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Ask HN: Did you deliberatively develop any new hobby in recent years?

47 pointsby atulatulover 3 years ago
Could you please share how you went about developing it? How much time, effort it took, why did you prefer that hobby over some other? Thanks.

51 comments

armagonover 3 years ago
I learned to sew.<p>I suppose the biggest thing that got me interested was I got a book on making costumes from a Humble Bundle. Keeping me interested, though, was a desire to do something that was not on a screen during the pandemic.<p>I probably read through 15 books from the library in my spare time, honestly, over the course of several months. I asked me wife some questions, and read through the manual for her sewing machine -- and then watched enough YouTube videos and did things tediously slowly until I understood what I was supposed to do. I found books aimed at kids especially good for beginners, and re-read things as I understood better.<p>I borrowed some patterns from my aunt, and made pyjamas for my four year old. (I figured something small would waste less fabric). It took me five weeks, on and off, to get them made, and involved a lot of learning, but they turned out really nicely and my kid wore them every night for quite a while. Since then I made some Hallowe&#x27;en costumes. (Making pyjamas for everyone for Christmas would&#x27;ve been nice, but I haven&#x27;t been able to make the time.)<p>Why this instead of something else?<p><pre><code> - I didn&#x27;t know how to do it - I could do it at home - We had the basic tools</code></pre>
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beningradover 3 years ago
Yes, alpine climbing. Which begat trail running, ski mountaineering, mountain biking, and wrestling.<p>A friend had moved to Denver and was starting to climb more impressive and intense routes just as my whole division at a big company was let go. It looked fun and I thought it would be a good way to spend my time. After a primer from my friend, I joined clubs and sought out partners who I gelled with. I ultimately found that the passionate rationality of alpine climbing&#x27;s risk assessment and fitness requirements were a great healthy replacement for what I did at work.<p>I started trail running as part of my training and decided I liked it for its own sake. I took up ski mountaineering a couple years later because it meant I could have more fun moving faster on larger terrain. I took up mountain biking two years ago because a buddy badgered me about how fun it was and described it as &quot;skiing in the summer.&quot; And, recently, with a large base of fitness, I joined a group of friends who are all martial arts nerds who get together for sparring and style comparison chats. I wrestled in high school, so I jumped in and decided it was as fun now as it was then.<p>This whole journey kicked off in 2016. I spend between 5 and 15 hours per week in one of the above disciplines, plus a few hours a week in the gym lifting. It takes a lot of effort, but it rarely feels like it because I&#x27;m enjoying myself. I prefer all of these hobbies because, like many of us, my job keeps me glued to a screen&#x2F;hunched over a work table and I wanted something that put me back in my body in an enjoyable way.
flaveover 3 years ago
Yes. And quite intentionally.<p>1. Started playing rugby again after 12 years. Good male relationships. Physical exercise. A sense of time passing and a season in the year. 2. Violin. I wanted something I could spend ten years learning. And a creative hobby but that worked with analytical approach.<p>Time? Both take a lot of time and effort - but maybe less than you would expect.<p>Rugby: Email ten teams in the local area, attend the training of the one who was friendliest in their response. Training twice a week and a game on Saturday. I now go to the gym as well. All the above is optional.<p>Violin: Cheap violin is £100. Online lessons are cheap and convenient. After a year I bought a more expensive violin. I practice on my lunch break - little but often.<p>Do it. It&#x27;s a made a lot of difference to my happiness.
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dkerstenover 3 years ago
Yes, a few:<p>In late 2017 and early 2018, I started to learn sleight-of-hand card magic and am now able to perform a number of illusions and flourishes. I&#x27;m not particularly great at it, but its enough to entertain most people a little.<p>Last summer, I started to learn guitar. Again, I&#x27;m not great at it, but I can play a few things and can pick up new riffs quickly enough (as long as they&#x27;re not too hard to begin with) and, most importantly, I can play for fun and relaxation.<p>Two months ago, I started going to the gym almost daily.<p>In all cases, I set myself about an hour each day to do it. I kept a little calendar where I&#x27;d tick off each day as I practice. This was done to make it part of my day to day routine and to get over the initial &quot;hump&quot; where learning is slow. After one to two months, I wouldn&#x27;t bother with a calendar and just do it as I feel like it (its hobbies after all), but I did make sure it was always easy to do: I always have a deck of cards within arms reach, I have the guitar on a stand beside my desk, I go to a gym that&#x27;s 5 minutes walk away. Convenience is key, for me.<p>For guitar and cards, I also signed up to online courses (video lessons). Both have plenty of youtube tutorials, but I find that to start off, something much more structured is better for me and they&#x27;re designed for beginners in mind (so will start with the fundamentals). Nowadays, I just go by youtube tutorials when I feel like trying to add to what I know.<p>For me, I chose those things because they are completely unrelated to my work (programming), interesting to me and in the case of gym, would benefit my health.
