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So what exactly is everyone up to in their non-boating hours?

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In addition to my responsibility of posting inane comments on public forums I also dig bicycles in a pretty big way. I currently own 4, and I ride throughout the year with bikes focused on specific tasks. Like the canoe quiver, we sometimes find that odd project that compels us to bring it home. We don't "need" it for tripping, but we must have it. This partially explains why a 55 year old Schwinn Super Sport was loaded into my truck for an hour and half ride home.

This was the second best spec - the Paramount ruled the roost - and represented a domestic product that was right on par with the best from Europe and Asia. They succeeded. The SS would be a pricey bike, but still less then the Paramount. But in an effort to ramp up production they brought it back to the states where the fillet-brazing had to be done BY HAND. The competition probably laughed and laughed, and as the bike gained weight by the addition of high end parts, the Le Tour, made overseas was ramped up and sales gobbled up Super Sport sales to the point where it didn't make sense to produce the venerable SS.

So, a red-headed step-child of a bike. But it came with a Brooks saddle and a Pletscher rear rack, a ONE PIECE chrome crank that must weigh 97 pounds. I always wanted a Paramount but good examples with the spec I wanted cost a bit, and it would be hard to justify dumping 2 grand into a bike that I probably wouldn't ride that much. But this bike came home for only $150. It's in the shop now getting every square inch examined. Everything is intact except for a bracket and a couple of screws. The rack angles skyward at an odd angle. New period correct tan-walled 1 1/4" tires, tubes, bar tape and the clean/refurb/replace everything else.

As I cleaned it up I was smiling. Resto back to stock? Doubt it - nobody wanted it in 1970 and if I tart one up people would just keep walking. So, British Racing Green, chrome forks, and medium tan saddle, bar tape and tool kit will round it out.

New canoe day is every bit exciting as Christmas when I was a kid. New bike day is the same.

It got me to thinking, what other serious hobbies do you guys pursue with the same vim and vigor as canoeing?
 

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I played guitar four hours a day for twenty years, until my wrists gave out. Fly fishing, primitive skills and bushcraft got a decade out of me. Building furniture and fancy cabinets probably has another decade of good work to go.
Now its deer. Firearm culture, especially pistol culture, has gotten way too toxic, so I've shelved all my guns and shot nothing but recurve for six years. I've never enjoyed woods time more. I've always been a proponent of hunting close, but hitting them at 40 or even 30 yards now seems unsportsmanlike.
I have often wondered why restoring things doesn't really bring me any joy.
 
Because of my bad legs it's hard to walk very far or stand very long, so I had to give up hutting and fly fishing. So, since I retired from my cabinet shop, to fill in the time I like to sit, and wood carve. Here's a few projects I made and gave away to family.

Carved Swag 38" long by 18" high




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Fireplace and Mirrow I did for my den

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I was a bike guy in my 20's, racing and touring. When Cannondale came out with the oversize tube aluminium bike, I took part of my student loan and bought one. It was pretty advanced for the time, now it sits in my son's garage, probably worth almost nothing.

My interests have always bordered on fanatical, or at least full emersion. Canoes and canoe tripping took hold in my 30's, and up until a few years ago, reigned supreme. I find myself falling back into more of an advisory roll with canoeing now, helping out with the school club with route selection and such not, but health has limited my tripping abilities.

My main vice right now is partridge hunting, which will begin on Monday. For about two months, I will walk five to six miles every morning, taking a variety of guns for a stroll, and filling my freezer. There are some cursory moose hunting trips thrown in there to keep my moose hunting wife happy, but bird hunting is my favourite. I live in anticipation of this time all year, and fortunately I am only working afternoons this year. A 15 minute drive puts me in the midst of some of the best grouse hunting in the world.

The gun in the pic is my new favourite, it's not very traditional, but it's two pounds of fun. It's a Rossi Tuffy Turkey gun, with the extra full turkey choke. I have it in 410 and 20 gauge, each gun has a red dot on it. The year before I used an O/U 28 gauge, but I found the comb was too high for me.
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I'm thinking about getting back into video editing, I was always a Mac guy, but quit using them when they came out with Final Cut X, a complete departure from their previous editing platform. I've got a new Mac laptop coming in next week, and I might give Final Cut another go.
Next summer, I'm hoping to get back into fishing and freighter canoe camping, plus hoping to do a real canoe trip, if the health continues to improve.
Our band is playing a gig at the local bar on Halloween, those are a lot of fun too, I'm not much of a musician, my son and my wife kind of hold that area down, but I'm the sound guy and the money provider for new gear. Lots going on, probably too much at the moment, but the deep freeze is coming, things will settle down in the winter.
 
