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Along the Natchez Trace

Wednesday, April 10, 2013

A New Career or Maybe Just Another Adventure....

Looks like we're finally getting caught up with things.  One biggy was taxes...  we got all the tax info coordinated and sent it off to our CPA in Ohio.  Looks like we'll have to get an extension this year.  That will be a first for us, but it is what it is. 

Last Saturday Bill took the test to apply for his concealed weapon permit.  We don't carry a firearm of any kind with us in our motorhome, but there's something about the government taking control  that makes a person feel they must stand up for their rights.  That was a 10 hour class.   Bill passed just fine, now he has to get all the paperwork done and submit it.

We drove back to Ft Worth today...  more paperwork, including fingerprinting...  to become Gate Guards.  I think some of you are surprised that we'd even consider this job as it ties a couple down to being there 24/7 for weeks on end.

Well, we do enjoy our freedom, but it's not the first time we've taken on "jobs" that restricted us.  Heck, when we lived on the farm, we took separate vacations because someone had to be home to milk and take care of the critters.  As for living in a remote place, we lived in Utah for 4 months... in the desert, 63 miles one-way, on a dirt road, from the closest grocery store (which was a military commissary) and picked up our mail once a week.  

 Ladybird Johnson would be so happy to see these beautiful Blue Bonnets along these Texas highways!

We've never lived like "the family next door"...  in fact, we've lived in places you couldn't even see where the family next door lived.  After we retired, we both worked for a temp agency doing anything from merchandising, to data entry, to delivering flowers.  I had fun for a while being a "secret shopper", and one week I was a cook, fixing meals for 60 kids in a day care center.  We both love doing the "unusual" and both love the challenge of learning something new.  

Actually, the oil/gas business isn't new to Bill at all.  Both Bill's great-grandfather and grandfather worked in the oil fields in New Mexico, and his dad worked for a while in an oil refinery.  When Bill was with the geology dept at OU, he drilled and monitored water and gas wells on campus.



Indian paintbrush...  another roadside wildflower, here in Texas.








One thing I wanted to do after I retired was to work at a cooperative restaurant in my hometown.  It is worker-owned, uses local and organic produce and other goods, and serves innovative meals... both vegetarian and non-vegetarian.  Kind of a pseudo Mexican cuisine...  great food and atmosphere.  I never did that... too many other things kept getting in the way.

So... now this opportunity to be a gate guard has come up.  Maybe we'll hate it.  Maybe not...  but we'll never know unless we try it.

As for our "newly learned" Spanish language expertise...  heck, it might come in handy speaking to the illegals in south Texas....

That's All For Today!


15 comments:

  1. beautiful wildflowers... so pretty in the Texas countryside ... well, they are pretty wherever!

    Ladybird did a great job! well, and so, Bill is going to defend you two from the US Government? gotta be a big gun... I think we can even take North Korea ... Bill? well... maybe not

    practice on snakes...

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  2. What gets me about the Texas law, the weapon has to be concealed. I think it should be worn where it can be seen. That way, you may not have to use it as ofter. . .

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  3. We have some good friends who are gate guards and I would have said they would hate that job. But they liked it so much they went back for a second year. Good luck to you.

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  4. I think there will be a whole lot of folks applying for those permits. It sure is on my list of things to do!

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  5. Concealed weapons and gate guarding. Just can't relate to those two things. Maybe I'm naive. It's great that there are different strokes for different folks. I'll be interested to see what transpires. :)

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  6. Did I miss a beat? Gate guard? At the road into an oil field? Or something. I'll stay tuned.

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  7. Beautiful road side flowers.

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  8. The bluebonnets and Indian paintbrush are just beautiful.

    I used to be a secret shopper too!! Not much money in it but it was fun and sometimes we got to eat come good meals for free.

    Good luck with the gate guarding.

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  9. The wildflowers are pretty!

    I bet your Spanish will come in handy...good luck!

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  10. You and Bill have been busy, Sharon, much like ourselves. We were only gone for 11 days visiting family at Easter and came home to lots of yard work to catch up on...amazing what a few days of 70-80 degree weather can do for weed growth. We left with winter clothes and came home to short sleeve and shorts weather. Sounds like you have new adventures planned with gate guarding, which I looked up online and have to admit it does sound like very remote living, but guess it depends on the location...plenty of time to read and maybe practice your Spanish?

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  11. Love those Blue Bonnets and Paintbrush flowers. I admire you guys for not being afraid of a challenge, and you're always willing to learn something new!

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  12. Welcome home! We've been enjoying the beautiful wildflowers here in the Hill Country too.
    Teri
    markteri.blogspot.com

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  13. Gate guarding sounds interesting, and it pays so well. I'd like to give it a try, but not as a single woman like Susan did. I think the gun might be a good idea to have in that kind of job. I hope you both like it.

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  14. This new job will make for an interesting read!

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  15. Hmmm... Probably a good thing we never had a "gun laws" conversation while in Sevilla!

    Have a great time on the latest adventure.

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