Centigonalover 3 years ago
I intentionally got (much more) into gardening in 2021. I&#x27;ve always liked gardening and houseplants, but 2020 taught me that I needed to have a life outside of work, and I won&#x27;t always be able to physically socialize with friends, so I needed a third thing (i.e. a hobby) to bring me balance and peace.<p>I watched a <i>ton</i> of youtube videos from gardening youtubers, I bought a bunch of nursery plants and soil, and I got to work. Later on, I moved to starting plants from seed. Gardening doesn&#x27;t have to be an expensive hobby, and you can often start with whatever you have. It&#x27;s really nice to put work into something and see it bear fruit (sometimes literally).
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kriroover 3 years ago
All my life I&#x27;ve had a fear of heights. When I went skiing with my parents as a teenager I was more or less forced to ride the lifts and felt my fear of heights decreased a bit after that. I always had this experience in the back of my mind. I can &quot;unlearned&quot; this fear.<p>About 2 years ago I decided to try climbing with the explicit goal of tackling my fear of heights. I started with indoor bouldering because it was readily available. Initially, I was too scared to even climb up the moderately hight stuff or &quot;top out&quot;. Anything above 3m was a huge mental struggle. Typically bouldering will max out around 5m, where you can still safely fall onto a mat since your feet are about 3-3,5m above ground. Now I feel quite confident topping out and going to the highest points in the gym. Height is still a factor but not nearly as much as it used to be. Two month ago, I even started top roping with friends and I&#x27;m climbing 12m high routes relatively calmly now. A feat that seemed impossible two years ago. I can&#x27;t wait to try higher ones (18m) and eventually climb on actual rock.<p>Climbing has helped me overcome my fear of height and more importantly I absolutely love it and think about it constantly. It&#x27;s the only solo-able sport that has kept me motivated, too. Mostly because you always have micro challenges to tackle (finish this new route, get further on that old route) and also bigger goals (get to grade X). I absolutely love it, during lockout I have even built my own home wall and I&#x27;m currently working on building my own holds, too.<p>Highly recommended for anyone looking for a sport to try. I think bouldering works really well for analytical minds and puzzle solvers like myself because it&#x27;s essentially puzzle solving with your body. The community is also very friendly and nice and open, another big plus. And yes, your general body shape doesn&#x27;t matter, don&#x27;t be afraid, just try it some day.<p>Time: You can go to a climbing gym once a week for 1.5-2h. I go 2-3 times per week now and occasionally climb on my home wall and do some finger boarding and other exercises. I&#x27;d say 6-8h&#x2F;week with travel time.
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pipthepixieover 3 years ago
My new hobby is Linux, and all that that entails. I&#x27;ve learned basic command line operations and have experimented with all the popular distros out there, usually in Virtual machines. My daily driver is Ubuntu, and I have Virtualbox installed to try out different distros. I typically run the &#x27;live-cd&#x27; &#x2F; ISO to try out the distro before making a commitment to it. Other distros I use heavily are Fedora, Trisquel, Mint, and TailsOS.<p>I try not to install too much software on them as I like a simple working environment, typically with nothing but a text editor like Sublimetext running, and a browser with the LiveReload extension for doing web development. No npm or NodeJS crap. Just oldskool development.<p>The &#x27;ROI&#x27; if you will of learning Linux is that I have peace of mind that I&#x27;m not being spied upon or potentially getting ambushed by various malware, and also: knowing that I am standing on the shoulders of giants. I am super thankful for how far Linux has come along. I remember in the early days having to write scripts just to get my Wifi adapter working, and hours upon hours trying to debug simple shit like printer compatibility errors, etc<p>Frankly I didn&#x27;t have the time to focus on Linux in my twenties, and lately in my thirties I have more free time, so I can go down rabbit-holes all day and it doesn&#x27;t bother me as much.<p>My Linux installs are very much &#x27;set and forget&#x27;, as in, you configure them to your liking, and then never have to do that again for a very long time.
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derwikiover 3 years ago
1) learning guitar. Bought guitar and didn’t make much progress. Took Zoom level 1 guitar and now I’m good enough that it’s fun to try playing songs. 30 min&#x2F;day. Prefer over others because: I love music with good guitar parts, it has been mentally stimulating, fun to do with others<p>2) woodworking. Bought table saw, then router, specialized tools. Watched 1-2 hours&#x2F;day to learn stuff on Youtube (Steve Ramsey, etc). Find a project, it can suck as much time as a fun programming task. But projects are key. I started with step stools and moved into picture frames and patio furniture. Still not good at detail work but better at hiding mistakes. Why this: scratches same building itch as programming but diff domain, requires math and spatial reasoning, helps a lot with home ownership.
