Jump to content

  • Chat
  •  
  •  

Welcome to Formiculture.com!

This is a website for anyone interested in Myrmecology and all aspects of finding, keeping, and studying ants. The site and forum are free to use. Register now to gain access to all of our features. Once registered and logged in, you will be able to create topics, post replies to existing threads, give reputation points to your fellow members, get your own private messenger, post status updates, manage your profile and so much more. If you already have an account, login here - otherwise create an account for free today!

Photo

longest lasting hobby

hobbies

  • Please log in to reply
18 replies to this topic

#1 Online AntsGodzilla - Posted September 3 2024 - 12:16 PM

AntsGodzilla

    Advanced Member

  • Members
  • PipPipPip
  • 154 posts
  • LocationCalifornia

Other than ant keeping, what is your longest lasting hobby/interest? Mine is Godzilla, I've been a fan for 6 years.


Edited by AntsGodzilla, September 14 2024 - 1:53 PM.

I keep:

(angry) Pogonomyrmex Rugosus,
(stubborn) Myrmecocystus Deplisis
Tetramorium Immigrans
Monomorium Minimum

And many Carnivorous plants such as:

Dionea (fly trap)

Sarracenia x 'Fiona' ( American Pitcher plant)

Nepenthese ventrata (Tropical Pitcher plant

Pinguicula agnata x emarginata (Butterwort) 


#2 Online AntsTx - Posted September 3 2024 - 2:21 PM

AntsTx

    Advanced Member

  • Members
  • PipPipPip
  • 36 posts
  • LocationDallas, Texas

My hobby is keeping leopard geckos. I've always been fascinated by how they hunt and make their burrows. Although it's not my longest hobby, it's definitely my favorite one besides antkeeping. I decided to get one about a year and a half ago and I've loved the experience.

For anyone wanting another hobby besides antkeeping I recommend keeping leopard geckos.


Edited by AntsTx, September 3 2024 - 2:56 PM.

  • AntsGodzilla likes this

Currently Keeping:

Camponotus texanus x2                                             Pheidole obtusospinosa - Batch of eggs

Camponotus vicinus - 12-15 workers                         Solenopsis xyloni x7 - Freshly caught

Camponotus pennsylvanicus - 50-60 workers

Crematogaster lineolata x8 - 7-15 workers

Solenopsis krockowi - 3 workers

Solenopsis invicta - 5000-7500 workers

Formica spp. - 5 workers

Pogonomyrmex occidentalis x2 - First Workers!  :yahoo:

 


#3 Offline cooIboyJ - Posted September 3 2024 - 3:03 PM

cooIboyJ

    Advanced Member

  • Members
  • PipPipPip
  • 451 posts
  • Locationhenderson NV
Probably scootering in the skate park.
  • AntsGodzilla likes this

“You’ll survive” -wise man.
Currently keeping:
Brachymyrmex patagonicus

Solenopsis invicta

Crematogaster sp.


#4 Online GOCAMPONOTUS - Posted September 3 2024 - 5:40 PM

GOCAMPONOTUS

    Advanced Member

  • Members
  • PipPipPip
  • 860 posts
  • LocationRocklin,CA

I've been playing soccer for 6+ years and I've been keeping birds for almost 5 years


  • cooIboyJ, AntsGodzilla and antlover18 like this

Currently keeping: 2 C.vicinus colonies.2 C.sansabeanus. 1 C.leavissimus. 2 C.Ca02. 1 V.pergandei. 4 T.immigrans.1 F.pacifica. 1 C.hyatti

1 M.ergatognya

 

 

 

 

Trying to get my hands on :C.modoc,A.vercicolor, and Any Honeypots

  

 

 


#5 Online AntsGodzilla - Posted September 6 2024 - 2:16 PM

AntsGodzilla

    Advanced Member

  • Members
  • PipPipPip
  • 154 posts
  • LocationCalifornia

I've also kept carnivorous plants for 3+ years


I keep:

(angry) Pogonomyrmex Rugosus,
(stubborn) Myrmecocystus Deplisis
Tetramorium Immigrans
Monomorium Minimum

And many Carnivorous plants such as:

