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The Most Dangerous Job in the World... - YouTube
Channel: Trend Central
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Everyone needs a job to survive but not all
jobs are created equal.
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On one hand you have the safety and comfort
of an office.
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On the other hand, there are some jobs where
a bad day at the office means you don’t
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come home in one piece... or at all.
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Jobs so risky that employers have to pump
salaries up to ridiculous levels to entice
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anyone brave enough to turn up to work.
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Want to find out the jobs where a papercut
is the least of your worries?
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Let’s get it on.
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SMOKEJUMPER
Smokejumpers are the elite when it comes to
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firefighting.
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They’re like the Special Forces going behind
enemy lines and deep into hostile territory.
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Wilderness bushfires don’t have the luxury
of sealed roads and hydrants in the street
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to tap into for an endless supply of water.
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Remote locations are too treacherous to get
to in any form of vehicle, let alone a fire
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engine.
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This is where smokejumpers come in.
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These guys are the bravest of the brave, who
approach the out of control blaze in the wilderness
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by helicopter, then decide it’s a great
idea to jump out and parachute right into
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the heart of the beast.
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Getting to the fire before it becomes dangerous
to people and homes means that firefighting
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supplies, food, and water are dropped in to
enable the smokejumpers to set up temporary
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camps and spend the next 48 hours all alone
to manage the inferno.
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SKYSCRAPER WINDOW WASHER
A window washer doesn’t seem like a dangerous
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job at first.
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A ladder, a hose, and a squeegee with a long
pole is all that’s needed 99% of the time.
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For the other 1%, you need an expert.
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As society feels the need to build larger
and larger buildings and skyscrapers, a niche
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has formed for those who want to take a walk
on the wild side – and get paid for doing
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it.
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Specialist window washers only deal in towers
and skyscrapers, having to hang hundreds of
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feet in the air just so you can have an uninterrupted,
smudge free view out your office window.
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They ascend huge skyscrapers, head out onto
the roof, and abseil down the side of the
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building.
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Harnesses, ropes, helmets, and purpose-built
platforms are needed to keep them safe while
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they struggle to stay attached while strong
winds push them from side to side.
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LINEMEN
While their name might not be too familiar
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to you, linemen are actually some of the most
important people in your day to day life.
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As a matter of fact, you couldn't be watching
this video
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right now if it weren't for your local linemen.
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These brave men and women work to make sure
that electricity continues flowing all over
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the grid, and are first on the scene when
service is
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somehow interrupted, like when a tree falls
on a powerline.
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As crazy as it sounds, they have to
actually fix the live wires by hand, with
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not much more than some insulated rubber gloves
between then and one point twenty one giga
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volts straight to the heart.
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For decades, lineman
has consistently ranked as one of the top
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ten deadliest jobs in the US, and it's not
hard to see
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why; electricity is nothing to play around
with.
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One wrong move and its lights out.
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Thankfully, these courageous workers are compensated
pretty well, making on average 73 thousand
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dollars a year, plus some serious benefit
packages.
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Still, no amount of money is worth your life,
so you've really gotta have nerves of steel
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to take on being a lineman.
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ICEFALL DOCTOR
Icefall doctors haven’t been to medical
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school, but they are still responsible for
saving hundreds of lives each year in the
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Khumbu icefall on Mount Everest.
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They are native Sherpas who are at the top
of their game, men who know the summit back
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to front, and inside out.
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They are tasked with carving out routes between
base camp and camps one through to four much
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higher up towards the peak.
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Khumbu icefall is regarded as the most treacherous
and unsafe section on the whole expedition,
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as the ice could crack and break at any time
causing climbers to fall to their deaths.
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The ice has less chance to break at night
when the temperature is much colder, so the
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Sherpas carry equipment though the section
at 2am in the morning to prep the upper camps
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ahead of the rest of the party.
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The icefall doctors spend up to 75 days a
year in this frozen, snowy nightmare.
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LUMBERJACK
Being a lumberjack is so much more than wearing
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red checkered shirts, sporting luscious beards,
and downing short stacks dripping with maple
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syrup.
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The reality is that this is America’s most
dangerous job, more people die every year
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cutting down trees than any other profession.
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These men and women of the woods need to maintain
ultimate concentration as a falling tree in
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the wrong direction could end up making them
as flat as the pancakes they hold so dear.
