• Notyou@sopuli.xyz
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      20 days ago

      I always wanna mention about how your public library (if applies) works with apps (usually libby and hoopla) and they let you check out books for free. They have books, audio, comics, and more. Everyone should check it out. I read the invincible comics and I’m super excited for the final seasons.

      Go to your local library website. Make an account. Use that account info in the app.

  • youcantreadthis@quokk.au
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    20 days ago

    Pick locks shoplift stalk the wealthy and their renfields security us a fun rewarding exciting and potentially profitable hobby

  • fartsparkles@lemmy.world
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    20 days ago

    Acoustic guitar. My first guitar was €50. After that, you only need maybe a pack of strings every now and then and maybe a pick or two.

    Pretty cheap entry as far as hobbies go but, like most hobbies, you can throw obscene money at instruments if you want to. You can also just stick with your first cheap guitar for years.

    • Nebby
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      15 days ago

      You can also modify your cheap guitar to make it play better, rounded fingerboard, file the frets etc. And if you get a cheap electric guitar you can get different pickups.

  • EarlOfSam@quokk.au
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    20 days ago

    On top of reading, I’ve been recycling out-of-date Kindles.

    Here’s a link to Kindle Modding

    You can get a nigh-indestructable e-reader for very cheap, recycle something in the process, and it holds over a thousand books.

    Hell, it’s so satisfying I’ve been handing them out to friends and family.

    Also you get to rip intellectual property right out of Jeff Bezos hands! What’s not to like?

  • ClockworkOtter@lemmy.world
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    20 days ago

    Observation and listening.

    Learning bird ID with a second hand book. Learning all the different calls and how they change throughout the day and year.

    Plant ID. Where do they grow, flourish, struggle? When do they flower? Which grow together? Which are the pioneer species when land is cleared? What do they look like when they’re first sprouting?

    Take some identification books and some scrap paper with pencils.

    • Hikermick@lemmy.world
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      20 days ago

      Came here to say this. It gets you outside getting fresh air and exercise. It also teaches how nature is always changing, birds migrate, plants flower and wilt. I also ID and photograph aquatic insects and track which ones are hatching. Trees are another thing to ID.

  • Brainsploosh@lemmy.world
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    20 days ago

    May I suggest simple crafting, like whittling, ancient/native pottery, wood carving, paper basket weaving, origami, crochet (or the slightly more addictive and expensive knitting), braiding, weaving, macrame, yarn spinning, decorative knotworking, flower pressing, dyemaking, hand dying, flower arrangement, make walking canes, etc?

    Or maybe an instrument? Someone mentioned guitar, but why not harmonica, ukulele, bongos, simple percussives, or why not take up singing, there’s typically a choir almost everywhere, or you could try solo, or whistling, or yodeling.

    Or maybe take up gardening/growing? In pots, hydroponically, maybe on a growing lot, or someone’s yard?

    Or take up community projects, like either sanctioned or guerilla gardening, greening, forestry, litter picking, maintaining communal spaces, volunteer, start a community project (pollination diversity, bee keeping, growing lots, food drive, food forestry)

    Or take up a cause? Build community, take affirmative action, demonstrate, protest, coordinate, communicate, with an established org, or on your own?

    Maybe the outdoors could entice? Take up walking, ornithology, watch bats, discover new insects, take up chabana/ikebana, learn to forage, learn survival skills, go hiking, stack rocks, track animals, learn trapping, get into scouting, make bark boats, learn to skip rocks, climb trees, jump in puddles, pretend (or practice) animistic rituals, feel rain on naked skin, sleep under a bare sky, learn to forage, pick skulls, horns and bones to craft with.

    Perhaps create stories, tell stories, write poetry, learn magic, juggle, poi, take up clowning, go swing/country/folk/traditional/ballroom/social dancing, try Butoh, write sketches, join a theatre, start a business, take up decorating, or just embrace whimsy?

    I can also warmly recommend trying a new thing every week/month/period and see what sticks and not.

  • TheIvoryTower@lemmy.world
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    20 days ago

    It technically involves a phone, but I took up Walkscape.

    It’s addictive enough that I went from walking an average of 3000 steps a day to 10,000 Fun, step-based crafting game

  • manmachine@lemmy.world
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    20 days ago

    Cheap small offline eink reader and, well, there are quite a few ways to acquire basically endless amounts of books.