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Hobbies

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  • dunbardunbar Member Posts: 1,603
    @wubble Yup, a 1983 2.2L diesel station wagon with a Fairey overdrive and free-wheel hubs.
  • wubblewubble Member Posts: 3,156

    CrevsDaak said:

    building things with LEGO

    @CrevsDaak when I was young I was totally the same! New LEGOs were just new pieces to a larger puzzle.
    Step One: Build Lego on the box cover
    Step Two: WRECK IT FOR SPARE PARTS
    Step Three: Create entire new universes in your young mind

    Great times
    Step four: Get a cat who raids your lego box for toys (but won't accept it to be given to him, it has to have been stolen)
  • DragonKingDragonKing Member Posts: 1,979
    O_Bruce said:

    Drawing, sometimes painting and writing.

    I approve.
    Yay, I really need to get back to doing BG fanart.
  • wubblewubble Member Posts: 3,156

    but brutal if you have any knee issues.

    My dad screwed his knee at fencing club...


    During the pre club basketball mess around.
  • AndrewFoleyAndrewFoley Member Posts: 744
    wubble said:

    My dad screwed his knee at fencing club...
    During the pre club basketball mess around.

    Apparently one time I was sick they played indoor soccer for a warm-up. I'm SO glad I wasn't there for that one...

  • wubblewubble Member Posts: 3,156
    Tbh I found the basketball more fun than the fencing, probably because my dad never let me do sabre and I was forced to do foil instead.
  • AlmateriaAlmateria Member Posts: 257
    Try archery! Literally the best sport invented, and absolutely no knee-related drawbacks.
  • dunbardunbar Member Posts: 1,603
    Does skydiving count as a sport? It's certainly the laziest activity I've ever participated in - I mean, anyone can fall, it's just stopping that's the tricky bit (and definitely not good for the knees).
  • Amber_ScottAmber_Scott Member Posts: 513
    Not reallly a "hobby," maybe, but one of my goals this summer is to learn to drive a standard. My friend has a car she claims is easy to learn on and she's going to teach me.
  • wubblewubble Member Posts: 3,156

    Not reallly a "hobby," maybe, but one of my goals this summer is to learn to drive a standard. My friend has a car she claims is easy to learn on and she's going to teach me.

    A standard as in a manual? if so It's not too hard so long as your teacher knows what they're doing (a nice gearbox helps too)

    It's odd that some countries favour manuals and some prefer automatics.
  • meaglothmeagloth Member Posts: 3,806
    edited August 2015
    wubble said:

    Not reallly a "hobby," maybe, but one of my goals this summer is to learn to drive a standard. My friend has a car she claims is easy to learn on and she's going to teach me.

    A standard as in a manual? if so It's not too hard so long as your teacher knows what they're doing (a nice gearbox helps too)

    It's odd that some countries favour manuals and some prefer automatics.
    Standard? Huh. Never heard that one before. I learned on a diesel:P fun. They're much less forgiving. Still learning, but I can get around pretty well now. I actually prefer it to automatic. I like cars, and it's a lot more involved. Driving an automatic is kinda... Boring.
  • dunbardunbar Member Posts: 1,603
    edited August 2015
    Being British I cut my teeth on manuals and still find it just feels 'wrong' when I drive an automatic (and I would never drive an automatic off-road where precise clutch control and gear selection are vital), but having said that, automatics are perfect for inner city stop/start crawling.

    Given that automatics are lousy for fuel consumption it's always been my understanding that they are so popular in the U.S. because historically the price of fuel there is so much lower there than elsewhere in the world (and they are after all a lot easier to drive, just not affordable for ordinary mortals).
  • atcDaveatcDave Member Posts: 2,387
    I've owned and enjoyed both. No doubt a stick (standard, manual...) is more engaging. It forces you to think more about your driving and be more a part of the process.
    But if you have to deal with city/rush hour driving the automatic is vastly easier. My first five cars were sticks, but now my last two have been automatics, so I do have many miles on both types. If I didn't have to deal with city driving so much I would probably still prefer the stick.

