Shift Work × Classification Details: Forestry Occupations
21 jobs found.
Timber Transport Worker
A profession that safely transports felled timber from within the forest to the skidding or collection point.
Choker Setter (Forestry)
A job involving transporting and organizing felled timber from within the forest to the collection point.
Forest Patrol Worker
Forest patrol workers patrol and monitor forests and mountains, detecting and reporting or addressing risks such as fires, illegal logging, and pest damage at an early stage.
Forest Patrol Officer
Forest patrol officers regularly patrol forests, monitor and report forest fires, pests and diseases, illegal logging, wildlife damage, etc., and are specialists responsible for forest safety and conservation.
Forest Patrol Worker
A job that regularly patrols mountains and forests, monitors forest conditions, and conducts surveys and inspections for fire prevention, crime prevention, and ecosystem conservation.
Log Transport Worker
This occupation involves collecting timber felled in forests and transporting it to storage sites. Using manual labor and forestry machinery such as forwarders and skidders, timber is safely and efficiently transported out.
Skidding Worker
A job that uses collection tools and machinery to transport and organize felled logs from the forest interior to the stacking yard.
Forest Worker (Logging, Timber Processing, and Skidding)
A profession that involves felling trees in forests, shaping them into usable timber, and skidding (transporting) them out.
Forest Maintenance Worker (Silviculture)
Forest Maintenance Workers (Silviculture) cultivate healthy forests through afforestation, underbrush cutting, thinning, etc., supporting sustainable timber production and environmental conservation as specialized professionals.
Firewood Lumber Feller
Firewood lumber fellers are forestry workers who select, fell, and process timber into logs in forests or wooded areas to obtain fuelwood such as firewood.