Hi,
are you a hunter or a collector? Where is the fun?

You don't have to do things you don't love.

A collector could collect all children, stepchildren, siblings, half siblings ... Lifestories, stories about the houses, the village, the next town, ... regional history ... I knew a person, he had a his ancestors in a circle 50 km around his living place and he had a complete collection of the signatures of his ancestors over 300 years. (In Palatinate everybody was able to write at least his name.)
A hunter could have a lot of fun breaking brickwalls, looking for circumstantial evidences and footprints of his ancestors until he will get the final evidence.
I started twenty years ago with a box of old photos, no names written on them and tried to arrange them for an album. There had been a photo: I found out: The date has been the silvermarriage of my gt grandparents (1901) with about 40 guests, all unidentified. I went back to there parents and grandparents, then forward to 1901, got all siblings and cousins. Then a tried to find out my cousins third and fourth grade. I wrote letters, did phone calls, we had been visiting exchanging photos and up to now I have identified two thirds of the group. The last third might have been finds of the family ... And I started to look for cousins of higher grades ...
It has been fascinating to meet cousins and uncles of a higher. They had photos, even a youth painting of a gt gt grandfather, antic chairs, other indivisible things and a lot of stories, they heard from their grannys. Stories are the salt in your ancestor's soup. -
I don't want to collect a cemetery of gravestones with names and dates only.
One day I met a German President (I am sure you know his name), introduced myself and as farewell he said to me:
Kind regards to your mother, my cousin sixth grade. Two weeks later I have got a nice letter from him!

At RootsChat I am a BEGINNER

(!) - I am looking here for my cousins third grade in UK and fourth grade in Australia. Researching ancestor lines which are more important for them as for me, I have broken a brickwall and I was able to add eight generations to a line on my tree (not from a copy & paste source).
As hobby I am researching trees of German and German-American Forty-Eighters from Palatinate.
Best regards
happy hunting or happy collecting
Rudolf
NB: My avatar is an example of such a single piece treasure on glass plate. Carol (treetotal) was so kind to identfy it as a
tinted ambrotype. He is my gt gt gt grandfather, surname Kummerer, a surname which can be found for German pork-butchers in Scotland.