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Summer used to feel infinite. No school, nowhere to be, the pool, the bike, the particular quality of light at 7 pm when no one has called you home yet. Somewhere along the way, it got shorter—not actually, just experientially, in the way that seasons do when your calendar is the thing running your life instead of the sun. Which is why summer hobbies matter more than they sound: not as self-improvement projects or resume items for your personality, but as the thing that makes the next few months feel entirely your own.

So here are 31 summer hobbies worth actually trying: some you’ve probably considered and never gotten around to, a few you haven’t thought of yet, and none that require you to become a different kind of person to enjoy them. Pick one that sounds good right now, not one that sounds like a better version of you in theory.
1. Press flowers into art
Summer blooms are peak for about three days before they’re drooping on your counter. Pressing them is the move: lay them between parchment paper under a heavy book, wait two to four weeks, and you’ll have something frameable. The commitment is low, the payoff is genuinely beautiful, and it costs roughly the price of one farmers market bouquet.
2. Try watercolor painting outdoors
The bar for this is lower than you think — all you need is a small paint set, a brush, a cup of water, and somewhere to sit outside. The point isn’t to make something good, it’s to spend an hour actually looking at something instead of through it. Parks, patios, backyards: anywhere with a view works.
3. Sketch outside
Same premise as watercolor, different muscle. Grab a sketchbook and a pencil and go sit in front of something worth looking at — a building, a tree, a fountain, your friend’s face. The act of drawing forces you to notice things you’d otherwise walk past. That’s the whole point.
4. Learn calligraphy
Meditative in the way that puzzles are meditative — absorbing without being demanding. There are inexpensive starter kits and workbooks that make it genuinely accessible, and the learning curve is satisfying rather than frustrating. Also: genuinely useful for anyone who still sends cards.
5. Try natural dyeing
Tie-dye has a PR problem, but shibori — the Japanese indigo-dyeing technique behind it — does not. The results are graphic and beautiful, it’s legitimately best done outside, and you can apply it to clothing, tote bags, linen napkins, basically anything you’re willing to commit to. A starter kit is inexpensive and the process is more forgiving than it looks.
6. Make your own jewelry
The combination of something to do with your hands, a finished object you’ll actually wear, and the option to do it while watching something is hard to beat. Start with a basic kit, then let the bead selection become its own problem. Fair warning: you will develop opinions about findings.
7. Pick up crocheting
Having a cultural moment for good reason — it’s portable, it’s meditative, and there’s a satisfying directness to making something three-dimensional out of a single strand of yarn. YouTube tutorials are genuinely excellent for beginners. Start with a market bag or a simple dishcloth before you commit to a sweater.
8. Start a junk journal
Every summer generates receipts, ticket stubs, coffee sleeves, postcards, and polaroids that end up in a drawer or the recycling bin. A junk journal is just a blank book where all of it lives instead — layered, taped, scrawled on. Less precious than a scrapbook, more interesting than a photo album. The only rule is that nothing has to be good.
9. Get into film photography
Using a film camera changes how you shoot — you get 24 or 36 frames and then you wait. That constraint makes you more intentional than any photography tutorial will. Disposables are the obvious entry point; a secondhand point-and-shoot is the upgrade. The waiting-for-the-prints part is its own small joy.
10. Try flower arranging
There’s more to it than taking off the packaging and finding a vase. Flower arranging is an actual skill — how you cut stems, what you pair together, what vessel you choose — and grocery store flowers are a completely legitimate place to learn it. Hit the farmers market, pick up a few different varieties, and spend an afternoon figuring out what works. Your kitchen table will thank you all week.
11. Cook your way through a cookbook
Pick one cookbook, commit to making a few recipes a week, and let it change your dinner rotation. The constraint of a single book is the point — it forces you to make things you’d never choose otherwise. Throw on The Bear for inspiration and get started.
12. Bake with seasonal produce
Summer baking has a completely different logic than cozy-season baking — it’s lighter, brighter, and built around whatever’s actually good right now. Stone fruits, berries, citrus: the farmers market is your starting point. A peach galette or a blueberry buckle is not the same undertaking as a December cookie exchange, and that’s a feature.
13. Try foraging
This one sounds more ambitious than it is. Start with something low-stakes and identifiable — blackberries, dandelion greens, wood sorrel — and go from there. A local foraging walk or a single good guidebook specific to your region is the right entry point. The combination of being outside, paying close attention, and coming home with something you found yourself is genuinely satisfying.
