skinning, herbalism, mining.
Druids are excellent for gathering and you can make a fortune with epic speed flying and daily routes. If you have gatherer addon, then check out this.
Listen to other druids about leatherworking. If the crafted stuff pwns for raiding and you intend to raid, seriously consider that. You could always go like... skinning/lw and then swap skinning for herbalism/mining once you gear up, if those are more money.
yes and no.
1 - 69; Make money with mining/skinning/herbalism.
70; Dump one and powerlevel leatherworking.
It's a lot easier that way, and even if you take skinning in the two and dump the other you could simply farm all the materials you'll need or if not (or you're lazy) you will have ample gold to buy mats off AH to powerlevel it.
Yea, you can almost always sell greens for way above vendor prices even if just as cheap enchant fodder. Whether it is a new server or an old one, you can make money.
I just strongly advise people invest in bags early and NEVER vendor shit "just to clear bags." Send that shit to bank alts and sit on it for days if you must. You can always sell it later when you've got time/energy to really max profit.
Most useless greens I end up breaking anyway and then selling the mats. Enchanting mats are pretty nice since they don't have a vendor value there's no way they can make a deposit for it. Doesn't matter if it's a stack of Strange Dust or a stack of G.P.E.s it never costs anything to put it on auction.
True.
But that is VERY situational. Some older high pop servers thus have shitloads of people always dumping mats very very cheap. Depending on the specific mat, the server, etc... you may be better off just tossing up greens.
I usually don't because the deposit money adds up when it doesn't sell, particularly weapons.
It should always sell, if you price it in range for enchanters to snag it. That's the whole idea. YOu can always get way above vendor prices. If you can do better than that by DEing then go for it.
I'm just simply sayign you can ALWAYS sell greens for higher than vendor prices.