Dionea (fly trap)

Sarracenia x 'Fiona' ( American Pitcher plant)

Nepenthese ventrata (Tropical Pitcher plant

Pinguicula agnata x emarginata (Butterwort) 


#6 Offline Stubyvast - Posted September 6 2024 - 2:56 PM

Stubyvast

    Advanced Member

  • Members
  • PipPipPip
  • 237 posts
  • LocationBC, Canada

I've been writing books and stuff for at least 6+ years. I've also played minecraft for 9+ years...still gotta get into that redstone stuff haha


  • cooIboyJ and AntsGodzilla like this

Currently raising: 

Myrmica Rubra (1 queen +  ~5 workers)

Lasius Niger (single queen + ~90+ workers)

Lasius Neoniger (two single queen + brood)

Formica spp. (Queen [likely parasitic, needs brood])

Also keeping a friend's tetramorium immigrans for the foreseeable future. Thanks CoffeBlock!


#7 Offline rptraut - Posted September 7 2024 - 8:26 AM

rptraut

    Advanced Member

  • Members
  • PipPipPip
  • 437 posts
  • LocationOntario, Canada

*
POPULAR

Hello Everyone;

 

I've probably had more hobbies and had them longer than most of you merely because of my age.    When I was nine or ten years old, I had a book about Japan with a picture of a bonsai tree, and I was intrigued.   I tried to grow a small maple tree in an acorn and another in half a grapefruit.   Around the same time, I tried keeping ants in a makeshift ant farm that I'd made by putting a small jar inside a larger one.    I was never able to find a queen.   Both my attempts to grow bonsai trees and keep ants were dismal failures.   To be honest, sixty years ago there were no videos, websites or even books about these subjects, so information about both hobbies was almost non-existent.    About forty years ago, I was able to buy a small dwarf juniper tree that was genetically smaller than a normal juniper, and my bonsai hobby began in earnest.   As more information became available and my experience increased, I accumulated more and more trees.    I now have 25 trees, everything from maples to junipers of various ages and sizes.   

 

 

IMG_6467 - Copy.JPG

 

I still have the dwarf juniper I bought forty years ago; it's still less than a foot tall.

 

 

 

IMG_6577.JPG

 

Bonsai trees are kept small by various forms of pruning and training, but they still exhibit all the characteristics of a full-size tree.   They flower, produce fruit of normal size, and change colour in the fall if they're deciduous.   

 

 

 

IMG_6310.JPG

 

I don't pot up every tree in spring, many of them are pruned and trained as I would any other bonsai tree, but I grow them in my garden.    This way I can grow a larger number of trees without all the work of watering them every day or two like a potted tree.   

 

 

3.JPG

 

I display the potted trees on our deck, picnic table and some are displayed in the house as well.

 

Now you know why I use a photo of a bonsai tree as my thumbnail.    Keeping ants is something I've wanted to do since I was a kid, but growing bonsai trees is the hobby that I've actually done the longest.

 

If you're interested to see more about how I grow my bonsai trees, please watch this video.     

RPT


Edited by rptraut, September 9 2024 - 12:47 AM.

  • Barristan, ANTdrew, Somethinghmm and 9 others like this
My father always said I had ants in my pants.

#8 Offline ANTdrew - Posted September 7 2024 - 5:18 PM

ANTdrew

    Advanced Member

  • Moderators
  • PipPipPip
  • 9,751 posts
  • LocationAlexandria, VA
RPT, your trees are truly amazing! I’ve been training an American elm tree for eight years now. It’s looking ok now, but nothing like your trees.
  • rptraut and AntsGodzilla like this
"The ants are a people not strong, yet they prepare their meat in the summer." Prov. 30:25
Keep ordinary ants in extraordinary ways.

#9 Offline rptraut - Posted September 8 2024 - 12:38 AM

rptraut

    Advanced Member

  • Members
  • PipPipPip
  • 437 posts
  • LocationOntario, Canada

Thanks ANTdrew;

 

I grow a wide variety of bonsai trees, but I've always been a little wary of American Elm as we have big problems with Dutch Elm Disease.   About 25 years ago I bought a Korean Hornbeam, Carpinus turkzaninowii, I believe, it's very similar in looks to American Elm.   It was about 25 years old when I got it and it's one of my favourite trees, now about 50 years old.   