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partisanover 3 years ago
To counteract the obvious sense of loss that came from an official separation from my wife, I took up sketching, first in pencil and then in pen. It’s run its course so I have slowed down quite a bit.<p>I am planning to take up photography next.
bitxbitxbitcoinover 3 years ago
Hunting.<p>I searched online and watched a bunch of YouTube videos to get more educated.<p>I completed my state’s Hunter Education course including an in person training day.<p>Bought hunting license.<p>I reached out via Reddit and other online forums to local hunters and asked for advice. I found 3 separate mentors from Reddit, YouTube, and RokSlide and ended up meeting 2 of them and learning a lot from all 3.<p>It took a lot of effort but it was all in incremental , repeatable steps and I have started helping others by passing on the knowledge.<p>It took the better part of a year before I harvested small game. I still haven’t harvested any big game.<p>I like this hobby because it gets me outside, gives me fresh and ethically harvested meat, keeps me fit, and allows me to practice my firearm manipulation skills.
opportuneover 3 years ago
Lifting weights. I lift weights 4-6 times per week.<p>I started at 3 days per week. For the first few months I had to force myself to exercise. When you are first starting out, lifting weights in a gym can be uncomfortable due to not knowing what you’re doing or feeling like the weakest one there. Once I started seeing results (first in strength, then in the way my body actually looked) I was hooked. Now I actually like exercising a lot and go out of my way to go to a local gym a couple times even on vacation.<p>It’s a great hobby because it has a lot of side effects beyond just the enjoyment you begin to experience as you grow accustomed to exercising. You become healthier, better looking, and at less risk of injury in daily tasks. The only cost is a gym membership (and a diet high in protein if you want to optimize muscle growth, which can get pricey). It only takes about 1hr&#x2F;day so it’s not very hard to fit into a daily routine.
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SAI_Peregrinusover 3 years ago
Bird photography. I was already into bird watching, filled out eBird checklists, etc. So getting a suitable camera &amp; lens (Sony a7rIV and Sony 200-600mm f&#x2F;5.6-6.3 G OSS, not top-of-the-line but quite good enough that gear won&#x27;t be the problem) was an easy step.<p>I&#x27;m still learning. I&#x27;ve got a handful of excellent pictures, a bunch of decent ones, and a whole pile of junk. My &quot;hit rate&quot; is steadily increasing as I get better at judging aperture &amp; shutter speed. And I&#x27;m getting better at editing.<p>I typically go birding for 3-4 hours per week, taking 500-1000 shots in 100-200 bursts per outing, and spend 2-3x that to edit all the images. I&#x27;m holding off on re-editing some of the older images I know I could do better now for when I purchase a colorimeter and calibrate my monitors.
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motohagiographyover 3 years ago
I do more than a few things at a novice&#x2F;amateur level, and getting good at them requires iteration. Think of it as a compounding function. If you are doing something less than 3x a week, you probably aren&#x27;t improving.<p>The other thing is, hire an instructor. Anything worthwhile means you are going to be embarassingly bad at it for several years, so don&#x27;t substitute buying expensive gear for spending time, it&#x27;s symbolic, and it doesn&#x27;t make you into the thing you are trying to represent.<p>You can do something just on weekends for fun, but that&#x27;s not enough to improve. While it&#x27;s unlikely anyone will pay me much for my personal skills, the difference is they couldn&#x27;t pay to develop those skills with all the money in the world without putting in the time. Sure, someone of independent means can afford more time, but I make time, so it often nets out. There&#x27;s no royal road, and so when I meet very successful people from other domains, I can respect what they&#x27;ve accomplished without being intimidated at all, because I know what it takes to be good too.<p>An olympic medalist once observed to me that he felt he had more in common with people who had worked to achieve at an excellence and elite level than people who did his chosen sport. Most successful people also have intense personal pursuits because the side effect of discipline it imposes on their time is a significant factor in their success.
jollofricepeasover 3 years ago
Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu.<p><i>How much time</i>.<p>So far, I’m about two years in on BJJ and it’s the best decision I’ve made from a mental and physical health POV. I found a local gym, met the teacher and sat in for a few classes. Now, I train about 3-4 times a week for 90-120 minutes.<p><i>Effort</i>.<p>Mentally, it’s like physical chess and it helps me relax. It’s hard to worry about the days problems when you have to be focused on your opponent&#x2F;partner. Other than, the major learning curve is all mental. Relaxation and breathing are important to learn when your training partner is sitting on your chest lol.<p><i>Why this hobby?</i>.<p>I hate exercise. I’ve tried swimming, running, biking, weightlifting, ball sports and I pretty much hate them all. With BJJ, there’s a self-defense utility that I like and a mental&#x2F;physical complexity that makes it challenging like a great puzzle.
