This is a discussion on Strangest Travel Jobs In The World (PHOTOS) within the Current Cruise Travel News forums, part of the category; Aol Travel. Has Just Posted the Following: Filed under: Weird Loews Coronado Bay Resort & Spa When Travel + Leisure ...
Aol Travel. Has Just Posted the Following:
Filed under: Weird
Loews Coronado Bay Resort & Spa
When Travel + Leisure searched the globe for the most offbeat tasks, they came up with some surprising professions.#plain_module { width: 590px; height:190px; border: none; float:left; margin:0px; font-size:12px;} #plain_module img {border:none; width: 13px; height:14; border: 0px; margin:0px; } #plain_module .mini_main { margin: 0px; padding:0px; width:585px; height:220px; repeat scroll 0 0} #plain_module .mini_item_header {padding:10px 0px; margin: 0px 0px; font-size:16px; color: #555555; border-bottom:1px dotted #CCCCCC;} #plain_module .mini_item {padding:5px 0px; margin: 0px 0px;} #plain_module a { color: #49A3CA; text-decoration:none; } #plain_module a:hover { color: #F98419; text-decoration:underline;} span.gray {color:#949494;} .mini_main li{list-style-type: none;background-image: url(http://www.aolcdn.com/travel/bullet);background-repeat: no-repeat;background-position: 0 1px;padding-left: 10px;}
Airports have known for a long time that birds can pose problems to airplane engines, and have come up with different ways of combating the issue. Amsterdam's Schiphol Airport, for example, has a robotic hawk to scare birds away. But if you'd like to get a job keeping the birds at bay, inquire at Zürich Airport, which employs three hunters to shoot the potentially damaging creatures.
And airport hunters are just one of the strangest jobs in the travel industry. When Travel + Leisure searched the globe for the most offbeat tasks, they came up with some surprising professions.
In fact, many offbeat travel-industry jobs involve keeping Mother Nature at bay. In India, "monkey men" at a plush resort spend their days chasing primates prone to stealing guests' cookies. "We are convinced that the monkeys have 'tea parties' on the other side of the resort's stone wall," says Rishi Kapoor, an executive with luxury tour operator Abercrombie & Kent, which partners with the Amanbagh Resort.
Happily, not everyone is just chasing critters behind the scenes-and for some people, what started as utilitarian jobs somehow turned into entertainment or guest perks. In St. Thomas, an engineer who helps protect guests from falling coconuts has become an essential part of happy hour.
It's not always about creating a spectacle though: sometimes it's about the service.
In the past few years, other hotels have created quirky positions to enhance the guest experience-say, a "tanning butler" who applies sunscreen to pool-goers, "bath sommeliers" who fill your tub, or "bibliotherapists" who choose your reading material. "Anything that hotels or resorts can do to differentiate themselves, to create a 'wow factor,' is essential in today's very competitive market," says John Clifford, a travel agent and president of San Diego-based International Travel Management.
Text by Katrina Brown Hunt & Darren Tobia, Travel + Leisure. Photos courtesy of Travel + Leisure.
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