    HOWEVER, be aware, that on newer cars the automatic is both MORE fuel efficient and faster. This was not true for many years, but modern gear boxes with many gears (or CVT) can pick the right gear and shift points for any situation more efficiently and faster than a human driver.
    And any kind of performance car will probably offer the best of both worlds that will let you manually select gears if you disagree with the automatic choice. The paddle shifters on my Challenger make it easy to downshift when I want to punch it to get around traffic.
    Of course by the same measure, sticks are smoother and easier than ever.
    This is very much a golden age for automotive technology. Whichever way you go driving should be a ton of fun.
  • wubblewubble Member Posts: 3,156
    Manual is common in the uk and getting your license in an automatic only qualifies you to drive automatics.
  • wubblewubble Member Posts: 3,156
    dunbar said:

    I'm currently awaiting the arrival of some specially mixed paint so that I can re-spray it in it's original colour, and in the process of rubbing it down in preparation I've discovered three layers of completely different paint underneath!

    are you going for the classic green or something else?
  • dunbardunbar Member Posts: 1,603
    @wubble The short answer is "yes", but which 'classic green' depends on which era of manufacture you're referring to - in this case it's "Middle Bronze Green".
  • Amber_ScottAmber_Scott Member Posts: 513
    Yes, by standard I meant manual/stick. :) It's mostly because of Fury Road. If there's an apocalypse I want to be the driver.
  • atcDaveatcDave Member Posts: 2,387
    @Dunbar do you write the blog Skarach's World?
    I read several scale modeling sites, of which that is one. But he's also doing a 1/1 scale Land Rover restoration.
  • dunbardunbar Member Posts: 1,603
    @atcDave. I'd never heard of Skarach's World before but now that I've had a quick look at it I'll be spending more time there (thanks for the 'heads up'). I'm doing similar work in that I've just started on the coachwork and interior - I was originally only intending to do the oily bits but, as I mentioned before, it sort of got out of hand. My Series 3 though is quite a bit older than his Defender so it doesn't so much dismantle as, fall to pieces.
  • NimranNimran Member Posts: 4,875
    I've recently started collecting a variety of interesting things, such as mannequins, statues, posters, stuff like that. Only small stuff, though. I don't have room for anything larger.
  • SvarSvar Member Posts: 157
    My biggest hobbies are things I've been doing impulsively practically from the moment I learned to hold a pencil. I write more than anything else, probably. I love language. It is my playground. Countless hours of my life have been spent studying and inventing languages or writing fiction. Lately, I've been using my knowledge of Persian to create a more developed version of the Forgotten Realms language Alzhedo. Haven't got anywhere with my novel for a few months, to my shame. I'm stuck on design decisions for a sort of sea monster, among other things. Anyway, I'm quite enthused that there are other writers lurking about around here. I sometimes affectionately refer to writers collectively as "my people".

    The other thing I really spend a lot of time on is drawing, a skill which I developed primarily to create visuals for the stories in my head. My avatar is an example of my work. In high school, I had such a compulsive need to draw that my 11th grade English teacher thought I was distracting myself, so she banned me from taking out my sketchbook in her class. Joke's on her; I doodled in my notes instead. I like drawing mainly with Pilot G2 pens, but I also use a tablet for digital work. It's exciting that there are other artists around here as well. Nothing brings people together like mutual understanding of the struggle that is The Other Eye.

    Aside from that and the obvious gaming, I occupy myself with a smattering of reading, music composition, knitting, baking, sewing, movie/TV watching, cosplay, and of course wasting my life on the internet. I also enjoy acting, especially voice acting, but I never get the opportunity outside of scaring people with the Batman voice (I normally have a very soft, boyish voice, so no one suspects that I'm capable of making deep sounds, and one time I completely freaked out my entire German class by saying "I am the night" in German in the Batman voice. One lady thought I was possessed for a moment. Oops).
  • NonnahswriterNonnahswriter Member Posts: 2,520
    Svar said:

    I sometimes affectionately refer to writers collectively as "my people".

    I usually point and yell "COMRADE!" behind the safety of my computer screen, foaming affectionately at the mouth like that one psychotic vampire that Zero kills in that one episode of Vampire Knight.

    image

    I pick the strangest scenes out of animes to clearly remember...
  • brusbrus Member Posts: 944
    Nonnahswriter, which anime is this scene?
    I've been having really diverse hobbies lately:
    learning Blender for fun; trying to get in Maya; some advanced mathematics which could be applicable in deeper way; failed experiment with LED diode;wanting to make a perfect game; playing some games.
  • NimranNimran Member Posts: 4,875

    Writing.

    I'm actually almost finished with a set of seven fantasy novels. It starts with an energetic young farm girl who teams up with a ditzy undead psychopath to steal a WMD/time machine from the medieval equivalent of Kim Jong-il...

    And then the story gets kind of strange.

    Sounds like a fun tale. I'm sold.
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