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nmehnerover 3 years ago
1.) Got myself two Kayacats (<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.kickstarter.com&#x2F;projects&#x2F;1037377909&#x2F;kayacat" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.kickstarter.com&#x2F;projects&#x2F;1037377909&#x2F;kayacat</a>) after renting Kayaks from time to time for a long time. Kayacats seem to be discontinued, but I love getting just on a train with a backpack and just spending an afternoon paddling downstream on a river to the next train station. The only effort required is planning the trips, preparing a picknik. Nothing much to develop.<p>2.) Got a velomobile (<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.velomobileworld.com&#x2F;product&#x2F;milan-gt&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.velomobileworld.com&#x2F;product&#x2F;milan-gt&#x2F;</a> ). This was actually not supposed to be a hobby but a way to get to work while not producing too much C02. 50km each way were to far for a normal bicycle, an ebike is still to slow. With the velomobile I could average 40km&#x2F;h and stay fit at the same time -- until Covid&#x2F;Home Office came along. This year I took some time off and cycled 11000km in 3 month. From Northern Germany to the Black Sea, to the Atlantic Coast and back to Germany again. This took some time and effort ;) But with cycling you can spend as much time&#x2F;effort as you please. You can tour alone or in groups... many options.
manomanowiczover 3 years ago
Inline skating.<p>It&#x27;s relatively easy to get started. Buy some skates and a helmet and find some smooth tarmac (asphalt) to practise. For me, it&#x27;s something always wished I could do so I thought why not learn.<p>I practised for a half hour to an hour after work when the weather was nice and found it a good way to de-stress, usually while listening to music. It&#x27;s a good form of exercise too since it doesn&#x27;t strain your joints too much. Obviously, you may (and probably will) injure yourself when you fall though you should learn how to fall to minimise injury.<p>If you&#x27;re new, the fear of falling takes some time to get over but after a few hours you&#x27;ll get the confidence to overcome this. At first you&#x27;ll probably even dread going to practise but getting over that fear is intensely satisfying. Above all, you&#x27;ll probably have to be okay with making yourself feel like a fool (in public). For me, this was the biggest thing I had to get over. Getting over that is liberating in itself. You realise the world doesn&#x27;t end if someone saw you fall. You just get up again.<p>After about 10 hours I was at an okay standard and I feel after about 20-30 hours most people would be very competent. There&#x27;s a high skill ceiling too so there&#x27;s always more to learn and areas to develop.<p>The thrill of the speed and the sensation of going really fast never gets old.
snarf21over 3 years ago
Designing card and board games.<p>This started pre-covid and I have always enjoyed card games and board games. Playing games has always felt a bit like trying to solve a puzzle. Designing a game is simply making a puzzle for other people to solve. The great thing with analog card and board games is just the fun you get sitting around a table and visiting with friends over a shared activity.<p>The time varies per project but you don&#x27;t have to be an expert or need lots of equipment. Your first version of a game can just be hand-written on note cards and paper. I&#x27;ve designed some games that have I probably 100 hours on design (not done yet) and others that are done at 10 hours. I tend to make cards using regular paper and cut to size and sleeve in TCG sleeves. Boards and token can be printed and stuck to cardboard&#x2F;foam&#x2F;chipboard. The more your prototype game facilitates the game play, the better and more quickly it will improve.<p>The best thing about analog card and board games is the immediacy. If you have a few like minded friends, you can test a game the same day you start it. It is great to see how the game evolves and you fix issues, re-design cards and as your play testers offer opinions about how the game works. Even if you never license a game to a publisher, you will always still have a game that you and your friends enjoy playing.
real-dinoover 3 years ago
After reading a polygon post about Gundam Plastic Models (Gunpla) I have become OBSESSED with them. Getting the tools, decals, different grades.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.polygon.com&#x2F;guides&#x2F;22653114&#x2F;gunpla-gundam-models-hobby" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.polygon.com&#x2F;guides&#x2F;22653114&#x2F;gunpla-gundam-models...</a><p>Before you know it I&#x27;ve acquired 15+ of the things, am writing a price comparison site and streaming on YouTube and CrunchyRoll.<p>And I wouldn&#x27;t consider myself a Weeb, or anime fan. I just love the models. It&#x27;s everything I&#x27;ve loved about model kits in the past, but none of the awkward paining or glue.<p>And it&#x27;s WAY cheaper than LEGO.