 

 

IMG_6670.JPG

 

This is my Korean Hornbeam after a round of spring pruning and repotting.   The foliage thickens quite a bit over summer, it takes regular pinching back and pruning to keep it this size.  The pot's homemade because I'm not willing to pay the price of very large clay bonsai pots when I have a woodworking shop where I can make "wooden pots" quite cheaply.   I unpot all my hardy trees in the fall and plant them in the garden for the winter with my other trees.   We have large windbreaks, so the trees are often covered with snow and survive the winter quite nicely.  My tropical trees, mostly figs specially selected for use as bonsai like Ficus benjamina "Toolittle", spend the winter under grow lights in the house.   

RPT

 

 


  • ANTdrew, RushmoreAnts, bmb1bee and 3 others like this
My father always said I had ants in my pants.

#10 Offline Ernteameise - Posted September 8 2024 - 1:39 AM

Ernteameise

    Advanced Member

  • Members
  • PipPipPip
  • 1,062 posts
  • LocationGermany

OMG, these bonsais are amazing!

 

Well, actually, since I have been playing with ants since I can remember, kept them in my youth and only came back to them recently, I think antkeeping IS indeed my longest hobby!


  • ANTdrew, rptraut and AntsGodzilla like this

#11 Offline mbullock42086 - Posted September 13 2024 - 5:23 PM

mbullock42086

    Advanced Member

  • Members
  • PipPipPip
  • 215 posts

 I'm an artist.  havent really drawn anything recently though, just not much motivation.

  seascorpion.png.png

  a concept of a scorpion that had become truly aquatic. 

   The pectines are now used in swimming and respiration, but still function as a chemoreception tool.

  the tarsal claws have become elongate and hook-like, to ensure a good grip on fish.

the fourth pair of legs has become laterally flattened- functioning much like the swimming legs of Predaceous diving beetles.

  The metasoma is largely the same, though carinae have broadened and flattened to function as a caudal fin.

  Swimming is tri-modal, pectines allow for hovering and slow stalking, whilst legbeats and tail flicks are used during rapid swimming.


  • ANTdrew, bmb1bee, Ernteameise and 2 others like this

#12 Offline B_rad0806 - Posted September 13 2024 - 10:14 PM

B_rad0806

    Advanced Member

  • Members
  • PipPipPip
  • 703 posts
  • LocationCalifornia

I played basketball for 9 years. I always grew up watching Kobe Bryant so I decided around 2015 in 4th grade to start playing. Played on my high school team for all 4 years and played on Varsity for 2 of those. Don't play as much now, but I'll still play at my gym every week.


  • Ernteameise and AntsGodzilla like this

Journals:

Ant Journals

Shop:

Brad's Ant Adoption

Instagram:

brad_ants

YouTube:

B_rad0806


#13 Offline Pogonomatt - Posted September 14 2024 - 6:50 AM

Pogonomatt

    Member

  • Members
  • PipPip
  • 11 posts
  • LocationUK

I’ve been keeping ants almost 40 years, but I guess botany is another hobby (30 years) - orchids and other weird exotics. Art used to be a hobby, but that’s now my job


Edited by Pogonomatt, September 14 2024 - 6:51 AM.

  • mbullock42086 and AntsGodzilla like this

Camponotus cruentatus (2022), fedtschenkoi (2022), fedtschenkoi Dark morph (2023), foreli (2022), maculatus (2022), micans (2022)

Lasius flavus

Messor barbarus Bicolour (2014), barbarus Red Head (2018), capitatus (2010), wasmanni (2014)
Pogonomyrmex badius (2024), barbatus (2024), californicus bicolor (2024), californicus concolor (2024), rugosus (2024)

#14 Offline Full_Frontal_Yeti - Posted September 14 2024 - 7:46 AM

Full_Frontal_Yeti

    Advanced Member

  • Members
  • PipPipPip
  • 342 posts

I think gaming in general has been a life long hobby.
All games. Solo/multiplayer, Co-op/PvP, video/tabletop. And almost all genres, from puzzle games, to action/FPV, real time/turn based, RPGs/sims

 

But of all gaming table top role play games have to be my number one, if not longest running of all gaming.
I got the red/blue book box set a bit too young at like 9 or 10 maybe. But I been on and off IRL or VTT RP gaming for better than 40 years now.
I may actually have enough of it going on in my life right now too with 2 games as PC and one as GM forming now.
With one of those 2 PC games being one of the best of my life as a single campaign going now for about a year and a half(which now includes a real bestie from my first RP group in jr.high).

