TL;DR: I’m weighing various methods of hawsepiping against a 1 year school program, and a 4 year maritime academy as a path to engineering.
I’m in Seattle, for reference.
I’m 25, no kids, no debt, own my property outright, been a diesel tech for 7 years, large variety of equipment, trucks, factory machinery, ammonia freezers, reefers, trailers, snowcats, heavy equipment, power generators, have OEM certs, 608/609 etc. currently making around 100k/year with overtime.
I love doing this, but, I’m a lifelong sailor, former live aboard, several ocean passages under my belt, and spend all my free time on boats already so my goal is to join my passion two passions, make some money and have some more free time. Overall my goal would be to have at least 3 months straight off a year, since my lifestyle is cheap and my interests are not expensive.
With that being said I’m looking to get into the engine room, ideally I’d like to make it a long term career. from my research and talking to people I figure I have several paths.
First off; I’m considering applying to be a wiper/oiler on a factory trawler for the upcoming pollock season, which would give me my initial 120-180 days of sea time depending on if 12 hour shifts make a difference, I believe I’d have to actually stand watch, not just working.
The goal here would be to sit for my qmed as soon as possible, because it seems like all the jobs I’m seeing have this as a requirement.
Secondly, I’ve been told MSC and the merchant marine in general is a great place to start earning sea time. I’ve also heard that it’s a slow process, and the hitches are long, and I’d like to visit home at least every 6 months.
I’ve also read about SIU apprenticeship, but have not found any details on what this consists of or where it lands you.
If anyone has experience with those or the merchant marine in general, I’d love to hear about the day to day, as well as the barrier for entry.
Third option; Seattle maritime academy has a one year program that ends with a qmed, and an accreditation from the program, though I’m not sure if that’s valuable.
They’re also involved with a bunch of maritime companies, and I’ve read that this is a good way to get on the radar for your first job. This sits as a medium between school and full on hawsepiping.
Fourth option; going to a 4 year program, this culminates in being a 3E, but I have several hiccups with this option,
the first being that I’d be relocating, and I just bought a property in the cascades last year and built a cabin on it, so I’m currently living with no bills other than property tax.
So while moving away from my house to attend school, I’d also be taking on six figures of debt to graduate into an industry I’ve never worked in, and have no insight on how it’s doing. I’d hate to graduate into a stagnant economy or a bad job market.
I could probably find a job in my current field in whatever city the school is in, that would make enough for me to live and go to school, but It would definitely be a very rough 4 years for me if I was set on graduating with no debt.
Also, I’ve heard that all the good shoreside jobs basically require a degree, but I’m already making six figures as a diesel tech, which again is a job I love, and if the only benefit of a degree is shoreside job security when and if I burn out on sailing, it might not make sense for me to go to school right now, maybe later in my career?
The benefit of school is a very concise timeline, and that set path inherently will have less ups and downs then just taking whatever jobs I can, I haven’t done the math, but I’m assuming I’d break even with what I would make hawsepiping + debt within 4 years of graduating school, unless I was incredibly fortunate to move up the ranks as fast as possible.
I should add, I only have a GED, as I started working full time at 15 to support my younger siblings. I’m sure because of the is I’d likely have a hard time with admissions, or have to get an associates somewhere first. I’m generally not familiar with college admissions.
So if anyone has some insight into how formal schooling would benefit my career, or if I’m missing something, please share it.
With all that being said, any insight into career paths, or discourse about it is greatly appreciated. Thank you.