Geeky hobbies outside the geek-sphere

Hmmm...Seashells

1) The study of Mollusks- the critters who make most seashells- is called Malacology.

2) The color known as Royal Purple was originally created by crushing the flesh of a certain few species of Murex snails.

3) Some Mollusks- especially those of the Conus family- have a poison so powerful that it can kill humans. They use this neurotoxin primarily for hunting fish. So be careful when handling seashells on the beach. (AFAIK, no bivalves- the ones with 2 shells, like clams, oysters or scallops- are poisonous.)

4) Almost any mollusk can produce a pearl, not just oysters. Essentially, a pearl is a defense response to parasites or grit lodged between the mollusk and its shell.

5) Scallop shells were used as badges by some Crusaders

Jewelry Design

1) The best deal in jewelry is in estate sales, the second best is in custom work...along as you're dealing with a reputable jeweler or doing it yourself long term.

2) You HAVE to educate yourself. There are all kinds of manmade and treated stones- going back centuries- and some of those are legit practices and some are shady. For example, most aquamarines are heat treated to achieve that bright pale blue- in their natural state, they are sea foam green. Hence the name.

3) in addition, there are lots of stones that look like other stones, and over the course of human history have been misidentified- deliberately or by simple mistake. Classic example: the Black Prince's Ruby is actually a spinel.

4) Zircons and Cubic Zirconia are 2 different things. Zircons are a natural and beautiful stone that comes in a wide variety of colors, including a diamondlike colorless white. CZ, OTOH, is a man-made stone created specifically to mimic diamonds.

5) Some stones change color. Amethyst, for instance, can permanently fade over time due to sun exposure. Other stones, like alexandrite, appear to change color depending on what kind of light source you have them under.

6) Some diamonds are fluorescent.
 
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Over the last year or so, I've been collecting and reading Star Trek novels. (Not exactly the most exciting hobby).

Mostly stuff I found at book fairs, thrift shops, library cutouts, etc ... for around 50 cents to a dollar a pop. (Sometimes as low as 10 cents a pop or even free).

So far I've picked up almost all of the novels published before 1999, in the various Star Trek franchise series. Novels published after 2001, seem to be harder to come across at book fairs, thrift shops, etc ...

Many of these Star Trek novels seem to be the sci-fi equivalent of "junk food for the mind".


Other non-geek hobbies is playing guitar, and collecting dvds of tv shows and movies. Kinda amusing watching old tv shows from the 1970's, 1980's, and 1990's, I use to watch back in the day.


These hobbies have more or less replaced my previous hobby of buying rpg books every month (such as Pathfinder, 4E D&D, Mongoose Runequest 2, etc ...), which I discontinued more than a year ago.
 

I play with polymer clay. I make jewelry, and do small sculptures. I keep trying to convince myself to do a room box, of a wizard's laboratory, or dragon's lair or something. Maybe I will, someday.

Polymer clay isn't geeky in and of itself (it's a PVC material very similar to plasticine, which gets hard when baked or cured at about 275 degrees F). But the fun is in the making of props for my game, etc... and I'm learning to do wirework, torching silver, etc...

And of course, collecting all the possible tools to use with it - rubber stamps, molds, foils, chalks, paints, waxes, crystals, beads, glass cabochons, wire, wirework and jewelers tools, etc.... is SO MUCH fun!
 

My kids and I play Heroclix.

If you know of it, you know it is geeky. "Comic book characters as miniatures that are made to play battle chess" is the best way I can put it.
 

I think the canonical hobbies of this type would be stamp collecting and coin collecting.

They're possibly outside the geek nexus because they are much older.
 




I used to use a lot of art programs- Superpaint, Aldus, Corel...but all of them became obsolete with my last computer upgrade, and I've been spending my money on CD's, guitars, precious metals & gemstones. So I haven't been able to afford to replace them.
 


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