• This topic has 60 replies, 44 voices, and was last updated 7 years ago by core.
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  • How do you manage your hobbies?
  • core
    Full Member

    I think it’s time I cut back and focused my attention and finances (or less of) on fewer things.

    I’m into three things, mtb’ing, shooting and rallying. Last one being the most expensive.

    I think I ought to cut back, focus on one and do the others less, on the cheap. But, how do you do it?

    I’m so reluctant to give any up, but I know people do it all the time, swap hobbies, give things up, I just can’t face it.

    Advice please?

    TheBrick
    Free Member

    Work away. Have a lot of work to do when I am at home.

    SaxonRider
    Full Member

    My dad once told me that I had to calm down and accept the fact that I could only do one or two things.

    Consequently, I gave up on a number of ideas – not with a feeling of resignation, but of recognition and acceptance. And while I still admire them from afar, I make up for my inability to do them by concentrating harder on the things I *can* do.

    scotroutes
    Full Member

    Give up work.

    finbar
    Free Member

    Be good at one thing instead of average at three.

    fifeandy
    Free Member

    Its always hard to give up something you enjoy, but for me at least i can be quite obsessive about really trying to get the best out of myself. This typically means something falls away while i focus on the one i really want to do well at.

    Then some years down the road if a hobby is beginning to get stale then i gradually transition to something else.

    cloudnine
    Free Member

    Combine shooting at mountain bikers whilst rallying around welsh fire roads.. Why compromise?

    Ben_H
    Full Member

    I’d really love to get into road cycling, but there’s just no way I could commit the time nor probably the money for the gear. There are so many temptations and possibilities out there; you just have to focus on the things you can comfortably do and to enjoy them. 🙂

    jambalaya
    Free Member

    Never really had more than two, used to sail in the summer and mtb mainly in the winter. IMO with an expensive hobby like sailing (or rallying ?) the point comes where unless you have a new challenge or you are really mad keen on it gets harder to justify the expense. With my sailing I did a few different campaigns / projects and that came to a natural end, I decided to take a break. I miss it a bit (still 1 or 2 events a year as crew) but it was very time consuming and used up every other weekend 9 months of the year and 10-15 days of holiday.

    garage-dweller
    Full Member

    I’ve packed in two or three things over the years. Track days was the big expensive one and I only dabbled in it. Sailing was another.

    It’s about priorities and choices at different times of life. I chose married life and children at a bit over thirty and a job that means I don’t lie awake worrying about money. That means a bit less time for hobbies so I focus on the one that might as well be a crack addiction (disclaimer for the yogurt knitters – it clearly is not like a real crack addiction).

    Before all that I spent lots of time sailing, more time riding and track days etc. I drank more beer too.

    The bike is the one thing that’s not really negotiable for change. The kids love riding, I love riding, it keeps me fit and it’s probably one way or another half my social life and a great brain cleanser.

    core
    Full Member

    In fairness the rally car would fit the play bike and all my guns in the back……

    Rallying has been a passion since I was a kid and my main focus for 20 years, I live in a motorsport heavy area, a lot of my friend group are motorsport people, I’m a council member of my club. It’s just got bloody expensive and frustrating to compete recently. That’s ‘in my blood’ more than anything, but the least good for my health, finances and relationships.

    km79
    Free Member

    Biking, hill walking and fishing. They compliment each other so don’t feel the need to prioritise one over the others. A perfect weekend will involve all 3 with a bit of camping thrown in. Not that expensive or high maintenance so none are a burden and I enjoy them all equally. Recently gave up boats as they consumed too much time and money and impacted the time I spent on other interests. I like the balance I have now, don’t think I’d add anything else but do find myself looking at photo/film gear from time to time as well as woodworking setups. I think they’d involve too much learning and again would impact the others. Keeping it simple is the key for me.

    core
    Full Member

    I’ve not got any kids, nearing thirty, guess that would/will force my hand if/when the time comes.

    esselgruntfuttock
    Free Member

    Part time here. A lot easier to combine biking, sea fishing & doing naff all else!

    Biking for thrills, fishing to chill.

    MoreCashThanDash
    Full Member

    I’ve only ever done a couple of things at a time. Put in as much as I could to get to a certain level, had to make a choice to commit more time, effort and money to take it to the next level, and if I didn’t fancy the commitment, packed it in and tried something else.

    Bit like relationships really. But longer lasting and more satisfying.

    loddrik
    Free Member

    I have kids. So no hobbies as all my time is pretty much spent with them. Cycling here and there. Wouldn’t change it though as they aren’t kids forever and when they aren’t I’ll be glad that I’ve spent so much time with them.

