Talk about a boring job... Thomas Curwe watches paint dry for a living.
The Dulux scientist from Twyford, Berks, 34, checks how the colour of matt and emulsion changes over time on walls and under microscopes.
If you think that sounds a bit dry, just wait.
We’ve found there a many worse ways to earn a living around the world...
Armpit sniffer
Getting a whiff of BO may sound like the pits, but it’s all in a day’s work for Peta Jones.
She works as a deodorant producer for Unilever in Australia, developing the Dove, Lynx and
Impulse brands. A big part of her job is sniffing strangers’ armpits to check her products’ work.
Peta said: “It was strange at first, but in a week it was fine.”
Crime-scene cleaner
CSI may be a morbid hit with TV viewers, but there is nothing entertaining about cleaning up
a crime scene after a death.
Married couple Mike Nestved and Carmen Velazquez, above, clear up after bodies in Orlando, Florida – the worst being one in a hot
caravan. Carmen said: “There are some things you can’t just Febreze.”
Crocodile trainer
We’ve all worked with snappy colleagues, but putting your head in a crocodile’s mouth should
attract danger money.
Yet trainers at Pattaya Crocodile Farm, Thailand, get just £4 per day for their work. Another stunt
involves kissing a giant croc on its nose.
Ian Maclean, who filmed the show during a trip to the zoo, said: “One of the performers had his head crushed while locked in the jaws of a croc.”
Mosquito bite victim
Helge Zieler has a job that really sucks – letting himself get bitten by mosquitoes. Working in the
Brazilian rainforest, he offered himself as bait so he could study the bugs’ behaviour.
But despite once suffering a debilitating bout of malaria, he says: “The beauty of the rainforest
far outweighs the thousands of mosquito bites.”
Pet food taster
This is not just pet food – this is the ultimate in Marks & Spencer dog and cat cuisine.
Every dish in the store’s luxury range has been tested by Simon Allison, above.
He said: “I love my job – but draw the line at swallowing.”
Simon chews gum after sittings to stop, er, dog breath.
Sewer diver
We all think our job stinks from time to time, but it really does for Julio Cu Camara. He swims through sewers in Mexico City to clear
blockages and repair pipes by hand.
Julio, below, has notched up 1,400 dives in 30 years – each one lasting up to six hours in 7,500 miles of tunnels.
He has to wear a 6.4 stone helmet and suit to protect him from the human, chemical and animal waste – and its stench.
Watching grass grow
If watching paint dry sounds too exhilarating, you could take a leaf out of Helen Southall’s book.
The grass expert works at British Seed Houses in Lincoln, where her daily duties include counting
out and planting 400 seed samples.
Later, she goes through them blade by blade to monitor growth.
Helen said: “People think that it’s strange when I tell them my job is to watch grass grow.
“But it’s fascinating. I wouldn’t do anything else. It’s so rewarding to see a stretch of perfect grass.”
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