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Hudson

1,255 posts

56 months

[news] 
Thursday 2nd August 2012 quote quote all
Guitar as a cheap hobby....

Im up to about £5000 on gear in the last 7 years hehe

Hoofy

47,941 posts

151 months

[news] 
Thursday 2nd August 2012 quote quote all
Condi said:
... I knew they were boobies....
In that case, what's your reply about?

don4l

3,315 posts

45 months

[news] 
Thursday 2nd August 2012 quote quote all
If you are musical, then buy an instrument.


I bought an expensive piano in 2001. It seemed a big investment at the time (£2.5k). However, I have played it every single day for an average 2 hours(excluding holidays). That works out at about 34p per hour. I suspect that you can buy a similiar instrument today for a few hundred quid. I'm still bloody useless, but I really enjoy it.

If you think that you would enjoy the countryside, then join a walking group.

For completely free unfettered access to the countryside, look up your local Beagles pack.

Don
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WeirdNeville

4,191 posts

84 months

[news] 
Friday 3rd August 2012 quote quote all
Hudson said:
Guitar as a cheap hobby....

Im up to about £5000 on gear in the last 7 years hehe
Yup, my wife dropped that on a single guitar.

If you're a spender, you'll spend. Hillwalking can be as cheap as a decent pair of boots or as expensive as a light weight one man tent, full goretex kit and driving to Skye for a weekend.

Cycling can be as cheap as serviving the bike you have and getting out there to the cost of a minor F1 team.

How about you use the stuff you have already, vow not to spend more on kit but to fully use/perfect the stuff you have?

Instrument is a good shout, but really you need lessons for motivation and finesse. Again, my wife (ok, so she has a diploma and plays concerts on occasion) spends £40+ an hour on lessons, £500ish of retreats and masterclasses every now and agian, and £15 a go on sheet music. And load and loads of CD's. Not a cheap hobby.

One think I have found cheap and very involving recently is Flight Sims - A £25 Thrustmaster joystick, a copy of FSX gold edition and you've got countless hours of entertainment and challenge there. MS Flight is shinier and free (for the basic game) and there are laods of sims out there cheap or nearly free.

Zad

8,711 posts

105 months

[news] 
Friday 3rd August 2012 quote quote all
It is a bit iffy recommending Maplin for electronics. Some of the shops have staff that know their stuff, but many of the ones I have been in seem to have people who weren't quite clever enough for PC World. They also seem to be pretty low on proper electronics components, preferring to sell cheap RC cars, disco lights and CCTV cameras.

Electronics is a huge subject, so it might be an idea to look at one part of it, such as amateur (ham) radio. The courses leading to the exam are run by local amateur radio groups. Some of them can turn into "hey look how much cash I just spent on this new blahblahblah", but then all social / hobby clubs can be like that. http://www.rsgb.org/clubsandtraining/

Coursera is excellent, but the courses are very definitely university level, and require a regular amount of hard work.
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D15CO D4VE

309 posts

20 months

[news] 
Friday 3rd August 2012 quote quote all
Forza 4 saves me money smile I want start canoeing pretty soon though...

iggysport

378 posts

16 months

[news] 
Friday 3rd August 2012 quote quote all
Minecraft. But say goodbye to the rest of your life.

iphonedyou

2,558 posts

26 months

[news] 
Friday 3rd August 2012 quote quote all
Learning a language is fairly cheap. Well, unless you add the cost of practising in a foreign country.

I'm learning Spanish. I've probably spent about £150 over the last two years, and that's probably overestimating the cost to be honest. So much available on the internet. I record internet radio from Seville, and listen to it back. Or just listen live. It's good because the accent and distinción pronunciation is similar to where I go on holiday.

Iggy - regarding minecraft. What's the attraction? That's a genuine question, as I know it's unbelievably popular, but the graphics are so retro that I wonder how it's got such widespread appeal?

slk 32

246 posts

62 months

[news] 
Friday 3rd August 2012 quote quote all
Mobile Chicane said:
Krav maga's cheap. £7 a lesson even in Surrey, and certainly 'challenging'.
Whereabouts in Surrey? I did look a while back and most courses seemed to be in Central London during the week and given that I would have to schlep in after work was not sure I could get in in time for the start

Surrey would be a lot better as I am in Richmond

Riknos

3,574 posts

73 months

[news] 
Friday 3rd August 2012 quote quote all
When I need to save money I buy computer games. A standard night out for me is about £40-50, sometimes more. A computer game costs this or less. If I want to save for something, I buy a game, and if it stops me going out twice it's already paid for itself.

