Welcome to the World of Work
Posted: Wed Jan 27, 2016 2:11 pm
I have to say I'm rather proud of Junior Daughter. Having left school, she's helping out on a cotton station in New South Wales for a few months, amongst other things driving one of these: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aytdI1G5lKk. A tad bigger than the VW Up! on which she passed her test!
She's on 12 hour day shifts fertilising and in one shift you get through half the field; 6 to 6 and you refuel and hand over to the Kiwis who do the night shift. Apparently she knows all the playlists and all the ads on all the radio stations. The thing drives itself on the straight, so you drive across the field on auto for 4 minutes, turn it, then let it drive back, and repeat. For 12 hours. Meanwhile you live your life in 4 minute chunks, during which you can message your mates if they're awake, poll Facebook, etc.
I hadn't appreciated just how full on farming could be - or how industrialised. There's more to it than the tractoring thankfully, but in some respects she could just be in an office...
She's on 12 hour day shifts fertilising and in one shift you get through half the field; 6 to 6 and you refuel and hand over to the Kiwis who do the night shift. Apparently she knows all the playlists and all the ads on all the radio stations. The thing drives itself on the straight, so you drive across the field on auto for 4 minutes, turn it, then let it drive back, and repeat. For 12 hours. Meanwhile you live your life in 4 minute chunks, during which you can message your mates if they're awake, poll Facebook, etc.
I hadn't appreciated just how full on farming could be - or how industrialised. There's more to it than the tractoring thankfully, but in some respects she could just be in an office...