Outdoors & Nature
Hiking, paddling, fishing, birding, gardening, houseplants — hobbies where the difference between a great first day and a miserable one is often two pieces of gear and one piece of knowledge. These beginner guides cover both: what to buy, what's safe to skip your first season, and the rookie mistakes that cost the most.
36 guides in this family
Spearfishing
Spearfishing is hunting underwater — free-diving on a single breath, finding fish in the reef, and coming home with dinner. It's physically demanding, genuinely technical, and one of the most rewarding ways to be in the ocean. Here's what the $400–500 starter kit actually looks like, and what to skip until you're sure you're hooked.
Read the Spearfishing guide →Photo by Chinh Le Duc on Unsplash
Ice Fishing
Ice fishing is a completely different sport from open-water fishing — you need an auger, a shelter, and a flasher just to get started. But the first time you pull a walleye or crappie up through a ten-inch hole in frozen lake ice, you'll understand why this hobby has a fanatical following across the north. Here's exactly what you need.
Read the Ice Fishing guide →Photo by Matthew Fassnacht on Unsplash
Pond Keeping
A garden pond transforms a backyard — and it's more achievable than most people think. The planning matters more than the engineering. Here's what you actually need to get fish swimming within a season.
Read the Pond Keeping guide →Photo by Elena Golubeva on Unsplash
Whitewater Kayaking
Whitewater kayaking is the one outdoor sport where the gear literally keeps you alive — and the most addictive thing you'll ever do on a river. Start on a Class II with the right boat and safety kit and you'll be hooked by noon. Here's exactly what to buy first, and what to wait on until you're ready for bigger water.
Read the Whitewater Kayaking guide →Photo by Michael Gluzman on Unsplash
Wakeboarding
Wakeboarding has one of the most satisfying progressions in water sports: you'll struggle to stand up on day one, and you'll feel like you're flying by day three. The gear list is shorter than you think — board, bindings, handle, life jacket. And cable parks mean you don't even need a boat to get started.
Read the Wakeboarding guide →Photo by Steven Welch on Unsplash
Wing Foiling
Wing foiling is the fastest-growing water sport on the planet — equal parts kiteboarding, surfing, and pure aviation. The bad news: it's expensive and the learning curve is real. The good news: dedicated beginners can go from barely standing on a board to flying above the water in one season. Here's exactly what to buy first — and what to skip.
Read the Wing Foiling guide →Photo by Alexandros Giannakakis on Unsplash
Sailing
Sailing is one of those skills you don't learn from gear — you learn it from water time, under instruction. But once you've got your first lesson under your belt, the gear question opens up fast: life jacket, foul-weather gear, gloves, shoes. Here's what to buy, what to wait on, and why you don't need to own a boat to fall in love with this sport.
Read the Sailing guide →Photo by Daniel Stenholm on Unsplash
Overlanding
YouTube overlanding is $80,000 trucks and months-long expeditions. Real overlanding is a stock SUV, a few pieces of recovery gear, and a camping setup that fits in your trunk. Most beginners spend $800–1,500 on a first kit and have genuine adventure before they ever bolt on a lift kit.
Read the Overlanding guide →Photo by Chris Cordes on Unsplash
Freediving
Freediving is breath-hold diving at its purest: no tank, no regulator — just you and the water. Done right, it's meditative, surprisingly achievable, and one of the few water sports where better technique matters more than bigger lungs. Take a course before you dive deep. Then buy the right gear, and the ocean gets a lot more interesting.
Read the Freediving guide →Photo by Jeremy Bishop on Unsplash
Bird Photography
Bird photography turns a walk in the park into a hunt. Your quarry moves fast, spooks easily, and never waits. The telephoto lens that makes the shots possible costs real money — and the gimbal head, monopod, and autofocus system all matter more here than in any other genre. Here's what to buy first, and what to hold off on until you know what you're doing.
Read the Bird Photography guide →Photo by Diana Parkhouse on Unsplash
Astrophotography
Astrophotography is photography at its most extreme — camera pointed at the sky, sensor collecting light for minutes at a time. The reward is your own images of the Milky Way, nebulae, and star clusters invisible to the naked eye. The bad news: the learning curve is real and the gear matters. Here's exactly what you need for your first night out — and what you don't.