Or in the case of BF3, and my 5 days 19 hours played on it, it's saved me a hell of a lot whistle

chunkymonkey71

5,435 posts

67 months

[news] 
Friday 3rd August 2012 quote quote all
Geocaching.

dmulally

2,773 posts

49 months

[news] 
Friday 3rd August 2012 quote quote all
Riknos said:
Or in the case of BF3, and my 5 days 19 hours played on it, it's saved me a hell of a lot whistle
I lol'd. Then felt ashamed.

Mixed feelings really. smile

Hoofy

47,941 posts

151 months

[news] 
Friday 3rd August 2012 quote quote all
dmulally said:
Riknos said:
Or in the case of BF3, and my 5 days 19 hours played on it, it's saved me a hell of a lot whistle
I lol'd. Then felt ashamed.

Mixed feelings really. smile
hehe

Am considering buying it since getting my new PC. I guess that's my spare time used up for the rest of the year?

Vieste

9,090 posts

29 months

[news] 
Friday 3rd August 2012 quote quote all
19 hours in 5 days pfft i can do that on friday and saturdaysmile

Riknos

3,574 posts

73 months

[news] 
Friday 3rd August 2012 quote quote all
Vieste said:
19 hours in 5 days pfft i can do that on friday and saturdaysmile
You misread this. It's 5 days 19 hours total play time, so 139 hours total over a space of 8.5 months...

So averages at 1.7 hours a day.

Some of the people at the top of the leaderboards on XBOX have 90+ days in the same period...!

boobles

12,163 posts

84 months

[news] 
Friday 3rd August 2012 quote quote all
Cooking is a great hobbie + if you become anygood, you could always appear on "come dine with me" biggrin

Riknos

3,574 posts

73 months

[news] 
Friday 3rd August 2012 quote quote all
boobles said:
Cooking is a great hobbie + if you become anygood, you could always appear on "come dine with me" biggrin
Good for impressing women too wink Which could lead onto another hobby - shagging.

Rob282828

2,321 posts

18 months

[news] 
Friday 3rd August 2012 quote quote all
Geocaching is a very good hobby to do, and it can be combined with your walking, jogging, running, rollerskating, bird spotting, dog walking, stalking, biking and wking too. It's also good if you've got kids as well...

Why not try building some models as well, Lego Technic and Airfix are nice choices.

WeirdNeville

4,191 posts

84 months

[news] 
Friday 3rd August 2012 quote quote all
iphonedyou said:
regarding minecraft. What's the attraction? That's a genuine question, as I know it's unbelievably popular, but the graphics are so retro that I wonder how it's got such widespread appeal?
It's lego in digital form.

Build a house, build a circuit to open a door, build an escalator or a lift... survive, hit zombies with a wooden sword... explore vast cave systems, find gold, make a compass and a boat and discover new lands. Meet funky animals and tame them or eat them. Play with mates and exchange gold and diamonds for stuff you can't find yourself. Build a life sized Wembley Stadium. Battle dragons, go to hell and back, fall into lava and die. Become a farmer, make bread, realise that's boring and go and slaughter a whole forest worth of pigs instead.

It's an unbelievably "deep" game.

iphonedyou

2,558 posts

26 months

[news] 
Friday 3rd August 2012 quote quote all
WeirdNeville said:
It's lego in digital form.

Build a house, build a circuit to open a door, build an escalator or a lift... survive, hit zombies with a wooden sword... explore vast cave systems, find gold, make a compass and a boat and discover new lands. Meet funky animals and tame them or eat them. Play with mates and exchange gold and diamonds for stuff you can't find yourself. Build a life sized Wembley Stadium. Battle dragons, go to hell and back, fall into lava and die. Become a farmer, make bread, realise that's boring and go and slaughter a whole forest worth of pigs instead.

It's an unbelievably "deep" game.
Aw balls. That's Friday night sorted then! biggrin

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