    This comes up on here from time to time and I can never understand how people have jobs, kids and loads of hobbies. They are either a bit selfish or their days contain a lot more hours than mine do.

    garage-dweller
    Full Member

    Delete: that post was no use at all!

    core
    Full Member

    I think part of my issue is all of my hobbies are gear heavy, you can’t just ‘do’ any of them. Running, guitar and stone skimming would be much easier.

    Northwind
    Full Member

    I more or less settle it with fights. Motorbiking and pushbiking was a total conflict for me, I essentially did exactly the same things and spent exactly the same lumps of time on both. So I just spent a while figuring out which one I enjoyed and missed the most and which one I thought “wish I was doing the other one” least, spent about 3 months just mulling it over and working it all out. Tried to ignore money but it could have been a consideration if circumstances were different.

    (in the end I found I prefer the act of mountain biking… But damn, I miss the social side of the motorbiking. I’ll never get 100 friends together in a field for pushbikes)

    My other hobby/half-assed side business (toy refurbishing/building/selling) conflicts with bike mechanicking (which I pretty much consider a separate hobby to the riding) but not too drastically so they can coexist. Sometimes one gets pushed aside by the other- when I’m building a new bike or fixing something or filling an order- but they don’t have to. And it helps that one of them actually makes money rather than eating it. (not that it’s recouped the setup costs, but it will, probably…)

    It really does seem to be as simple and as complicated as deciding what’s important to you and then acting on that.

    Spin
    Free Member

    By not having kids.

    sweepy
    Free Member

    I’d rather do three things mediocre than one thing well, plus another five badly.

    bodgy
    Free Member

    Nobody ever warns you: If you turn your hobby into your job . . . you have to find new hobbies.

    wilburt
    Free Member

    Not sure where you get the time, last year I had 250 hours cycling that included a week away abroad and a two weekends here for events and 100 hours running.

    Then most of us will be doing 2000 hours a year paid work and a couple of hundred unpaid mowing the lawn or whatever.

    Then socialising and maintaining freindships and family a few hundred.

    Maybe a family holiday that isnt about your hobby a few hundred hours?

    You will need to sleep less than 4 hours a night to have several time consuming hobbies.

    BigDummy
    Free Member

    mtb’ing, shooting and rallying

    I reckon the key is to have things that complement one another. I only really ride bikes as a serious, proper “hobby” involving equipment. But riding means I’ve a basic set of outdoor gear, which means that hiking, camping, birdwatching, going for a wander with my good camera or to find something to sketch, bivvying out etc. are all able to be bolted on with minimal additional expense or hassle.

    I’ve hardly taken anything up in 20 years though. Just got steadily, incrementally fitter and more competent at the biking.

    🙂

    milky1980
    Free Member

    Used to do karting, MTB and RC cars in my youth. The karting had to go as it was just burning through far too much money, RC went when most of my friends stopped so it just left the bikes. Happened naturally so I’ve never had to face your dilemma directly!

    Suggest you make up a list of pros and cons (financial and time commitment etc) for each then sit on it for a week or two before making a decision. Then reassess after a few months, you can always go back to one and drop another.

    jambalaya
    Free Member

    guitar

    n+1 applies here too @core 8)

    If rallying is in your blood then it’s the priority. What I found with sailing looking back at 15 years running boats was that the biggest boat gave the least pleasure, the smallest where the easiest to move around and so do events abroad. I think also doing it competitvely to get into top 1/4 is reasonably achievable, going fro (say) 4th to 1st can be very time and money expensive. I imagine rallying is the same and that can suck the fun out of it. If I went back to owning a boat it would be small/medium and focused on the events I enjoy and not get too fussed on winning, if it happens then great if not I did the events I really like.

    OP based on my world view now I am 50+ and current situation I would step back from rallying and build some savings / pension, invest in some more property etc.

    Cougar
    Full Member

    my hobby seems to be collecting hobbies. I’ve done everything, mastered none of it.

    matt_outandabout
    Full Member

    Give up work.

    This. So envious.

    kraken2345
    Free Member

    A few years ago I saw the quote “you can do anything, not everything”. After that I’ve started to really focus on my main hobbies of mtb’ing and weightlifting instead of trying to balance sailing, climbing etc as well as I find these the most fun and the most challenging/rewarding.

    stumpy01
    Full Member

    Spin – Member

    By not having kids.

    loddrik – Member

    This comes up on here from time to time and I can never understand how people have jobs, kids and loads of hobbies. They are either a bit selfish or their days contain a lot more hours than mine do.

