The Most Extreme Jobs in the World

The Telegraph

Commuting to a nine-to-five desk job isn’t for everyone. Here are some of the world’s most extreme jobs for people that like to pay the bills with a dash of adrenaline. The business software provider Your Trade Base created this infographic and the information is presented in this slideshow.

It’s not quite sofas-in-Freud’s-office, but crocodiles have psychologists, too. This job involves bringing crocs ashore to study their behavior and results in studies such as this recent one – the first of its kind – which found that crocodiles are actually pretty playful. Still, some crocodiles species are particularly dangerous and are thought to kill hundreds, if not thousands, of people every year. Is that worth a salary of $62,500 per year?

Stunning images show the power of some of America's most extreme weather. Camille Seamans remarkable work features huge supercells, crashing lighting and gale-force winds.

While most people would sprint from a storm, some people head straight for dangerous weather zones. Storm chasers tend to pursue severe weather as a hobby, but some – such as scientists, meteorologists and journalists – make a living out of it and can earn around $61,000 a year.

 

It’s not for pouring on your cereal. Snake venom can be lethal, but its antidote, called antivenom, is made from venom. Antivenom can also be used in non-snake related remedies, such as for strokes and tumours. Venom milkers extract the poison by holding a snake’s head while it bites a piece of latex stretched over a cup or by stimulating the snake’s venom glands with electrodes. The job can pay around $30,000 per year, but the venom is valuable too.

 

World's best places to skydive and bungee jump

You could pay a few hundred quid for the chance to jump out a plane… or you could earn $24,000 by doing it all the time.

 

Explorers charting the underwater cave network of the Blue Lake, near the Caucasus Mountains in Russia

Up on the shore they work all day, out in the sun they slave away… for $58,640 per year, you could spend your time where it’s better and wetter. Cave diving can be more dangerous than ocean scuba diving because of small spaces, lack of surface and unusual water pressures.

 

Smoke jumpers parachute into deserts and forests to extinguish wildfires and must be able to be self-sufficient in a burning woodland for up to 72 hours. It pays $33,000 per year, and is apparently not as life-threatening as it sounds.

 

Inside the Made in Chelsea safari lodge

Safari guides can earn more than $70,000 per year taking tourists through the natural wildlife, but they have to contend with remote regions, unpredictable animals and tricky travelers.

 

Tom Cruise filming on the set of 'Mission: Impossible -- Ghost Protocol' (2011).

Hollywood actors don’t get paid enough to do their own stunts. For $70,000 per year, professional doubles put themselves in risky situations instead of their celebrity counterparts. Perks of the job include variety, adrenaline and famous friends.

 

A climber using a ladder to cross a crevasse on the Khumbu Icefall on Mount Everest

More than 4,000 people have climbed the world’s tallest mountain, and just over half who try successfully make it to the top. But they don’t usually do it unassisted: an Everest leader can make around $5,000 per season.

 

White-water rafting in Sabah, Malaysia

For $6,675 per season, water lovers can roam the rapids with a group of inexperienced rafters. But if none of these have taken your fancy… what about a shark aquarium cleaner?