Read the Astrophotography guide →Photo by Jim DeLillo on Unsplash
Snorkeling
Snorkeling has one of the lowest barriers of any outdoor activity. If you can float, you can do it. The gear list is genuinely short — but a bad mask will ruin an entire vacation. Here's exactly what to buy, what to skip, and why the mask is the decision that actually matters.
Read the Snorkeling guide →Photo by Bernd 📷 Dittrich on Unsplash
Foraging
Wild food is everywhere — in city parks, along trails, at the edges of backyards. The barrier to entry is almost nothing: a field guide, a basket, and a commitment to going slow. The catch? Don't pick anything you can't identify with 100% certainty — that's the first rule, the last rule, and the only one that counts. Here's what you actually need to start.
Read the Foraging guide →Photo by Anita Austvika on Unsplash
Hydroponics
Growing plants without soil sounds like science fiction until you see a tomato plant with roots dangling in nutrient-rich water and zero pests in sight. Hydroponics is surprisingly beginner-friendly — once you pick the right system. Here's what you actually need to start, what to skip, and why that first decision matters more than anything you'll buy after it.
Read the Hydroponics guide →Photo by Ona Creative on Unsplash
Bonsai
Bonsai looks intimidating from the outside — centuries of Japanese tradition, tiny trees that seem to require magic to keep alive. But the actual start is simpler than you think: one tree, a handful of tools, and a willingness to learn by doing. Here's what you actually need.
Read the Bonsai guide →Photo by Erik Mclean on Unsplash
Freshwater Aquarium
Fishkeeping has a steep learning curve disguised as an easy hobby. The good news: once you understand the nitrogen cycle and pick the right tank size, the rest falls into place. This guide cuts through the beginner confusion — tank, filter, heater, lighting, and water care — so your first tank thrives instead of cycling through dead fish.
Read the Freshwater Aquarium guide →Photo by Elist Nguyen on Unsplash
Beekeeping
Beekeeping is one of the most rewarding hobbies you can take on in a backyard — and one of the most gear-confusing to start. You don't need most of what the catalogs push. Here's what actually matters for your first hive.
Read the Beekeeping guide →Photo by Vitaly Gariev on Unsplash
Bass Fishing
Bass fishing is America's most popular freshwater sport — and the gear aisle is where most beginners get lost. Spinning vs. baitcasting, mono vs. fluorocarbon, crankbaits vs. soft plastics: it's a lot. Here's what to buy first, what actually catches fish on day one, and what can wait until you're hooked.
Read the Bass Fishing guide →Photo by Annie Lang on Unsplash
Kiteboarding
You've passed your IKO lessons. You've body-dragged, relaunched a downed kite, and triggered the quick-release. Now you're ready to buy your own kit. Here's the honest gear roadmap — what to invest in, what to buy used, and the one corner you should never cut.
Read the Kiteboarding guide →Photo by Mark mc neill on Unsplash
Mushroom Growing
Mushroom growing hits a sweet spot almost no hobby does: your first harvest can arrive in under two weeks, requires almost no equipment, and tastes like something you actually grew. Start with a pre-inoculated kit — just mist and wait. Get hooked, and the path leads to grain spawn, pressure cookers, and cultures living in your fridge. Here's how to buy in smart.
Read the Mushroom Growing guide →Photo by Niklas Sagrén on Unsplash
Surfing
Surfing has a higher learning tax than almost any hobby — the ocean is unforgiving, and the wrong board sets you back months. But the beginner path is well-worn. Get a big foam board, commit to the pop-up, and you'll be riding real waves within a month. Here's what you need — and what almost every beginner buys way too soon.
Read the Surfing guide →Photo by hayleigh b on Unsplash
Stargazing
Here's the one thing everyone gets wrong on day one: they buy a telescope before they understand the sky. Binoculars are the right starting move — you'll use them forever, you'll actually see things, and they cost a third of the scope you were eyeing. Here's how to start smart.
Read the Stargazing guide →Photo by Josh Behunin on Unsplash
Houseplants
The secret about houseplants: most of them don't want that much from you. The ones that die on beginners almost always die from overwatering, bad soil, or the wrong light — not neglect. Here's what to buy first and the three things that actually matter to a plant.