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orobinsonover 3 years ago
I started learning the piano a year and a half ago. I make electronic music and was becoming frustrated by my limited musical knowledge acting as a barrier to creating more complex arrangements.<p>I&#x27;ve found the best way to get stuck into a new hobby is to not make excuses to yourself like &quot;oh but I can&#x27;t do that because I don&#x27;t have X or Y piece of equipment&quot;. Just start with whatever means you have available and if it sticks then invest some money in the hobby. For example, I had a small midi keyboard so I just started learning on that, then bought myself the cheapest full size electric piano I could find once I&#x27;d managed a couple of months of consistent practice.<p>Also I think it&#x27;s hard to pick up a hobby just for the sake of it, there has to be some kind of motivation - like the example of me wanting to improve my songwriting by learning the piano. I&#x27;m now seeing tangible results and it&#x27;s immensely satisfying, which motivates me to carry on spending 20-30 mins a day practicing the piano.
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swat535over 3 years ago
Not a hobby but I decided to study religious texts from all Abraham religions (Islam, Judaism and Christianity) as well as Dharmic ones. Why? Because as an Atheist I&#x27;ve always been curious about this but never worked up the stamina to actually do a deep dive until now.<p>So far the it has been a net positive in my life. It has broadened my understanding of art, philosophy and history and I have also met a lot of interesting people and have grown my network significantly.<p>I started reaching out to religious organizations in my local community and everyone welcomed me as an outsider and answered all my questions politely. It would have been even better without the COVID restrictions as the in person activities are limited but I can&#x27;t complain..<p>I don&#x27;t think I will completely &quot;settle&quot; on a specific religion but I can confidently say that my views on spirituality and religion has massively shifted as a result of this journey.
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stevebmarkover 3 years ago
Reading between the lines, I’m guessing this is either for research, data mining, or your own personal motivation. If it’s the last I one, researching what a “growth mindset” means might be more helpful than hearing other people list their hobbies. <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;hbr.org&#x2F;amp&#x2F;2016&#x2F;01&#x2F;what-having-a-growth-mindset-actually-means" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;hbr.org&#x2F;amp&#x2F;2016&#x2F;01&#x2F;what-having-a-growth-mindset-act...</a>
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exabrialover 3 years ago
Mountain Biking, cross country (XC) and downhill enduro!<p>I&#x27;m not an endurance athlete genetically, so racing in cycling isn&#x27;t going to be a podium winning experience. MTB provides a balance between skills you can develop and having to be in good physical shape. It&#x27;s allowing me to travel across the country and [hopefully soon] Europe to exotic destinations. I&#x27;m in some of the best shape of my life too and I highly recommend everyone try it
loonsterover 3 years ago
Wooden Puzzles<p>My (at the time 4 year old) daughter likes to do puzzles and she always wanted me to do them together. I got bored of doing the same easy puzzle over and over. I discovered wooden puzzles and they are amazing. Completely different experience than cardboard puzzles. Many have intricate piece shapes that you can put together based mostly off shape.<p>Coolest Puzzle Piece Shape (and my favorite): Artifact Puzzles: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.artifactpuzzles.com" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.artifactpuzzles.com</a><p>Best Quality: Liberty puzzles: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.libertypuzzles.com" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.libertypuzzles.com</a><p>Huge selection: Wentworth: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.wentworthpuzzles.com&#x2F;us&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.wentworthpuzzles.com&#x2F;us&#x2F;</a>
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drcongoover 3 years ago
I produce music, mostly acid house and minimal techno, entirely on iOS (apart from the mastering). I started because I wanted a creative outlet that wasn&#x27;t my job and didn&#x27;t involve my laptop. It took about 18 months to get to the point where I was actually happy with the stuff I was making, but then that became a bit of a burden because now I get anxiety if the thing I&#x27;m working on isn&#x27;t coming out as good as the last thing I made. Every now and then I have to forcibly break myself out of the creative process and try something new to ease that self-pressure. Earlier this year I did a remix for another artist&#x27;s EP, also entirely on iOS.
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yakshaving_jgtover 3 years ago
I intentionally learned to shoot with my DSLR in manual mode and RAW format. I think being able to take decent photos is a skill I will always wish I had, so it made sense to just get busy and learn. Turns out, it&#x27;s not difficult at all to go from useless to half decent.<p>Here&#x27;s some shots from a recent trip to a salt mine in Transylvania that I&#x27;m quite pleased with:<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.instagram.com&#x2F;p&#x2F;CUIVk1EAzv2&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.instagram.com&#x2F;p&#x2F;CUIVk1EAzv2&#x2F;</a><p>My camera is totally entry level also. I don&#x27;t like the idea buying the most professional-grade equipment to compensate for a lack of fundamental skill.