Wood canvas canoes, both tripping and restoring are my Maine love now, been that way for as long as I can remember.
My other interest has been old Chevy trucks, I have owned many over the years. I thought it was over when I sold my old 72 3/4 ton long bed. I sold my Tacoma at the same time and bought a new 2023 Chevy truck, but I still had the itch so I bought my current 1983 Chevy truck, which rides so nice I sold the 23 Chevy.
My 72 Chevy 4x4, 350, 4 speed, 3/4 ton, my son who is a plumber, painted it, I did everything else, from the frame up.IMG_1883_Original.jpeg

My new Chevy that I sold with my old 83 daily driver (except winter).
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I'm a slacker in comparison to you all. I'm also a "dabbler" in most things as I enjoy learning how something works; bagpipes anyone??? Although retired, I work at the Fenimore Farm & Country Village (formerly the Farmers' Museum in Cooperstown, NY) so spend a lot of my time sitting on the tavern porch, playing banjo and carving spoons. I also work with a lean-to adoption program with the NY-NJ Trail Conference in the Catskills, Add in all my 18th century living history outings and I've still got a full plate. It's been difficult finding time to paddle this year so I'm also making sure I put time aside for that; which is why my wife and I are headed to the Adirondacks in a couple of weeks for a few days. All and all, I stay busy doing a variety of things. In the past, I'd have been called a utility infielder. Now, I'm just a jack of all trades, master of none.

That's all for now. Take care and until next time...be well.

snapper

PS - Need to get back to fishing more too!
 
Right now I'm "enjoying" a week off from "work." That is to say, I'm running around the house trying to kick the punch list's butt before hunting season and winter.

Otherwise, my hobbies are wildly varied: sewing my own gear (camping, tool bags/rolls, etc); reloading for rifle; the occasional wood-working project; dog training (retriever and pointer); hunting (woodcock, grouse, deer, coyote); tinkering with technology (python-based weewx weather station, piHole, custom streamer box). There's more but listing them all makes me a little self-conscious.

EDIT: BTW KO, my grandfather was an engineer at Raleigh bicycles in Nottingham before moving to Canada and joining CCM. He is the inventor of a patented "machine for tensioning wire-spoked wheels".
 
The kids and family activities take up the majority of my free time, but I enjoy fishing, hunting, woodworking, car/truck/motorcycle restoration, and using old tractors even though new ones are more reliable. There has often been a cloud of obscenities hovering over my snow filled driveway while I’m filing points or cleaning carburetors with frozen hands…
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Bob
 
I'm always in and out of hobbies.

I enjoy birdwatching but haven't been serious about it for quite a few years. But this year I gave myself the goal of seeing as many species as I can in a roughly 6 mile radius around my house. I live in the middle of a complex of small lakes, wetlands, woods, and prairies that is pretty unique for the middle of the midwest. It's where I spend 95% of my outdoor time and this 'project' has helped me get out more and explore different areas I don't use as much. I'm sitting on 195 species so far. I'd love to get to 200 but those last 5 are going to be tough.

I've been trying to get into better shape in the last few years. I set up a nice gym in my garage that's a good way to spend some cold, dark, winter hours. I also do jiu jitsu during the short and cold months.

In the summer I've taken up bike riding. Riding is fun and I'm also enjoying working on them. I've bought a couple bare frames and built them up from components scavenged from my other bikes. A few weeks ago I bought a drop bar peddle assist e-bike and I'm loving it so far. Despite being an e-bike it looks and feels like a drop bar road/gravel bike. I don't have great flexibility so I often get uncomfortable on longer rides so I set this one up with short reach and tall bars with 45mm tires for gravel. I'm very comfortable on the bike and 90% of the time I ride it on the lowest assist, which basically offsets the extra weight and poor aerodynamics so I can still go the same speed as my road bike with the same output. Being able to add more assist makes me more likely to use the bike for utilitarian needs (taking it to town or combining bike riding with hiking/birdwatching).

I have about 5 acres of land on the edge of town where I like hanging out. I'm slowly converting much of it to native prairie, which is a lot of work. I also have seemingly no end of other warm weather projects to work on there and at home.

I have a great woodshop next to my house but I got a bit burned out on woodworking a few years back and haven't done anything with it lately. Maybe this winter.....

Alan
 
the Le Tour, made overseas was ramped up and sales gobbled up Super Sport sales

Ah, the Le Tour. Fond memories of that bike. It's theft was the end of my pedaling days for quite a long time though.

I took up riding regularly again a few years ago - and yeah, three very different bikes. I'll surely add another at some point.

I just recently sold the sailboat. When the snow flies, I ski the back country. I do a little backpacking and day hiking. I am a part time woodworker. Beekeeping and gardening take up some of my summer time.

And yet, I have been in canoes more this year than ever before.
 
I've got eight bikes, but used to have a lot more. And I've got six revolvers, which take up much less space. My latest is a stainless single action 357 that I got as a retirement present for myself. And I might be looking at yet another bike in the next few days, assuming it doesn't sell.

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