Read the Houseplants guide →Photo by Vitaly Gariev on Unsplash
Fly Fishing
Fly fishing has a reputation for being maddeningly complicated. Some of that is earned — the casting mechanics alone take a few sessions to feel right. But the gear decisions are simpler than the internet makes them look. Here's exactly what you need to start, and what can wait.
Read the Fly Fishing guide →Photo by chris robert on Unsplash
Bird Watching
Bird watching has the most lopsided gear-to-enjoyment ratio of almost any outdoor hobby. You need one good pair of binoculars, a field guide, and somewhere to walk. Everything else comes later — and the 'everything else' people will tell you to buy first is mostly unnecessary. Here's what actually matters.
Read the Bird Watching guide →Photo by Jordan Spalding on Unsplash
Camping
Camping is the rare hobby where going in underprepared and overdressed both create problems. The good news: you can have a genuinely comfortable first trip for under $300, and half the gear you already own. Here's exactly what to buy, what to borrow, and what to ignore for now.
Read the Camping guide →Photo by Mattias Helge on Unsplash
Day Hiking
Day hiking is the most accessible outdoor pursuit there is — no overnight gear, no permit lottery, no technical skills required on most trails. The barrier is almost entirely in buying the right first kit and knowing where to go. Both are easy to solve. Here's what you actually need.
Read the Day Hiking guide →Photo by Marek Piwnicki on Unsplash
Vegetable Gardening
Vegetable gardening is easy to overspend on and easy to fail at in ways that have nothing to do with skill. Here's what actually matters: starting small, getting your soil right, and picking crops that want to grow.
Read the Vegetable Gardening guide →Photo by Markus Spiske on Unsplash
Outdoors & Nature glossary
Words from the trail, the river, the garden, and the field guide. Knowing a few makes the experience itself sharper.
- Cast Fishing
- Throwing a lure or fly with a rod. Technique beats strength — a well-cast 30-foot line lands better than a brute-forced 60-foot one.
- Catch and release Fishing
- Returning fish to the water alive. Use barbless hooks, wet hands, and don't keep them out of water more than a few seconds. Practice keeps fisheries healthy.
- Dead drift Fishing
- Letting a fly float naturally with the current, no tension on the line. The hardest skill in fly fishing and the one that catches the most fish.
- Eddy Paddling
- A calm pocket of water behind an obstacle, where the current reverses. Resting spots in a river — and the only way to control your descent in whitewater.
- GPS waypoint Hiking
- A marked coordinate on a GPS device or app — a trailhead, a junction, a campsite. Drop them liberally; deletes are free, getting lost isn't.
- Hardiness zone Gardening
- USDA-defined climate band based on average minimum winter temperature. Plant labels list compatible zones — "hardy to zone 6" means it survives down to about −10°F.
- Layering Hiking
- Wearing a base layer (wicks sweat), insulating layer (traps heat), and shell layer (blocks wind/rain), so you can adjust to changing conditions. Cotton kills; wear wool or synthetic.
- Leave No Trace Hiking
- Seven principles for backcountry ethics: plan ahead, travel on durable surfaces, dispose of waste properly, leave what you find, minimize campfires, respect wildlife, be considerate. Pack out the orange peel.
- Lifer Birding
- A species you've seen for the first time, added to your "life list." The dopamine hit that drives the entire hobby.
- Pelagic Birding
- Birds of the open ocean — albatrosses, shearwaters, petrels. Rarely seen from shore, which is why "pelagic trips" exist.
- Pollinator plant Gardening
- Flowering plants that attract bees, butterflies, hummingbirds. Native species support local pollinators best; ornamental hybrids often produce no pollen at all.
- Skin (a kayak) Paddling
- The spray skirt sealing you into the cockpit. Keeps water out in waves and helps you roll back up if you flip. Practice wet-exiting in calm water first.
- Switchback Hiking
- A zigzag trail up a steep slope, making the grade walkable. Cutting them — going straight up or down — erodes the trail. Stay on the path.
- Trail mix (GORP) Hiking
- Good Old Raisins and Peanuts. Calorie-dense, shelf-stable hiking food. Customize with M&Ms and you've reinvented every brand on the market.