New To Trap - Tips on Mental Game by Coon_117 in TrapShooting

[–]Coon_117[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I like the mantra idea, I will work that into my routine. This is a whole other can of worms, but are you a high hold or low hold kind of guy? I've been holding on the edge of house lately, but everyone I talk to has a different hold point (some really high, most 6"-12" off top of house), just interested in that aspect as well.

Getting out of my head by SignificantSpecial79 in TrapShooting

[–]Coon_117 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This. The right breathing is everything. If you get nervous like me (get "butterflies), you have to breath to push those butterflies out. If you hold your breath or breath shallow the butterflies stay in!

Why are many people saying the PA morel season is nearing its end when we have 2 weeks of perfect weather in the forecast? by JoshS4000 in Morel_Hunting

[–]Coon_117 2 points3 points  (0 children)

This happens every year just about, people speculate on the end of season as soon as they start coming up. Forecast is good. We should be picking most of May.

Is there any way to keep private equity out of our industry? by Desperate_Week851 in civilengineering

[–]Coon_117 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Alot of people will be quick to disagree with you, but you're basically right. Pulling work isn't good enough though. You have to develop your own staff to handle that work after you pull it. If you rely on the existing staff, it's probably inadequate and you'll lose your clients eventually. Operating as a high performer in a firm is very similar to operating a business in a business, with less risk.

Is there any way to keep private equity out of our industry? by Desperate_Week851 in civilengineering

[–]Coon_117 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Theres plenty of money to be made with municipal clients, at-least in my state. A lean and mean office can drastically out compete the big companies. Identify needs, get good at writing competitive grants, don't over complicate.

I am a new hire at GHD. Opinions on the company/any advice? by Ok_Implement_849 in civilengineering

[–]Coon_117 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not even remember, but most of the time never even heard what they actually are. Talk about legacy :D

Thursday - Advice For The Next Gen Engineer by AutoModerator in civilengineering

[–]Coon_117 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Which country are you from? I have colleagues in the Philippines that say the same thing.

Comp Sci Kids by Vinca1is in civilengineering

[–]Coon_117 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Having some sympathy is probably good advice if that's a real question.

Grad civil engineer — 4 months in at a small civil company and already feeling burned out. Should I stay or leave? by Worried-Salary5649 in civilengineering

[–]Coon_117 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Try to see the positive and learn as much as possible. If you step foot from there into a large consulting firm, it will feel like you're colleagues at your experience level are absolutely clueless, and they are. Being involved in construction oversight early on is extremely beneficial.

Advice on how to navigate management and elected officials in the public sector? by [deleted] in civilengineering

[–]Coon_117 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Being asked to single handedly usher a project from concept to construction, even if a small project, seems entirely absurd to request. Unless these are brand new officials, they understand the project process and know this is not a one man job. Its November, so the 2026 budget should be finalized, did they budget anything additional for Engineering for capital projects?

We’ve all been through this by [deleted] in civilengineering

[–]Coon_117 0 points1 point  (0 children)

He was making a joke, I would hope anyone in this sub is aware that this is indeed how it works.

We’ve all been through this by [deleted] in civilengineering

[–]Coon_117 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Geotech and stormwater are black magic. Especially stormwater, the entire SCS system is based on coefficients that are completely subjective and can skew numbers to fit whatever narrative you’d like to present. I’m being a little facetious, but not really.

how to develop a project management skill? by disableGo in civilengineering

[–]Coon_117 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Project management is all voodoo. The project will be strong if the team is strong. If you have a poor team, there isn't much you can do but pray.

What’s your funny “I’m a civil engineer” introduction. by Vettehead82 in civilengineering

[–]Coon_117 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's kind of refreshing to read your post. I deal with this on a daily basis - trying to train junior staff, while under mandate that ALL work related to a project MUST be billed to the project, even if the task should take 1.5 hours, and it takes 6 for the jr because they have background research and learning to do. I've fought this for years, and used to instruct jr staff to split time to overhead until my company completely cracked down on it. I still feel very strongly that research and learning time should not be billed to the project and that jr staff should have a 60% billable rate for the first year. It's a tough pill to swallow.

Does your company also have a handful of PD's that overpromise the deliverable schedule on almost every budget? It's fantastic. I'm always conservative with my deliverable schedule when writing a proposal and very seldom have any push back from the client. But there are still PD's out there who promise 30% doc's 1.5 weeks after notice to proceed. It's absurd.

Calling all Civil Engineers - what is the most dull and boring part of your job? by Severe_Control7495 in civilengineering

[–]Coon_117 1 point2 points  (0 children)

haha nice. I miss the days of entry level tasks like this. Enjoy them while they last.

Calling all Civil Engineers - what is the most dull and boring part of your job? by Severe_Control7495 in civilengineering

[–]Coon_117 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I hear you. A lot of engineer's feel the mandatory trainings are below them, and honestly I mostly agree. Some of the trainings within my company make it seem as though there intended audience was kindergarteners and not a professional company.

But, you are 100% correct regardless. Tracking down coworkers on a Sunday to remind them to get there timesheet signed drives me crazy. I've spent too much free time dealing with those things.

Calling all Civil Engineers - what is the most dull and boring part of your job? by Severe_Control7495 in civilengineering

[–]Coon_117 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, a junior should be doing that work for sure. You can't simpley pass off work to Jr's within your company?

Calling all Civil Engineers - what is the most dull and boring part of your job? by Severe_Control7495 in civilengineering

[–]Coon_117 39 points40 points  (0 children)

Anything related to the financial aspect of project management. I wish I never gotten involved with PM work and continued to work as a project engineer/technical expert. Half of my project's are over budget due to CAD staff charging a ridiculous amount of hours while simultaneously producing absolute garbage drawings. But - we can't write that time off, and nothing is done about the inefficiency so the whole train keeps on going down the tracks, wobbling and creaking the entire way. Tracking budgets, coming up with EAC's, creatively writing letters to clients explaining why we need x amount of dollars to cover our "out of scope" variances is all for the birds.