Having worked at home in my bedroom for the last couple of years I'm beginning to feel particularly claustrophobic being sat inside all day long!
Examples I can think of:
- Outdoor robotics engineers
- Wildlife monitoring
- ...and that's about it
I work in industrial automation and I love how hands on it is. I'd recommend to any SWE who is bored being cooped up in an office and isn't afraid to get a little dirty. Feel free to reach out to me if you'd liketo know more.
Last year, it often meant working according to weather patterns, so that I could be outside on sunny days.
This might be an alternative way to achieve your goal.
Land surveyors have to know some basic programming, but their main skillset is knowing how to survey, and being willing to walk around with their equipment all day.
Wildlife monitoring and Remote Sensing and GIS tend to be.... remote. Usually the equipment is satellite or set up by a park warden/summer student who doesnt have strong programming skills. They might call a contractor if they're having problems with it.
Industrial automation requires a fair bit of mechanics, circuits, hydraulics, pneumatics, a bit of basic programming and a strong aptitude for physically putting things together/taking apart (especially in freezing mud).
Geology can split either way, supervising drilling can mean lots of time in a tent staring at drill core as you write the core log report on computer but you might also end up in an office downtown doing oil flow modelling based on the log, or writing a financial report based on the model. (or a mix). Same with mine engineers, petroleum engineers, civil engineers.
Lots of these jobs are 12 hrs a day, 10 on 10 off or 14/14. You go to cool places but the downside is that you gotta go even if you dont want to. Your wife is due to have your first kid next week? Sucks that you got a two week shift starting tomorrow. Quick 1 day job a few hours drive from town? When an unmapped gas line gets hit it'll be week long fiasco of overtime hell. Sent to an offshore rig near Newfoundland? Get stuck there and miss all your other flights as helicopters are grounded by a metre of snow overnight!
Field jobs are exciting and interesting stuff is always happening, but its usually not good news. If you're feeling cooped up but overall enjoy software, try working from outside your house! If you're looking to change careers, becoming a Professional Engineer could be the move. Its not a short path though, and then you're responsible when things go wrong
in general security sensitive environments and everything to do with tier-1 support for military hardware
though you might end up marooned in barracks on an airfield in Angola or something,not sure if that counts as "outdoors"
My days were split up by small things to do like go pickup a vehicle from a coworker. Go to the test track to collect data. Help another engineer debug a vehicle. Review functionality of a prototype with a mechanic. Etc.
On paper all that sounds a bit annoying, and it was some days. After changing jobs and working fully remote with covid though, I do miss having a reason to get up.
[0] https://www.usatoday.com/story/money/food/2021/12/29/doordas...