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Types of adventure travel jobs?

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Adventure travel jobs range from hiking and mountain bike guides to helicopter ski guides and climbing guides. Salaries vary, but the experiences and travel opportunities are often worth it. Guides are responsible for safety, education, and emergency situations. Other adventure travel jobs include ship crew and skills instructors.

Adventure travel jobs are varied, from a hiking guide to planning an adventure vacation for tourists. Mountain bike guides can travel the world and show tourists the best trails and the techniques to ride them; professional hiking guides can do the same. Adventure travel jobs can include flying a helicopter into the mountains to drop off skiers, or taking them down the slopes as a ski guide. Climbing guides can also take tourists to the best climbs, while teaching them proper safety precautions and climbing techniques. Other jobs, including guide training, inland medicine training, and search and rescue, also fall under the category of adventure travel jobs.

Many adventure travel jobs don’t pay particularly well, but they allow a person to travel across the country or the world to partake in exciting experiences they would never have at home. Some photographers, for example, get to see parts of the world that most will only read about in magazines. The photographer must capture current events, the local flavor and day-to-day life of a place, and other subjects specific to the task. A travel photography job can put a photographer in direct danger – such as photographing a war zone – or it can take the photographer to a tropical island to capture stunning sunsets and indigenous people. Salaries vary from assignment to assignment, and some people manage to live comfortably on their earnings; others may do it for the experience rather than the pay, which may or may not be very lucrative.

Guiding is perhaps the most common of adventure travel jobs. Guides are not only responsible for the safety and well-being of their clients, but they are also responsible for educating clients about the sport they participate in, the environmental impacts around them, and local customs, history and information from base that can give the customer a better understanding of their surroundings. A guide is a list of all businesses that must be ready for all situations, including emergency situations. Most guides are certified in first aid and CPR, as well as medicine and indoor rescue.

Other adventure travel jobs can include working as part of a ship crew traveling the world or working as a skills instructor for any variety of adventure sports or activities including surfing, skiing, skydiving, cycling, wilderness survival , search and rescue, mountain climbing and orienteering, or any other adventure sport one might specialize in.

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