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speryover 3 years ago
Got into running and triathlon.<p>Started out 3 years ago with light running mostly on treadmill during the winter. Ran two half marathons and then one year later ran a full marathon. After that I spent three months preparing for half ironman distance triathlon. That was much fun, race as well.<p>Last year was most time intensive, I&#x27;ve spent about 6 hours running&#x2F;swimming&#x2F;biking a week, which is not that big of a jump as I use to go to gym for about 3-4 times a week.<p>Effort is interesting since I had to reduce the intensity to build up the endurance, so workouts we&#x27;re not difficult at all.<p>I prefer it over other stuff since it makes me active and I enjoy the endurance workouts.
mclbdnover 3 years ago
I learned Spanish.<p>I&#x27;m from Central Europe, so my mother&#x27;s tongue isn&#x27;t English, but learning English was kind of natural for me - all the games, TV shows, movies and the majority of pop music is already in English.<p>Approximately 3 years ago I signed up for Duolingo and spent +- 20 minutes every single day learning Spanish. Then met Mexican GF and later decided to move to Mexico for some time, which only improved my level of Spanish.<p>Anyway, it&#x27;s amazing to see how only 20 minutes per day can compound into speaking a foreign language.<p>And the fact that you can do it completely for free w&#x2F;o needing to visit some institution makes it even better IMO.
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JeffDClarkover 3 years ago
I have spent the last two years learning about galls on plants as well as botany (mainly Oaks). I even built a website for helping ID and catalog the various gall forming species that occur across the US and Canada. <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.gallformers.org" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.gallformers.org</a><p>My main techniques for learning have been internet resources, <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.inaturalist.org" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.inaturalist.org</a>, <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.biodiversitylibrary.org&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.biodiversitylibrary.org&#x2F;</a> , and sci-hub being indispensable. I also have built up a decent library of related books, though there are very few relating to galls mostly they are botany related.<p>This hobby has led me to become a much better photographer (this is one of my recent favorites <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.inaturalist.org&#x2F;observations&#x2F;96982552" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.inaturalist.org&#x2F;observations&#x2F;96982552</a>) and gets me outside wandering around in nature at every opportunity that I have. My own yard, the neighborhood park, county&#x2F;state&#x2F;national parks, all of them offer nearly limitless exploration opportunity.<p>I have been at it for about 18 months and I feel like I am competent but am acutely aware of just how much more there is to learn, which is for me one of the main appeals.
usehackernewsover 3 years ago
I learned Python. (and continue to learn)<p>I’m not a developer, and have no plans to become one.<p>I’m a product manager, so my initial reason for starting was so I could better communicate with developers regarding effort and ideas.<p>But I also wanted a hobby to challenge my brain and allow me to create.<p>I’ve spent a considerable amount of time learning&#x2F;doing. Starting with about 3 hours per night for 3 weeks to start - now it’s dependent on the projects I build.
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tominatedover 3 years ago
I took up film photography after catching up with a friend that was in to it. They shared some photos from when we met up and there was such a sense of nostalgia to them. I did some research and found a camera that fit what I wanted (I ended up with an Olympus OM-2n), and once I got one from ebay I just started going and walking around my neighbourhood while trying to look with a more critical eye than I usually would. When my first roll came back I was hooked.<p>I tried digital photography quite a while back but it never stuck - I think the limitations of film (limited shots, fixed ISO for the whole roll, no way to review until you develop it) make it so much more compelling for me - I&#x27;ve stuck with it for longer than most other hobbies I&#x27;ve tried. I end up shooting around 5-10 rolls a month, which admittedly gets pricey. I desperately needed a hobby outside of tech and this has been such a nice way to get away from a screen and appreciate my environment.
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mattmoose21over 3 years ago
I started sailing. The university near me has a club that offers lessons and after taking them you can use their boats whenever they are open. Learning the terminology can be a bit overwhelming but it becomes very useful when everyone knows exactly what you mean. Even though the club is on a small lake I enjoy sailing immensely.
