What is your favorite hobby for connecting with nature and why?
Mine probably has to be mountain biking. I just love riding through the forest, sometimes catching some air time and swallowing the occasional fly whilst going downhill at 30km/h.
My personal favorite is backpacking. It's pretty common but I like the simplicity of just walking out into the wilderness and being so exposed to the elements.
Possibly frowned upon by some but going fishing. Really feel in nature and I only keep what I know I will eat. Feels great to be out in nature and catch your own food.
I'm also a fan of fishing. It is a good mix of being relaxed but also attentive to the water and nature. I do catch and release, but some people also get the benefit of taking home some pretty cool fish
As long as you're respectful and sustainable, I'd say it's totally cool. I also went fishing a couple times and it was pretty fun. The biggest thing I caught was another fishing rod however...
I'm a bird watcher. I go birding every week. I built many sub-hobbies around it: photography, birdsong recording, blogging, cross stitching, and more. I find that when I'm out in nature, I can truly disconnect from my regular life stress and just be present in the moment.
I took this further by training and becoming a Master Naturalist though my local region's chapter. This opened the door to a great community, learning, and volunteer work.
I love birding. What I think is most beautiful about it is that, (for me at least) it takes a goal-oriented activity of hiking, and turns it into pure discovery.
My approach to hiking was something like "well let's go around 5 miles". Then, I would find a hike about that long, go to the end, then turn around and walk back. This kind of approach is such an anemic way to enjoy nature. It's something to conquer and then I go home when I've finished.
With birding, I do essentially the exact same activity, but I have thousands of excuses to just stop and appreciate the world around me. I know many people enjoy hiking in this way, but for me it was about the destination. Birding has transformed the way I go outside.
Besides this, I think the meditative nature of birding has made me more grateful in all aspects of my life.
Photography. I like birds, amphibians, and insects. I upload with location data to iNaturalist, which crowd-sources biodiversity. To that end, I will go to several different sites in my area at different times of the year so that I can contribute a variety of species at a variety of locations.
If you're well-versed in identification, you can confirm species identification on the app too. I'm familiar with the calls of all the frogs in my area and will help identify frogs in recordings.
My personal way is to actively restore it. Australia, for example, is a highly degraded and fragile country and there aren't enough people getting out there and doing anything that has a measurable effect on the state of it. There are far more people actively ruining it.
To me, looking at it is not enough, we have to repair it. Looking back after a few years at the habitat you've created or the degradation you have reversed is true connectedness. You can say "I did that" and be proud of the change you've made.
"A society grows great when old people plant trees in whose shade they know they shall never sit” - slightly paraphrased.
How do you organize and find the time to do it? Did you join a group that already existed, or perhaps just go out with some friends? If you don't mind me asking.
I quit my job and moved out into a rural area to put my money where my mouth is and actually try and restore something. I got another job doing "Landcare" or paid rewilding which is mostly chemical weed control. I set up a nursery to propagate and grow native plants (some fruits trees etc) and then I just plan some sites (or slap trees/plants into areas that are lacking), look after them a while and then repeat. I've got 20 years horticultural experience in a number of related industries so doing the actual work is just second nature.
The last planting I've just completed is a riparian zone next to a creek, 3000 plants or so. All by myself, from seed to pot to ground.
The hardest part is just committing to it each year, dependent on rainfall. Last 3 years we had La Nina so it was a lot of rainfall which made me work twice as hard (6500 plants total). El Nino will be depressing watching everything wilt (maybe burn) which will means I'll reduce size of nursery and do other things. I do run a little charity thing disseminating Vetiver Grass (I posted a link to it as one of the first things I did here), getting people out and showing them how it's done and then sending them off with some plants for a few bucks, far less than what the industry charges hence the "charity". Sets people up so they can start attacking their worst problems.
How do I find the time? Just an hour here or there. Larger plantings might be a few hours in arvo when it cools down. As last project wound up, one hour or two adding grasses/sedges each weekend really pumps the numbers up. I think I planted 80 plants every weekend for months when the weather was good. Takes about an hour to 1.5 depending on how much weeding to do. Maintenance is handled with a bit of work but better design and understanding on how weeds work helps mitigate the amount of effort.
Here are some pics with some thoughts, I'd add photos here but it keeps erroring out with json errors:
Is walking a hobby, ha ha! A walk around the neighborhood enjoying the trees and birds always makes me feel better. Walking around the nature preserve close to me is also super peaceful and relaxing. I also like feeding the birds in my yard- watching their behavior is fascinating and entertaining!
Walking and just being among trees and nature is definitely a hobby! The more you do it the more you become familiar with what is around you. Your eyes open and you begin to notice and appreciate the diversity of all kinds of wildlife. Check out the Seek app or Merlin to learn more about what you're seeing. Love both of those apps!
Floating in the kayak on flat, clear water, under the trees, gazing at the little fish and salamanders darting through the reeds and lilies, sigh. Dragonflies make me giggle. Fast is fun too.
Honestly, if I could do anything as a career, it would probably be this. It sounds super interesting and relaxing, especially when visiting other countries and seeing their wildlife.
geocaching, for the physical exercise -- some are genuine hikes, exploration of varying nature settings such as trails, forests, parks, seawalls, one can introduce others to the hobby, and the capital outlay need not be costly.
I like to go camping during the summers. I get about as far away as I can from other people. Its really nice to be able to just walk around, observe the birds and lizards and bugs. The stars at night. I would love to be able to have a cabin and live out in the woods, but if everyone acted on that instinct there would be no nature left. Just suburb after suburb.
Yeah, camping is a really fun and unique experience that I would also enjoy doing again. But compared to the US and Canada, Germany's camping grounds seriously suck. It really is almost like a mini suburb but with tents and RV's instead.
Is that right? I had no idea. Hermann Hesse made it seem like you just grab a crusty piece of bread and a bottle of wine and walk out into the Black Forest. What a bummer! Does Germany have Right to Roam?