posted by Counselor (Post 663994)
I've heard that UAL has dentists, accountants, and lawyers. Realistic?

Yes, if you started out life as a dentist/doctor/lawyer and later got into flying. You could not do medical training while employed as a pilot. But a 3-4 furlough might be an opportunity if you have the grades to get in.

You might be able to get a JD and pass the bar while actively flying, but I would suggest at least one year off to attend actual classes at the beginning.

ehe2 08-17-2009 05:33 PM

I work at a funeral home removing the deceased from homes and hospitals. Needless to say, I make twice as much per hour transporting one dead person then I do flying 76 live ones, and I'm topped out on 4th year FO pay!

jayray2 08-17-2009 06:22 PM


Originally Posted by ehe2 (Post 664075)
I work at a funeral home removing the deceased from homes and hospitals. Needless to say, I make twice as much per hour transporting one dead person then I do flying 76 live ones, and I'm topped out on 4th year FO pay!

This is craziness. I have never heard of something so absurd (the part about the pay difference between transporting dead people vs. live people).

Stew75 08-17-2009 06:30 PM

I try to work on the family farm part-time on days off.

ComairFO 08-17-2009 06:45 PM


Originally Posted by cubflyer (Post 663967)
Substitute Teacher..........(Well paid babysitter);)

I substitute teach as well at a local high school. EASY money, and unlike scheduling, you can always say "NO" when they call!

P.S. They don't make high school girls like they used to!

Cruise 08-17-2009 06:54 PM


Originally Posted by ComairFO (Post 664123)

P.S. They don't make high school girls like they used to!

:eek: :)

waflyboy 08-17-2009 07:10 PM


Originally Posted by ComairFO (Post 664123)
I substitute teach as well at a local high school. EASY money, and unlike scheduling, you can always say "NO" when they call!

Seems like a number of pilots do this. How does a person with a B.A. and no teaching credentials (other than CFI) get into this? Do you need to get a certificate or something?

KingAirPIC 08-17-2009 07:34 PM

Own aerial photo company.


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