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notacowardover 3 years ago
Archery and resin casting. I&#x27;m fortunate that I have a back yard large enough to do some archery, though I&#x27;m limited to short distances and low draw weights for safety&#x27;s sake. Equipment only cost a few hundred bucks. When I started I used to shoot a few sets between meetings. Nowadays it&#x27;s between chores. Either way, it&#x27;s a nice quick break. Unfortunately it&#x27;s only a three-season option around here.<p>Resin casting is a bit more expensive to get into because you have to buy supplies constantly, including molds (or mold-making material) and PPE, but it&#x27;s still cheaper than a lot of other hobbies. It&#x27;s also easy to make stuff that looks beautiful, even early on the learning curve. After I started posting pictures, friends and family started asking if I could make earrings and such out of the materials I was using. Just finished my fifth and sixth such gifts. Bringing joy to family and friends with <i>something I made myself</i> feels really great. I&#x27;ve also started making phone cases, and I could make some actual money from that on Etsy or similar. And I&#x27;m just getting started. There&#x27;s a near infinite number of techniques I still have yet to learn, so it&#x27;s likely to keep me amused for quite a while.<p>In both cases, YouTube videos have been absolutely invaluable. Particularly with the resin casting, I&#x27;ll see some technique I haven&#x27;t tried yet, watch several more videos to get different perspectives or explanations, then try it myself. Often I have to go a second round to fix mistakes and improve points of technique that I&#x27;d totally missed until I tried it. I try to do at least one pour most days, and to try something new each time unless I&#x27;m working on a commission. I literally have a stack of about forty test coasters from working out various techniques, and some of the &quot;failures&quot; showed new effects that I went on to refine. So basically it&#x27;s practice, practice, practice ... but it&#x27;s usually practice <i>guided</i> by watching people who have already done stuff.
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amerkhalidover 3 years ago
I had enjoyed photography since childhood but avoided videos, mostly because of storage and management issues. A few years back I switched primarily to videography. It was mostly when my first child was born. Now I love videos so much, I only wish I had started serious videography long time ago.<p>The main issue now with videos is that I might record a lot of boring raw footage. Some of this boring raw footage, actually, has a lot of nostalgic value when viewed a few years later. But I also edit videos and create shorter videos that are more fun to watch. I do most of video editing on iPad because it is simple.<p>The storage seems cheap enough, I use Apple Cloud and local NAS backup.<p>One thing I am bad at is organization of videos. But I am really hoping that in next few years ML&#x2F;AI will handle this part. It is already pretty good but not as good as it is for photos.
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RickJWagnerover 3 years ago
I started learning to play the banjo. (It&#x27;s not for everybody, but I love it.)<p>I got some books (with music or digital download.) Those were helpful, but YouTube song lessons are probably the most effective.<p>I play probably 30 minutes most days. I find it relaxing and entertaining-- occasionally even for others!
anotherhueover 3 years ago
I started keeping Jellyfish. They&#x27;re beautiful to watch and met the requirement of &#x27;Technical but not Digital&#x27; hobby.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.cubicaquarium.com&#x2F;orbit-20" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.cubicaquarium.com&#x2F;orbit-20</a>
geocrasherover 3 years ago
I already have too many hobbies. Amateur Radio. Metalworking&#x2F;welding. Acoustic Guitar. Off-roading and working on my 88 Suburban which is an ongoing project (aren&#x27;t they all..)<p>But, this year I started putting more effort into my YouTube channel and grew it from about 300 subscribers to over 700. I have a long way to go. It&#x27;s niche (amateur radio homebrewing) and so small is fine. But learning how to make better videos and edit them has been interesting.<p>On that note, if anyone can recommend a video editor that isn&#x27;t too hard to use, is free, and can work with a GT740 (you can stop laughing!) I&#x27;d be obliged. Win10&#x27;s video editor stopped working reliably for whatever reason.
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jonexover 3 years ago
I started wall climbing and bouldering with my GF. The time investment is that we go there two mornings a week for ca 2 hours, and some weekends for longer sessions. Living reasonably close to the gym makes it rather low effort.<p>I like it as it combines multiple skills such physical strength, climbing specific ability, balance, problem solving endurance etc. It feels like there&#x27;s always new things to develop. Indoor climbing has the advantage of being less weather and season dependent than outdoor sports. Bouldering has the nice property of not requiring someone to do it with and you don&#x27;t need to book anything in advance or follow fixed schedules.
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clircleover 3 years ago
My new hobby is... I bought an old house. Now a lot of &quot;free&quot; time is spent on maintaining and improving this old house. I&#x27;m learning a great set of new skills that my apartment dwelling self didn&#x27;t care about.
