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3 votes
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The National Museum of Denmark is paying tribute not to professional archaeologists, but to amateurs with metal detectors
3 votes -
The Lincoln Highway: Across America on the first transcontinental motor route
6 votes -
Pro luthier guesses guitar values blindfolded
5 votes -
Chainsaw Man! I made a custom Denji doll
1 vote -
I got some cool drone footage along Lake Superior on a cold winter day
5 votes -
Battle 4 America Episode 1 | Jet Lag: The Game
6 votes -
The rise of my new pet mantis
6 votes -
What is your opinion of snuff tobacco?
I must preface by saying that no form of tobacco is safe for consumption, and no reasonable person should use tobacco for any reason other than maybe in religious ceremonies. I just happen to be...
I must preface by saying that no form of tobacco is safe for consumption, and no reasonable person should use tobacco for any reason other than maybe in religious ceremonies. I just happen to be an unreasonable person.
I took a bunch of my stuff that was stored in my mother's house this week, among them some snuff tobacco in a good state of conservation. I like the smell and the ritual. I went by a tobacco shop and bought two additional tiny containers of snuff -- mint, and cinnamon. It was very cheap. I enjoy using it throughout the day.
A lot of people snort it like cocaine, but that is not the way to do it. You should simply press your thumb into the snuff (which will get some of it on the thumb), block one nostril with said thumb, and then gently breathe with the other nostril. It has a high that is similar to smoking, but milder and more gradual. I find it very pleasant.
You shouldn't ever use tobacco. But, if you have used snuff tobacco, I would like to know how was your experience.
10 votes -
Making a Christmas tree Bonsai
4 votes -
Huge 36" snowfall at Whistler made it almost impossible to snowboard some sections, glad I had my camera with me!
4 votes -
I built a wildlife pond - here's what happened
4 votes -
Valtteri Hirvonen reveals how he turned his lens to the night sky and bent the rules of astrophotography to create beautiful, yet unique photos
3 votes -
Is anyone here in or familiar with NYC? Going on a trip and have zero idea what to do as a non-tourist...
I'm spending 5 days in NYC starting next week. While I've traveled plenty, it's almost always been alone, frequently short term (2-3 days including flights in and out), and work related so I had...
I'm spending 5 days in NYC starting next week. While I've traveled plenty, it's almost always been alone, frequently short term (2-3 days including flights in and out), and work related so I had people to either ask for suggestions or just went out on my own. If the trip didn't fit into the above categories it was typically to somewhere I'm relatively familiar with or had a lot of lead time to prepare my trip.
That is not the case right now. I've never had any interest in NYC so I don't have a list of places I'd like to experience in my head, I don't have a ton of time to research a plan and filter out all the "top 10 things to do in NYC" websites, I'll be with my wife so going off wandering on my own isn't an option, and this will be the first trip where I don't have a rental car to just go get lost in and see where my randomness takes me. I'm also not the tourist type so there's no interest in "the tree" or Times Square, etc.
So I beseech you fellow Tilderinos, as someone that doesn't care about being a tourist, doesn't have a social media presence to feed I'm-here-and-you're-not selfies to, and needs actual destinations to go to due to a lack of independent mobility, what should someone with pretty much 72 hours of completely free time in NYC actually do?
16 votes -
Two-Face, Batman Forever - Sculpture timelapse
3 votes -
A wild Juniper tree (Yamadori) becomes a Bonsai
8 votes -
Tom Scott chases the Jet Lag team around London
5 votes -
Kratos, God of War - Sculpture timelapse
4 votes -
Running Lego engines with air
4 votes -
We played tag across Europe | Jet Lag: The Game
5 votes -
I went on TV and gave away presents made from junk wood
3 votes -
Some gorgeous top-roping on the North Shore of Superior
7 votes -
Going underground: Bunker and tunnel
3 votes -
One year alone restoring an abandoned smallholding
2 votes -
Why I will never buy katana from websites overseas
4 votes -
Welcome To My Garden: A not-for-profit network of citizens offering free camping spots in their gardens to slow travelers. Appears to be primarily western Europe.
11 votes -
Building a Toy Story rocket car
5 votes -
One year ago I built an ecosystem, this happened
5 votes -
Repainting cheap Star Wars halloween masks
2 votes -
How much helium does it take to lift a person?
4 votes -
What do you collect?
Collections can be made of anything. Some items have no purpose other than being part of the collection itself, something to look at and feel warm inside, while others are more functional or...
Collections can be made of anything. Some items have no purpose other than being part of the collection itself, something to look at and feel warm inside, while others are more functional or enjoyable by themselves.
Some collectors are moved by a desire for completion, some by nostalgia, or historical preservation. There are also those who accumulate objects which they believe will grow in value.
People collect books, movies, posters, magazines, rocks, cars, tools, swords, sand, tshirts, game cartridges, music CDs, videogame consoles, dolls, action figures, computers, letters, stamps, coins, digital files of all kinds, and knives. Anything that you cherish having in great numbers can be a collection.
So what do you collect, and why?
16 votes -
I attempted to dribble a football across Britain in under 24 hours [Part 1 of 2]
5 votes -
Flax to linen: From sowing to sewing
3 votes -
Full log cabin build - Townsends Wilderness Homestead
4 votes -
Kayaking the sickest urban river in Australia
5 votes -
I tried tightrope walking, and it was terrifying
12 votes -
Smelting iron from iron-oxidizing bacteria and then casting it in a mold to form a rudimentary knife
7 votes -
Searching the bush for my cameraman's wallet
2 votes -
The archive saving home sewing history from the trash
6 votes -
I tried free solo (rock climbing with no ropes) with Alex Honnold. Insane experience!
6 votes -
Racing an excavator to save this house’s wood from landfill
6 votes -
We played Connect 4 by travelling to actual US states | Jet Lag: The Game
9 votes -
Making an improved multi-blade forge blower
3 votes -
Print an Arduino-powered color mechanical television
4 votes -
Tom Scott plus Elise Freshwater-Blizzard return to the Devil's Arse
5 votes -
Carving eleven gallons of resin and wood into a whale
5 votes -
A DIY 3D printer that’s upside-down, on purpose? The Positron introduction.
4 votes -
Making wood ash cement and building a fired brick hut
17 votes -
Learn how to build a nuclear fusor
4 votes -
British Columbia fishing guide catches and releases giant 10.6-foot (3.2M), 600-pound (272kg) white sturgeon
10 votes