Any thriving hobbies out there?

jeffj2h

AzB Silver Member
Silver Member
Like a lot of us here I get caught up in the discussions about what's wrong with pool and how to save it. There's a place for that but I'm curious what other hobbies you guys have and whether they are thriving, attracting more people, or if you find yourself in similar "how do we draw more people into basket weaving!" discussions.
 
Both

I got involved in two Hobbies as a kid, they are still my hobbies to this day 40 + years later and they are both in the same boat. The one is Pool, which I play everyday either with someone or by myself, the other is Fish breeding and raising.I have over the years belonged to several Aquarium Society's as well as specific clubs that specialized in one breed, like Betta's, Guppies, African Cichlids, and their members are all saying the same thing " how can we encourage younger people into the hobby" . The sad fact is kids today have way to many distractions and bounce from one thing to the next, plus most just do not have the patience.Today everything seems to be geared for instant gratification.Pool at least has a chance to catch their attention and is more likely to make a comeback then Fish keeping.I will remain loyal to both , but Pool is my main love.
 
Like a lot of us here I get caught up in the discussions about what's wrong with pool and how to save it. There's a place for that but I'm curious what other hobbies you guys have and whether they are thriving, attracting more people, or if you find yourself in similar "how do we draw more people into basket weaving!" discussions.

I thought I would throw this response in just because it is kind of similar to pool in that it has mostly "older" guys participating in it.

Here in Louisiana, duck decoy carving has been a hobby and a job for a lot of people. My grandfather, Tex Aguzin was a market hunter (for ducks) between 1930-1950 and was a decoy carver. My grandfather only carved "working decoys", meaning that they weren't for show. There are quite a few people who have taken up the skill of decoy carving and it has now become a medium for artists who carve and paint the decoys to look as realistic as any live duck you have ever seen.

My son, recently took up the challenge of duck decoy carving and is probably one of the youngest members of that aging community. The group here in Louisiana are a bunch of talented and many are extremely successful businessmen who have fallen in love with this art form. With my son's young blood, skill, determination and technology know-how, he has been welcomed like the returning prodigal son of the bible. :grin:

Apparently, duck decoy carving is similar to pool. If you have the calling, you know it right away.

I would be curious if the statistics of dwindling numbers is the same for other countries?

JoeyA
 
Been going fishing every weekend. I accidentally turned my wife into a fishing monster as well.

By the looks of it, fishing tends to be more popular across North America than pool is at the moment.

I'm buying an 18' Lund Pro V this week. So there goes my retirement money.

Funny, my wife isn't chipping in on the boat. Maybe I should leave her at home or charge her by the day.

Do you think that will go over well?
 
Darts is going strong in the bars in the Valley of the Sun. Cowboy Action Shooting that was called a flash in the pan is still going fairly strong. Archery go a brief infusion of interest after the movie Hunger Games. Golf is still very popular with the Snowbirds who come to AZ for the winter months.

Elk Hunters are still lining up to buy, or get the chance to be drawn for a Elk Tag in Arizona. The demand is way way larger than the Tads Issued by AZ Game & Fish.

Think a lot of hobbies, or leisure time activities are driven by what Hollywood, and TV put in front of it audience. It is call the in thing to do.

People still pay big buck to see shows in Sin City, but I do not think Sin City is doing well as a whole.

My cousin just folded up his business in Las Vegas, because of the economy, and other providers of the same service were cutting out the profit margin he once enjoyed. Before his competition when from three or fur competitors to over 15 all trying to compete for the same service jobs most property owner need.
 
I enjoy doing a lot of stuff. Poker is obviously big, though it is "declining" I'm sure pool players wish they had that kind of decline. R/c cars is something I used to be into, and just recently gotten back into. It's gotten a bit more popular since lipo batteries have came to be. That technology is big for r/c cars letting electric cars have a ton of speed. Those lipo's have also made flying r/c really popular. Much better for planes and helo's.
you obviously have all the normal sports. Not too tough to find games going on at a "hobby" level. You could include fantasy sports in the hobby section I suppose.

I have a decent sports cards collection. They have really cool stuff coming out, but it seems like its died off a bit. By most hobbiest standpoint, the wrong card manufacturer got a hold of all the licensing rights. They don't put out as good of a product as others, but they try it seems. The "better" companies are stuck making cards with players out of uniform, or with their college uniforms. That's hurt the market a bit because people like to see players in their pro jerseys and with their teams names, but it is what it is.

And then there are video games...lol

Sorry, I rambled.
 
Quit thinking like that r u will b n the doghouse.

Been going fishing every weekend. I accidentally turned my wife into a fishing monster as well.

By the looks of it, fishing tends to be more popular across North America than pool is at the moment.