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Cables holding trunks and branches are prone
to suddenly snapping, sending chunks of tree
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spiralling out of control, impaling those
souls unfortunate enough to be standing nearby.
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Having the blade of a chainsaw get stuck into
a tree can cause the equipment to kick the
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lumberjack around so fiercely that they slam
into the tree hard enough to cause serious,
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career ending spinal injuries.
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Take on this career if you dear...
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ENTOMOLOGIST
Entomologists love to study bugs, and when
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you think about it, they are the true unsung
heroes of the working class.
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Most of us get the heebie jeebies at the thought
of having anything small with too many legs
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touching our skin.
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These guys are prepared to have insects crawl
all over them in the name of research and
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science, so that the average Joe doesn’t
have to.
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Some have been stung more than 1,000 times
over the course of their careers creating
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a pain scale that ranges from mildly annoying,
to so excruciatingly painful that you lose
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the ability to function and think rationally,
and even pass out.
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We salute any brave soul who chooses to get
covered in a suit of swarming bees and envenomated
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as their life’s work, putting their health
and lives on the line so that we don’t have
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to.
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PRODUCT TESTER
Anyone who tests new products aimed at preventing
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someone from dying are essentially putting
their own lives in someone else’s hands.
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It takes a special kind of nutcase to walk
through a field of live land mines and explosives,
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in a bomb proof suit just to see if it will
work.
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Having an attacker armed with a knife try
to bury it deep into your chest through a
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stab proof vest would be absolutely unnerving,
and fatal if something goes horribly wrong.
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Bridges are meant to be made of timber, steel,
concrete – or a combination of all three.
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You generally want to use materials that are
robust enough to take enormous weight and
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be stable as they span long distances.
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Glass isn’t a material that comes to mind
when you hear the word bridge, and the guys
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that test these architectural masterpieces
dance with the devil with every step onto
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virgin glazed panels.
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LIFEGUARD
Baywatch fed us a lie growing up.
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Protecting the beach is more than chiselled
abs, skimpy bikinis, and slow-motion action
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shots of beauties running along the sand.
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The lifeguards in charge of the Seven Mile
Miracle on Oahu’s North Shore in Hawaii
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know all too well that they dance with the
devil when they venture out into what is the
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most dangerous series of surf breaks in the
world.
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From an outsider’s perspective, the deep
azure blue ocean, white sand and picturesque
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barrels look like an absolute paradise.
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The reality is that over 1,000 rescues are
performed here each year, sometimes more than
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30 in a day.
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These lifeguards put their life on the line
every time they head out to save anyone unlucky
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enough to get into trouble here.
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Strong rip currents, huge waves, and shallow
coral regularly cause serious injury and death.
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WIND TURBINE TECHNICIAN
As the planet warms up from greenhouse emissions,
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alternative energy sources are becoming more
and more common – with wind turbines proving
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a handy producer of power by harnessing nature’s
atmospheric fury.
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Like any machinery, these turbines can sometimes
break down, and require a specially trained
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technician to get them back to working order.
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Repairing the blades and motor require a unique
combination of construction experience, rock
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climbing, and engineering know-how.
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Climbing up to the top of 350-foot-high turbines
requires nerves of steel, a high level of
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physical fitness, and being able to feel completely
at home at some seriously high altitudes.
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The job is made that much harder by the fact
that these areas experience high winds and
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lightning strikes.
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Straddling a blade during a repair is exactly
like trying to keep a hold of a bucking bull
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at a rodeo, those that don’t hold on tight
end up falling off.
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GARDENER
At first glance, there seems to be very little
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in the average back garden that could be labelled
as even remotely dangerous.
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That is, unless your name is Dean Smith and
you work at the infamous poison garden in
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sunny old England.
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The heavy wrought-iron gates serve as a warning
and are designed to keep people out.
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Why?
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Well every plant here is harmful to humans.
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Anything from causing you to break out in
a rash, get itchy all over, have you running
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to find the nearest toilet – and in a few
cases, you could potentially wind up dead.
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There are over 100 species in this collection
and despite some being truly beautiful, don’t
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be fooled – they contain powerful toxins
fatal to humans.
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Gardeners here warn you to not stop and smell
the flowers.
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Even professionals don’t dare venture too
close without protective gloves and a mask.
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