Same here in Australia, seems like it's most of what I do in the garageIn the UK it's *pottering*
I consider puttering doing something that needs to be done but isn't creating anything new nor will it last. A good example is cleaning - the house, the cars, the concrete, etc. Honest jobs in and of themselves and have to be done but require no real thought. I may be the odd man out though for considering puttering around doing actual work.I may need a little help here on the distinction between 'puttering' and 'tinkering'. Asking for a friend, of course.
Pottering covers a lot of ground in the garage, tinkering is a static event at a workbench etc.I may need a little help here on the distinction between 'puttering' and 'tinkering'. Asking for a friend, of course.
Are you my long lost brother? You nailed it.“Puttering.” The art of avoiding doing something you dislike by pretending to be busy doing something not necessary.
That's similar to defining the difference between lollygagging & dilly-dallying. I do both well, but not at the same time.I may need a little help here on the distinction between 'puttering' and 'tinkering'. Asking for a friend, of course.
I sometimes shilly shally...That's similar to defining the difference between lollygagging & dilly-dallying. I do both well, but not at the same time.
Nah, but sometimes that can happen involuntarily WHILE puttering! LolI thought it was piddling.
I don't consider it "puttering about", but on the rare occasion where I find I've got time without a specific purpose, I do what I refer to as "The Pick-Up/Put-Down Game". (Side note, I'm a pack-rat and and am easily distracted, so my workshop is usually somewhat disorganized.)
The game is . . . I'll find something that's not in it's proper place (a tool, piece of material, book or whatever) and I'll pick it up. I won't put it down until it can put where it belongs. The game usually spawns side projects to create or improve storage solutions.
An example . . . A while back I needed to replace the faucet head on the spigot in the barn. The old faucet head was junk, but I recovered a couple of brass fittings that I figured might have a 2nd use someday. Last weekend, I noticed them on a workbench and picked them up. 2-3 hours later, I had made a box for accumulating materials and round stock for lathe projects, and had modified the lathe bench to accommodate the new box . . . and now the brass fittings are placed exactly where they should be.