I'm buying an 18' Lund Pro V this week. So there goes my retirement money.

Funny, my wife isn't chipping in on the boat. Maybe I should leave her at home or charge her by the day.

Do you think that will go over well?

Fishing, beeen verry good to me.
JoeyA
 
I used to be an avid flyfisherman (obsessive and compulsive)... I built rods, tied flys, etc. When I got married in 1981, my wife agreed I could flyfish one weekend/month, and I did at least that until I got back into pool in '03 after a 17 year layoff. Around 1992-93 I stopped going anywhere else but the San Juan River in northeast NM, but I've fished most of New Mexico, Colorado, Utah, Wyoming, some of Montana and much of Arizona. Wanted to fish Idaho, Oregon, Washington but never did. I still go once or twice a year, but my health changed a few years ago and I can't pound the river like I used to, in fact nothing like I used to. So now I collect old impressionist paintings and shoot pool. :D
 
I imagine that the fishing is a lot of fun in LA Joey.

Primo, you have a good taste in fishing boats.

The stupid thing is, there is another boat for sale without a motor on it. Its a 17" Bass boat without a motor. Pretty sure I can pick this up for approx $1500 and I can get a used 150 Merc for another $1500.

So, been thinking about having a project boat as well. A 150 should make the Bass boat
toodle along nicely.

Ray, fly fishing seems to be an art form. I've been watching on UTube. Something that I would like to try my hand at too. Living on the prairies is not conducive to fly fishing but people do it and catch fish. Can't beat filleting flash frozen perch and cooking up a few on the Coleman stove on the ice.
That and a few ice cold beer makes for a great day.
Put a heater in the tent and you can fish in your tee shirt.

I got the fishing bug bad Ray. Haven't done any since my Brother passed so its been a few years.
Its so bad that I haven't thrown my leg over either my Harleys this summer. Pretty bad eh?

I think about it but the fishing pole wins out every weekend.

If any of you would like to try your hand at ice fishing, yer welcome to come up for a visit. I'm pretty much rigged out for that one too. I have a 4 man Clam pop up ice fishing shack and an underwater camera.
 
Last edited:
I just jump out of perfectly good airplanes at 14,000 ft. Look for a cloud that I might
fly through. Open at 2,500 ft and enjoy the scenery and a safe landing. Then of course
pack my gear and do it again :)
 
I collect knives and wish I had the money to get into guns. Unless you've been living under a rock I don't have to tell you how the firearm industry is fairing. Many good custom knife makers have more work than they know what to do with and therefore it's almost impossible to get on their books. The secondary market price on many of these knives is 1.5 to 2 x their original price. YouTube and instigram has also helped fuel a lot of up and coming knife pimpers and makers
 
I always loved pool and gambling, i was into hunting deer for 32 years in a row with my dad, Dad died in 2010 and i havent been hunting since and i never will!

Now a days iam coaching my son and the rest of the rec in baseball, our team has gotten so good we now can and are playing travelling ball.

My other hobbie is watching my daughter play fast pitch softball, while my wife coaches her and the rest of the team!

There are not many things left that dont cost money to enjoy!
 
Like a lot of us here I get caught up in the discussions about what's wrong with pool and how to save it. There's a place for that but I'm curious what other hobbies you guys have and whether they are thriving, attracting more people, or if you find yourself in similar "how do we draw more people into basket weaving!" discussions.

I have always really loved fishing mainly saltwater,y new found love for poker, and obviously pool.
 
I just jump out of perfectly good airplanes at 14,000 ft. Look for a cloud that I might
fly through. Open at 2,500 ft and enjoy the scenery and a safe landing. Then of course
pack my gear and do it again :)


As a private pilot I always thought that the only thing that should fall from the sky is rain and bird shit. I'll bet it's fun though. :)
 
After a five year lay-off I just bought a new set of Ping G25s and will be getting back out onto the golf course next week. :)
 
Lots of nice fishing holes in Ontario Primo. I've been to Kenora a few times. Would like to try Lake of the Woods next year.

The Lund is used. It has a Honda 90 tiller on it. More than enuff power. A Vantage positioning motor on the back.

I don't understand what Down rigging is all about. Someone will have to explain that one to me. I know what the set up is, just don't know anything more than that. Deep water as in Lake Ontario?

The Bass boat is something that I might look into for a project if I can get the hull cheap enuff. Don't want to put a ton into it. Not much more than 3 if I don't have to. Just have a fishing boat that I can run fast if I want to go for a spin. Maybe take the youngins tubing.

Kids are grown up but we have nieces and nephews that are the right age. When we get together at the lake, theres enuff of them.

From watching videos, it seems that the faster the Bass boat, the better they like it.

