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Cas City Forum Hall & CAS-L  |  Special Interests - Groups & Societies  |  BOLD Chambers (Moderators: California Lawdawg, Texas Lawdog)  |  Topic: Retired Law Dawgs... What do you do "after the badge"? 0 Members and 2 Guests are viewing this topic. « previous next »
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Author Topic: Retired Law Dawgs... What do you do "after the badge"?  (Read 8258 times)
Arabela Kid
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« Reply #20 on: May 17, 2008, 01:34:45 pm »

I just went to the retirement office on Thursday and found out that I can retire in mid-September Grin! For me, that is 57 more working days until my last shift and it will give me a total of 30 years "In the saddle"........I don't exactly know what  will be doing right off the bat, but I have a whole bunch of "Honey-do's" to take care of around the homestead.....

A couple of years ago, the lovely bride and I bought a little piece of dirt in the mountains of southern New Mexico (Hence my avatar). I need to build me a barn/workshop and then a house.... This will be the view off of my front porch when I get the "Hacienda" built:





One of my neighbors has some nice pets:



Right now we have a small cabin about an hour from the ranch. I have been working on it off and on for the past couple of years:



We get a few critters dropping by for a visit now and then:



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Arabela Kid

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« Reply #21 on: May 17, 2008, 05:28:26 pm »

Kid, I am jealous of the fact you only have 57 more days and that you own that beautiful piece of land.  I can't leave until Jan. 2010.  Enjoy yourself my friend.
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« Reply #22 on: May 17, 2008, 06:35:43 pm »


 Howdy Texas Lawdog

          You have a beautiful place to retire, if you're not happy there I wouldn't know where to tell you to go , I've been retired for two years know , and you can't beat it, do what you want to when you want , stay up all night or not , GREAT LIFE, so I hope your last 57 days go by real fast for you , so you can get out there and enjoy things, it looks like you will have your own rifle range , can't beat that. So Congratulations Pard you deserve it. Wink Cheesy Cool


                                                                     tEN wOLVES  Wink Cheesy Grin


                                     
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Marshal Tac
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« Reply #23 on: May 19, 2008, 04:09:07 am »

All I can say is "WOW"...
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Arabela Kid
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« Reply #24 on: June 04, 2008, 10:11:30 am »

Thanks for the kind words gang...... I got a call from the retirement board and they advised me to go on September 20th as that works out better for me for continuity of my paychecks and for my medical coverage. So that puts me out at 52 more working days and 109 days total left to go before my last shift.

I will be heading out to the ranch in July to burn off some vacation time and I can tell ya right now, it will be REAL hard to come back!

The countdown has started Grin Grin Grin Grin Grin!!!!!!!!!
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Arabela Kid

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« Reply #25 on: June 04, 2008, 10:36:06 am »

Be 2 years this August since the ticker made me Medically Unfit ..Huh been Mentally Unfit for years but that just made the job easier...
 Thought I was different till I met up with Arcey on this Forum  Grin

Took a while to switch off but one of the best things was this site. No crap or wawa , it just is a great place to spend some rainy days. Or any day..

My biggest chore now ..after the dishes  Roll Eyes is do I shoot or go fly casting!!.

Your photos look great. I have never been to your neck of the woods . Planning a trip this winter to Arizona to visit a pard who is going to winter there ., around Yuma I think .also hope to do some snooping around. Now if I could just get some new toys back across the border!!

Those 52 days will breeze by . You take care , enjoy it all  , and all the best.

Dutch

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« Reply #26 on: June 10, 2008, 09:16:50 am »

I had worn a uniform and carried a badge for 35 yrs, one morning I realized it was killing me.  I had high blood pressure, carried 2 pagers, a cell phone, and a portable radio.  I only drove my POV about 1 day a week, had 900+ hours of holiday, vacation time on the books.  It was hard to believe, but I figured out the "job" would go fine without me.  I went in and told my Captain that I was retiring in 60 days, so he wouldn't assign any new cases to me.  I admit I was wondering what to do.  I went to Alaska, something a lot of you have probably thought about.  I ended up with a great job, instead of handing out carts and saying "welcome to Wally World" I would go to Ted Stevens airport in Anchorage and meet incoming passengers saying "Welcome to Alaska".  I was a meet & greet agent for a tour company.  The company provided me with a van (that I could use 24/7) and a list of flights and people to meet.  The job only lasted April through September, then I would draw unemployment.  I had to give that job up due to an injury.  Now I'm really retired, just go shooting, reloading, and have a small ranch.  There is lots of life after the "job".
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« Reply #27 on: June 11, 2008, 03:03:23 pm »