And the only other topper to that now was my own 3 year run with a group as GM of their epic crew (some of them i still know and play with).

 

And thanks for making me think of the answer to this question. Life looks super deluxe wow for me these days i need to be extra grateful.


  • AntsGodzilla likes this

#15 Online AntsGodzilla - Posted September 14 2024 - 1:53 PM

AntsGodzilla

    Advanced Member

  • Members
  • PipPipPip
  • 154 posts
  • LocationCalifornia

I've also been a Star Wars fan for some 5 years.


Edited by AntsGodzilla, September 14 2024 - 1:53 PM.

I keep:

(angry) Pogonomyrmex Rugosus,
(stubborn) Myrmecocystus Deplisis
Tetramorium Immigrans
Monomorium Minimum

And many Carnivorous plants such as:

Dionea (fly trap)

Sarracenia x 'Fiona' ( American Pitcher plant)

Nepenthese ventrata (Tropical Pitcher plant

Pinguicula agnata x emarginata (Butterwort) 


#16 Offline cocdeshijie - Posted September 14 2024 - 8:46 PM

cocdeshijie

    Advanced Member

  • Members
  • PipPipPip
  • 544 posts
  • LocationCalifornia/Ohio

I've been alive for my whole life


  • Somethinghmm, eea, bmb1bee and 1 other like this

誰でも大好き!well.....except a few

 

cocdeshijie’s Formicarium Guides: https://cocdeshijie....cfe2df393b517f7

Ants API: https://ants-api.qwq.xyz/


#17 Offline bmb1bee - Posted September 14 2024 - 9:44 PM

bmb1bee

    Advanced Member

  • Members
  • PipPipPip
  • 899 posts
  • LocationHayward, CA

a concept of a scorpion that had become truly aquatic. 

Have you heard of eurypterids by any chance?


"Float like a butterfly sting like a bee, his eyes can't hit what the eyes can't see."
- Muhammad Ali

Check out my shop and parasitic Lasius journal! Discord user is bmb1bee if you'd like to chat.

Also check out my YouTube channel: @bmb1bee


#18 Offline bmb1bee - Posted September 14 2024 - 9:47 PM

bmb1bee

    Advanced Member

  • Members
  • PipPipPip
  • 899 posts
  • LocationHayward, CA

If you're interested to see more about how I grow my bonsai trees, please watch this video.

I must say, growing bonsai trees is truly an underrated hobby. Thanks for sharing and please keep up the great work, those maples look great!


  • rptraut and cooIboyJ like this

"Float like a butterfly sting like a bee, his eyes can't hit what the eyes can't see."
- Muhammad Ali

Check out my shop and parasitic Lasius journal! Discord user is bmb1bee if you'd like to chat.

Also check out my YouTube channel: @bmb1bee


#19 Offline cooIboyJ - Posted Yesterday, 11:43 AM

cooIboyJ

    Advanced Member

  • Members
  • PipPipPip
  • 451 posts
  • Locationhenderson NV

 

If you're interested to see more about how I grow my bonsai trees, please watch this video.

I must say, growing bonsai trees is truly an underrated hobby. Thanks for sharing and please keep up the great work, those maples look great!

 

I'm thinking about trying to grow some bonsai trees. :lol:


  • rptraut and AntsGodzilla like this

“You’ll survive” -wise man.
Currently keeping:
Brachymyrmex patagonicus

Solenopsis invicta

Crematogaster sp.






Also tagged with one or more of these keywords: hobbies

0 user(s) are reading this topic

0 members, 0 guests, 0 anonymous users