On the Job - Fishery Technician Jobs
Roby Adair is a fishery technician working at the Barnwell Fisheries District Office in Barnwell, South Carolina. He is originally from
Graycourt, South Carolina, and he is about to complete an Associate's Degree from Haywood Community College. The spring and summer of 1996 was his first paid position with the South Carolina Department of Natural Resources.
I got started with this work by taking college classes in fishery science and wildlife management techniques, and in more general subjects such as ecology and botany. My college has really strong contacts with the state agencies, and every time I saw a posting for volunteer work with the Department of Natural Resources, I would go and help out. I went on weekends and would skip classes to help with a project if it didn't interfere with a test. Most of the volunteer work I did was in wildlife management. I worked at deer check stations and helped with quail surveys and wood duck surveys. We also did a lot of restoration work - trapping wild geese or turkeys from an area with a high population and relocating them to an area with a low population. During the whole time, I made sure that my phone number was always at as many of the offices as possible, so that if an opportunity came up, they would contact me.
For other people who want to get positions like this one, I would advise volunteering your time. Any project that comes up will help you to get to know the people in each office that may need someone in the future.
Paying jobs usually require some college classes in fish or wildlife management, but most of my training has come on the job. I've really learned what it means to work for a government agency, and I think my chances are pretty good of getting a job somewhere in the state or for a federal agency after I finish my degree. The job has given me a lot of experience with speaking with the public and listening to their concerns. It has also given me practice identifying fish species and aquatic plant species. It's showed me a lot of new places around the state that are pretty different from where I grew up. I've always loved the outdoors and I grew up fishing and hunting, so I knew what kind of work I wanted and that helped me to get this position.