Being in Alaska would be neat but not during the winter. I don't like cold weather at all.
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« Reply #28 on: July 13, 2008, 06:38:51 pm »

I didn't kick in at first because I see myself as an old f*rt who doesn't know much after having been retired for 13 years. Howsoever, there is life after the badge.
I got out of the Navy in 1971 and went to work for a sheriff's office in rural Georgia. By the time I retired from the city PD in 1995 with 24 y and 7m I had worked my way up to Captain in patrol.
I went to Brink's Armored as a driver trainer and worked across the south before transferring to Boston to teach armored truck drivers in 1999. Can you guys just imagine taking young folks with an operator's license and trying to teach them to drive 30,000+ # trucks in downtown Boston? I like New England and disliked Boston...we bought a house in Concord, NH and I went to work for the New Hampshire Dept of Safety as a Supervisor in the Emergency Communications Bureau in 2000. We are in Safety with the state Office of Homeland Security and I also moonlight as an exercise and drill planner/evaluator with them. My sweet and long-suffering wife is an RN in our county nursing home. She and I are both about ready to pull the pin for the last time. I am ready to sit on my duff a little more often. In 2 years I will be vested in the NH retirement system. I have developed an abiding interest in Cowboy Shooting and finally have the time and resources to collect a few of the guns I owned and sold over the years as a young cop raising 5 kids who always needed the money from the guns for other things. Regards; Al (Chief John Ross; SASS # 80315. BOLD # 932)      Cheesy
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« Reply #29 on: September 19, 2008, 03:17:31 am »

Howdy Gents!

I just joined this board and am enjoying what I have seen so far. Tomorrow (April 1st, I thought the date was meaningful) it will be 1 year since I "pulled the pin" after thirty years of service. A buddy of mine sent me this and I thought I would share it with ya'll.

MRWILL


When Cops Retire

When a good man leaves the job and retires to a "better life," many are jealous, some are pleased and yet others, who may have already retired, actually wonder........

.....wonder whether he/she really knows what they are doing and are leaving behind....... because we already know.

We know for example, that after a lifetime of camaraderie that few experience, such will always remain as a longing for those past times.

We know in the law enforcement life there is a fellowship which lasts long after the badge, cuffs and weapons are turned in and the uniforms are hung up back in the closet.

We know that if he actually might even think of eventually throwing his old uniforms away, they will be always on him with every step and breath that remains.

We also know just how the very bearing of the man speaks of what he was and in his heart, still is and always will be.

These are the burdens of the job.

You will still look at people suspiciously...

Still see what others do not see, or choose to ignore...

You will always look at the rest of the law enforcement world with a deep respect for what they bravely and unselfishly do.

This remains from a lifetime of knowing it, doing it, and living it.

Never think for one moment that you are escaping from "the life."

You are only escaping "the job and we are merely finally allowing you to leave an active duty."

So what I wish for you now is that whenever you eventually and finally ease into your well-deserved retirement, that in your heart you never forget for one moment....

Blessed are the Peacemakers for they shall be called Children of God....

and never, ever forget that as a law enforcement-retiree, you always are part of one the greatest fraternities that the world has known.

Be Well! Be Safe! Be Fair! Be Strong! Be Proud!

Wow, that was awesome!

As for me, I am new to BOLD, but not to this board.  I retired in 2005, after 26 years of military law enforcement in the USAF.   I have thought about the gunsmithing route too, or maybe the range instruction type stuff;  but those doors just don't seem to be open or feasible to me at this time. 

I took a part time job when I retired to stay busy and supplement my retirement.  It turned into a full time job.  The company I worked for was not operated with "The Cowboy Way" as part of their mission statement.  I was let go because my work ethics were too good and my eyesight was too clear.  I also have a tendency to express how I feel, with the "bark on".  I am a straight-shooter and they didn't appreciate that and I was "let go".  I have been out of work for over a year now and I am now contemplating the same things you are.

I recently got my state gun and guard cards and will probably start working in the Private Security and or Executinve Protection arenas just pay the bills.  I really don't want to go back to the rotational shift work but it seems more and more likely that I will have to.  The military retirement is not as much as it needs to be and should be (and quite frankly should be) so Ill need to do something relatively soon.   Even though the Government seems to run on a deficit, I can't.  If you get it figured out, let me know.  Good luck we both need it!

Top Kick Ken
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Respectfully Submitted,

Top Kick Ken
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Cas City Forum Hall & CAS-L  |  Special Interests - Groups & Societies  |  BOLD Chambers (Moderators: California Lawdawg, Texas Lawdog)  |  Topic: Retired Law Dawgs... What do you do "after the badge"? « previous next »
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