stephenitisover 3 years ago
1 year Electronic Music Production, Song making, Song Writing<p>developing the hobby: It started when I was playing with dj software and saw patterns in how a lot of music is structured. It got thinking about making my own music.<p>I had to relearn all my elementary school music concepts and terms again from stratch once I decided I wanted to explore music creation.<p>I started with some Music theory and small Midi keyboard. <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.lightnote.co" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.lightnote.co</a> was helpful starting out to understand a bit of how music worked. I watched youtube videos of people describing concepts, working on songs, showing techniques. I tried a few short online cohort type classes. Joined a dozen music production discord communities. I would share my progress my instagram to have fun with my journey. A lot of my early posts are hidden now.<p>It was important for me to create small incremental things I could enjoy and share with others.<p>There is such a deep selection of concepts to explore that I find it very fulfilling to keep deepening my newbie knowledge into the hobby.<p>Time&#x2F;Effort: approximately 1-4 hours a day. I tried sitting down every day. Some days creative ideas would come rapidly and when they didn&#x27;t I would work on techniques and technical skills.<p>It&#x27;s been ~1 year but I&#x27;m humbled and grateful that I have learned and had fun learning to make sounds that I enjoy. I hope to explore my visual artistic expression with my music at some point. It&#x27;s also helped me appreciate the beautiful layers and craft of music I hear today by giving me another perspective when I actively &quot;listen&quot; to music.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;open.spotify.com&#x2F;artist&#x2F;1AFDRfC8RJf0O527M8AY0G" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;open.spotify.com&#x2F;artist&#x2F;1AFDRfC8RJf0O527M8AY0G</a> <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;soundcloud.com&#x2F;rlze" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;soundcloud.com&#x2F;rlze</a> (most of my music is on here) <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;music.apple.com&#x2F;sk&#x2F;artist&#x2F;rlze&#x2F;1572273532" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;music.apple.com&#x2F;sk&#x2F;artist&#x2F;rlze&#x2F;1572273532</a>
blueflowover 3 years ago
a) I joined other guys in a car garage. The metalworking and mechanics seem to be a good balance against the desk-sitting.<p>b) I installed a virtual model railroading program, where i can build stations and landscapes in a 3d-modelling&#x2F;blender like fashion. Its a quite dull, somewhat artistic kind of activity.
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pkilgoreover 3 years ago
Partner and I decided to learn about wine. Tasting classes (video + worksheets), intentionally buying from specific regions. It&#x27;s surprisingly inexpensive if you&#x27;re doing it from home in liue of restaurants, and one of the joys is discovering a $10-20 bottle you enjoy more than the $60 NAME, keeping costs down.<p>It&#x27;s also leading into my next project which is going to be bottle storage. Probably an unnecessarily geeky version of it involving digital monitoring and inventory.
newscluesover 3 years ago
Yoga. Hour and a half hot power yoga. For a while I was going every day but a few times a week is great.<p>It’s a way to be with others and not have to talk, and develop mentally and physically.
elliottkemberover 3 years ago
Roller skating! I took it up during the pandemic. I&#x27;d skated before, never very seriously, but my partner and I bought some skates and got to it. It&#x27;s incredible what an hour a day will get you. I&#x27;ve never felt as though I had strong legs before. It&#x27;s also inspiring me to do other workouts.
lbarrettover 3 years ago
I learned to knit. It helps keep me from getting distracted during video meetings. (I apparently need to fiddle with my hands a lot, and a fidget spinner or doodling doesn&#x27;t cut it.) I got a lot of help from my wife, but learning it was pretty straightforward.
andreskyttover 3 years ago
I took up triathlon two years ago. Being in my late forties and never having done any sports in a systematic fashion, I’m certainly not winning any trophies. But being in shape feels great and there’s an insane amount of technique to learn. It’s a very technical sport: swimming (tiny changes in posture make a big difference in efficiency), cycling (finding, optimizing and maintaining your aero position), running (yes, you can run incorrectly and you will hurt yourself doing so once the miles start piling up) and even transitions are very much dependent on very specific minute details of technique. I find learning those very satisfying
dborehamover 3 years ago
Excavation, forest management, and the associated heavy equipment maintenance activities.
alexfromapexover 3 years ago
I&#x27;ve been learning about general contracting and how to build houses just because it&#x27;s interesting. Also looking into getting a cinema camera to start making fancy videos because I love cinematography.
dave333over 3 years ago
Bought a $4k house out of state and flipped it remotely with one 3 week onsite visit to supervise the major renovations. Took 3 years elapsed to renovate and eventually sold it at a break even after expenses but learned a whole lot.<p>Now playing with arduino starter kit and a bunch of different sensors and also the amazing $29 oscilliscope I saw on another HN thread.<p>Also bought 3 plastic recorders (musical instruments) at Dollar Tree for myself and 2 granddaughters to play &quot;$3 Orchestra&quot; along with Youtube music videos.
freedom2099over 3 years ago
In the past 10 years I started: - astrophotography - miniatures painting - warhammer 40k - DnD
atum47over 3 years ago
I&#x27;m learning the guitar
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dakollerover 3 years ago
Yes, playing piano last year. I use the simply piano app and made it a habit to play 10-15mins every weekday.