Showing posts with label hobby. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hobby. Show all posts

Sunday, August 30, 2020

A New Hobby?


I've been looking around for a new hobby, something that I can do outdoors (which I can't wait to do as soon as the weather cools off a bit!) and a video on geocaching came up on YouTube.  I watched the video and it looks like something fun I can do when I am out walking and hiking around my city.  I'll let you know how it goes, since my only progress on this hobby so for is:

And here are a few more unrelated things...

Tuesday, March 19, 2019

Quirky Hobbies

I have a bunch of hobbies.  From walking to genealogy to volunteering to dozens of other things, I love learning new things and finding out what interests other people have (I walked with bird watchers last weekend for our volksmarch and they pointed out dozens of birds I wouldn't have even recognized--they are very cool people!).

Here's a bunch of free/inexpensive, fun hobbies you might enjoy (note that these hobbies are free or inexpensive until you go hard-core and start traveling the world for your hobby!):

You can pretty much make a hobby of anything you find fun and interesting and while some hobbies can cost a fortune (golf and diving come to mind), there are many free and inexpensive hobbies you can do for fun.

Tuesday, September 25, 2018

5 Interesting, Inexpensive Hobbies

I'm always on the lookout for free or inexpensive things to do.  Here are some interesting, inexpensive, and little-known hobbies I want to find out more about:

  1. Bullet journaling.  Making bullet journals is a surprisingly popular hobby.  Basically you take a blank journal and make it into anything you want.  You can write your monthly calendar in it, add to do lists, draw a habit tracker...and then get as crafty as you like (check the link for all kinds of bullet journal ideas).
  2. RTLSDR.  Take your computer and add a cheap defined radio tuner to it and you can pull in all kinds of cool things like satellite weather images and various radio broadcasts.
  3. Painting rocks.  Find a rock, paint it.  It's that simple.  Lots of people are doing this now for an artistic outlet, to sell, to publicize their location or event, to hide around town...  Then there are people who are super talented at this like Lorraine!
  4. Dorodango.  I haven't tried this yet but apparently this hobby is drawing a following of people who make shiny balls out of mud.  Yeah really.
  5. Lockpicking.  As a hobby, not as a criminal enterprise.  There is actually a large community of people out there who like to challenge themselves and each other to learn how to pick various types of locks.  This was even a topic at DefCon this year!

Friday, March 23, 2018

Genealogy...A Fun and (Kind of) Inexpensive Hobby

Most of my hobbies are pretty frugal.  I love to walk (free, just need shoes), I love to read (thousands of books can be had free on Kindle from the library), and another favorite hobby is genealogy (cheap, kind of).  I love research so researching ancestors, especially with the internet, can make for a pretty interesting and inexpensive hobby.

As with any hobby, you can go from frugal to freakin expensive pretty easily.  I know some genealogists who have subscriptions to every genealogy service, spend quite a bit on DNA tests, acquire tons of records which cost money if you are ordering them from county agencies, and travel back to the home country to do research (think Scotland or England).  But the basics of genealogy (tracing your family roots) can be started for free of for very little money.

There are a lot of ways to "do genealogy" but the most basic way to get started is to write down your information (full name, date of birth, place of birth, parent's names, etc).  Next, do the same for your parents (full name at birth, married name, date/place of birth, wedding location/date, date/place of death, list of their children, their parent's names), ad infinitum.  Of course, genealogy is all about the "proof" which means you need the documentation to prove the information you are writing down (birth certificates showing both parent's names, photos of grave markers, death certificates, marriage certificates, census records, etc).

Fortunately a lot of the basic information you need can be had for free or very cheap.  For yourself and immediate relatives you can often ask for copies of records.  When you get back generations, you will need to find the records yourself through research (ie: you know that great grandma died in Michigan so you go to Seeking Michigan online digital archives and look for a death certificate which often has additional information on it including date and place of birth, parent's name, date/location/cause of death, etc).  Needless to say you can go pretty far down the rabbit hole with this sort of hobby.  With some ancestors a simple Google search turns up even more information (one of my ancestors, Mary Staples, was reportedly a witch, another ancestor, Jane Strope, was captured by Indians).

If you want to get started with the fascinating hobby of genealogy, here are some free resources: