>>215954>something with animalsreally fucking broad man. like, theres a myriad of jobs working with animals all requiring different education. Basically, I would personally recommend studying some zoological degree. You can any number of jobs out of it and it gives you a great skill set (or at least, at large skill set you can tell potential employers about that they will love). You could either do ecological stuff with animals (going out, capturing them, tagging, etc. lots of outdoors stuff) or more animal husbandry related stuff. I dont know about where you are, but in Australia there are plenty of both kinds of jobs in the public sector - or at least with non-profit corporations - that involve working with animals. and if you did want to sell your sole to a corporation theres also numerous jobs in that sector. Lots of room to grow your career down this path, you'll get somewhat decent pay as a minimum and can easily move up if you ever so desire.
If you don't want to do that, apply for internships with places that involve working with animals. You're unlikely to get a job in the field without qualifications unless you do some kind of internship, that would involve potentially no pay or if youre lukcy, very minimal pay. But after 6months-12months you'd probably start to get paid and it would be exactly what you want. In the long term this has little progression in terms of pay and how high you can climb unless you get more into the administrative side. Most of this work would be animal husbandry related work too, not so much anything outdoorsy per se.
I dont know why you would ever want to work with animals though, at least if its animal husbandry. All those ethics and you spend most of your time cleaning up shit. Work with plants; they're much better (or maybe im just bias)
>also, this isnt by any means 100% accurate or absolute truths or what you should do. its just my opinion and some generalisations