Looks like yer charging the batteries and getting ready.
 
Hobbies in order of priority:

1. Pool
2. Fishing. Freshwater, small lakes. Largemouth bass, crappie, northern pike, perch and walleye.
3. Guitar and music in general. I used to have more guitars than lots of cue collectors have cues, but I sold all but three.

I find that I'm often fishing only because family or friends want to go fishing...when I'd really rather be playing pool. But none of them are pool players :mad:
 
foosball

I used to play a lot of competitive foosball against people who are world ranked.

A bit of history on foosball: It was huge in the '70's and '80's. The first national tourney was in ~'72. There was a tour in the later seventies that had over a million dollars in prize money. I knew a guy who had won a corvette as part of his prize money in one tourney in the late seventies. Others won porsches, pickups, etc. in addition to cash prizes. Table manufacturers took a friend of mine on a tour of Europe to expand their brand.

Now, tho, there is only one person alive who makes a full time living playing foosball. Basically the best player in the world. I can't think of another person who has dominated a sport like Frederico Colignon has dominated foosball. He was, for a long time, so far above everybody else that he would win almost everything. He would routinely go to international tourneys and win everything he entered: Open Doubles, Mixed Doubles, Singles.

There are many interesting things about foosball. It is such a combination of mental and physical that the difference between a good non-tourney player and a bad tourney player is ridiculous. There are guys who come to a weekly tourney because they are the best person in their frat house, neighborhood, dorm, whatever, and get absolutely smoked by low level tourney players.

When I first started playing foosball tourneys, I thought I knew how to play. I played two tourneys a week and practiced as much as I could, played pick-up games, etc. and I didn't win a match in a full year. There were matches where I lost two games 5-0, 5-0 and never had the ball on my front rod.

Anyhow, I digress, foosball is mostly people who played as teens in the height of foosball thirty years ago. Most of them quit playing for a long time while they raised their families.

There is a big desire and no effective action locally to get new people involved. The problem is that there aren't enough people who will take the abuse of losing so badly long enough for them to continue with the game. Couple that with the fact that these people have mostly known each other for a couple of decades or more and can be loud, angry, impatient jerks, there is little reason for new players to come back.

Foosball has one last difference: There is no standardization for tables. Everybody here likes to talk about the difference between bar boxes, diamonds, GCs, etc., but foosball is much, much different. Different tables have different shaped men, different balls (cork, rubber, hard plastic, different textures, etc.), the weight of the rods is different, the size of the goal is vastly different. Some tables have sloped corners and one goalie, others have flat corners and three goalies. Literally there are some shots and passes that a person will spend a ton of time perfecting on one table that won't work at all on another table.

If anybody is interested to see one of the top players in the world, watch this, Tony Spredeman vs. Frederico: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DAeSaJgcdcc

My claim to fame is that I beat Tony in a tourney by stuffing one of his shots back into his goal. This is like a B-player beating Efren hill-hill by making a three-rail bank.

dld


When I was young that was my game.
MMike
 
fishing

Been going fishing every weekend. I accidentally turned my wife into a fishing monster as well.

By the looks of it, fishing tends to be more popular across North America than pool is at the moment.

I'm buying an 18' Lund Pro V this week. So there goes my retirement money.

Funny, my wife isn't chipping in on the boat. Maybe I should leave her at home or charge her by the day.

Do you think that will go over well?


photography

MMike
 
Ray, fly fishing seems to be an art form. I've been watching on UTube. Something that I would like to try my hand at too. Living on the prairies is not conducive to fly fishing but people do it and catch fish. Can't beat filleting flash frozen perch and cooking up a few on the Coleman stove on the ice.
That and a few ice cold beer makes for a great day.
Put a heater in the tent and you can fish in your tee shirt.

I got the fishing bug bad Ray.
Haven't done any since my Brother passed so its been a few years.
Its so bad that I haven't thrown my leg over either my Harleys this summer. Pretty bad eh?

I think about it but the fishing pole wins out every weekend.

If any of you would like to try your hand at ice fishing, yer welcome to come up for a visit. I'm pretty much rigged out for that one too. I have a 4 man Clam pop up ice fishing shack and an underwater camera.

Yes, you do indeed Terry. Get out there and enjoy!! Sounds like a good idea for a boat, they're bunches of money now. Back in the day, I outfitted a new '92 Toyota 4x4 truck with a small shell and carpet kit, tent on wheels, no packing it up. Also had a '84 Folbot Big Glider for high mountain lakes and some rivers, it broke down into two packs and could cary 750 lbs, extremely stable expedition canoe/kayak type... I gave it away last year. I'd love to visit sometime... so you ice-fish almost year 'round, right? :) Fishing was my sanity, now pool is.
 
Back
Top