    This and this….!

    I managed to do the things I wanted to fairly easily BC (Before Child)….now I can only just about keep on top of the chores around the house with a couple of hour long turbo trainer sessions a week just starting to creep in.

    I used to do quite a bit of photography – never very good at it, but enjoyed taking the camera out trying to be bit creative. Haven’t wafted my camera at anything in a ‘hobby’ sense for ages.

    Decided I was going to get into woodworking – I think it would be a really therapeutic hobby. So far I have bought a book and read it a few times….oh, I got some chisels & a wooden mallet but have only attacked floorboards & skirting boards with them so far.

    The other thing was wheelbuilding – got a pair of wheels in the garage on old WTB hubs with a split rim on the rear wheel. Thought I’d build a wheel truing stand (tie in with the whole woodworking thing), get some cheap rims & get the wheels running again – so far I have read the Roger Musson book about 5 times & worked out the material I would need to build his suggested trueing stand….

    Hmmmph….

    benman
    Free Member

    I think its healthy to maintain at least a couple of hobbies. Even if you only spend a limited time doing each.

    The people I know who are REALLY into cycling are boring feckers. Literally nothing else to talk about other than riding. Then they wonder why they don’t get invited out socially…

    orangespyderman
    Full Member

    my hobby seems to be collecting hobbies. I’ve done everything, mastered none of it.

    Are you me? Kids now, and still young (3 and 1) so a bike ride on the weekend for a couple of hours and an early morning gym session a before work a couple of times a week are all I get. Wife encourages me to go out on the bike at least once, and if shopping is well in hand, then sometimes twice a weekend. She likes it because I’m less stressed when I get back from a good blast round.

    Cougar
    Full Member

    I can never understand how people have jobs, kids and loads of hobbies.

    Get kids to share your hobbies, no? I thought that was one of the perks of breeding.

    stumpy01
    Full Member

    Cougar – Moderator

    Get kids to share your hobbies, no? I thought that was one of the perks of breeding

    Woodworking & photography don’t sounds like the perfect hobbies for a 15month old girl, but I’ll bear it in mind! 😉

    stumpy01
    Full Member

    orangespyderman – Member

    Wife encourages me to go out on the bike at least once, and if shopping is well in hand, then sometimes twice a weekend. She likes it because I’m less stressed when I get back from a good blast round.

    Your Wife needs to explain this to my Wife….preferably in simple terms with pictures…..

    mark90
    Free Member

    now I can only just about keep on top of the chores around the house

    I’m less stressed when I get back from a good blast round

    I’ve come to the conclusion that you can never get on top of the chores. So do some (essential) chores but spend some time with the family and spend some time on hobbies. If I didn’t choose to leave some chores waiting I would spend all my time on them, and I’d be even worse to live with!

    chiefgrooveguru
    Full Member

    I think part of my issue is all of my hobbies are gear heavy, you can’t just ‘do’ any of them. …guitar … would be much easier.

    Ha!

    funkmasterp
    Full Member

    I’ve struggled since we had the kid. Used to do gym, climbing and mtb. Now don’t do any of them. Between work and family commitments there just isn’t the time or money.

    Going to get the suspension trainers up in the garden and try do half hour per day on these. My stomach has started jiggling when I walk and I’ve gained two stone. Wouldn’t lose the family time and can’t afford ever financial strain of cutting hours at work. Only really miss the mtb though.

    hairylegs
    Free Member

    stumpy01 – Member

    orangespyderman – Member

    Wife encourages me to go out on the bike at least once, and if shopping is well in hand, then sometimes twice a weekend. She likes it because I’m less stressed when I get back from a good blast round.

    Your Wife needs to explain this to my Wife….preferably in simple terms with pictures..

    Guess I’m lucky as my wife and I share our love of biking, kayaking and hillwalking/climbing …LOL…it was part of the selection process!!

    Children have been encouraged to take an interest too. They haven’t taken to everything and kicked back a bit as teenagers, but by and large we can either find time to do things together or at least never feel guilty or resent if one or the other of us can’t join in.

    Cougar
    Full Member

    Woodworking & photography don’t sounds like the perfect hobbies for a 15month old girl, but I’ll bear it in mind!

    Start ’em young! (-:

    (I do hope that her gender was merely for information and doesn’t preclude you from including her in your hobbies when she’s older…)

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