14. Start a garden or grow your own herbs
You don’t need a backyard. A windowsill with basil, mint, and chives will change how you cook for the cost of a few small pots. If you do have outdoor space, a single raised bed or a handful of containers is enough to start. The learning curve is real but forgiving, and your local garden center staff are almost always excellent and underutilized resources.
15. Go hammocking
Possibly the most honest hobby on this list — the entire point is to lie down in a suspended piece of fabric and do nothing, or read, or nap. Setup takes ten minutes once you know what you’re doing. Find two trees, follow the instructions, and spend an afternoon in a park being horizontal. It counts.
16. Hike at golden hour
You’ve probably already hiked. This is about timing it differently. The light between 6 and 8pm in summer is a completely different experience than a midday trail, the temperatures are better, and the photos are unreasonably good. Look up your nearest trail, add two hours to when you’d normally leave, and go.
17. Go on bike rides
The specific feeling of biking with the wind in your hair in summer is not available any other way. If you don’t own a bike, most cities have affordable rental options. No destination required — the ride is the point.
18. Try swimming as a practice
If you have access to a pool, a lake, or a beach, this summer is a good time to treat swimming as something you actually do rather than something that happens incidentally on vacation. It’s a full-body workout that’s genuinely enjoyable, which is a rarer combination than it sounds.
19. Play tennis
You need a court (most public parks have them, often free), a racket, a friend, and a willingness to chase balls for the first several sessions. It’s social, it’s active, and the learning curve is exactly steep enough to keep it interesting.
20. Try rock climbing
Start at an indoor gym—most offer intro classes, gear rentals, and staff who are used to beginners. It’s as much a problem-solving sport as it is a physical one, which makes it more mentally engaging than most workouts. Once you’re comfortable indoors, the outdoor version is a completely different and better experience.
21. Go on creative field trips
This is less a specific activity and more a practice: moving through your city with the intention of noticing what other people are making, curating, and caring about. A gallery, a market, a shop with a good window—anywhere someone made a creative decision about what to put where. You’re not necessarily buying anything. You’re just learning to pay attention. (I write more about why this matters here.)
22. Walking dates with friends
The best conversations happen when you’re moving and not looking directly at each other. Schedule a regular walking date with a friend—same time, same route, or a new one every week. It’s social, it’s active, and it doesn’t require a reservation or a reason.
23. Take a class with a friend
Pottery, natural dyeing, a cooking class, a floral arranging workshop—the specific activity matters less than the combination of learning something new and doing it with someone you actually like. Most cities have more of these than you’d expect, and the social pressure of having committed with a friend means you’ll actually go.
24. Start a craft night
Pick something specific (crocheting, embroidery, collage, candle-making), invite a few people over, and make it a recurring thing. The activity gives everyone something to do with their hands, which takes the pressure off conversation in the best way. Rotating whose house it’s at keeps the commitment light.
25. Host a progressive dinner
One friend does drinks and appetizers, another does the main, another does dessert—everyone moves between houses over the course of an evening. The logistics are simpler than a single host carrying everything, the pacing is genuinely fun, and it’s the kind of evening that feels like an event without requiring one person to do all the work.
26. Host a themed dinner
Pick a cuisine, a color palette, a season, a decade. A Provençal dinner in July, a backyard clambake, a Negroni-and-small-plates situation: whatever the theme, it gives the evening a shape that makes it feel more intentional than a regular dinner party. Get inspired with these summer party ideas.
27. Discover the best outdoor patios in your city
Make it a mission rather than an afterthought. Pick one new outdoor patio a week, bring someone, and rank them at the end of summer. The ranking is optional. The excuse to be outside with a drink on a warm evening is not.
28. Explore your city like a tourist
Most of us have a list of places in our own city we’ve been meaning to go for years. Summer is the time to actually go. Pick one or two new spots a week—a neighborhood you don’t usually visit, a small business you’ve walked past a hundred times, a market or festival you always mean to check out. You already live somewhere worth exploring.
29. Read outside
Not revolutionary, but consistently underrated. Take whatever you’re reading and do it outside — a park blanket, a porch, a hammock (see #15). The combination of a good book and actual sunlight is one of the more reliable sources of summer contentment available.
30. Go camping
The full immersion option. You don’t need much—a tent, a sleeping bag, a campsite with a view. Borrow gear from a friend if you don’t have it, or car camp somewhere with amenities while you figure out whether you like it. The enforced simplicity of spending a night outside, away from your phone and your to-do list, resets something that’s hard to reset any other way.







