To be clear, I don't necessarily "let" the ducks walk around wherever they want, it's more that I'm just powerless to stop them.
But, yeah, Tom pretty much covered everything. I work from home as well. My shop is a 3000 sf. shop my late father in law built when they moved to Florida about 15 years ago which sits on 3 acres along with a 1200 sf. house. When my mother in law passed away, my wife and I decided we liked the place so we made her brothers an offer to purchase their shares of the property they received in the inheritance and it all worked out pretty well. If you ever watched any of the GRM Live shows, we shot that at my place.
So, the weirdest thing for me is that I have a nice office in the actual house that I hardly ever use. The office I actually use is a cruddy little hovel built in the corner of the shop, which sits about 300 feet from the house. Even that small commute—usually in the golf cart we use for property maintenance—really puts me in "work" mode. Right outside my interior shop window is my lift, so I have a nice view of whatever work is in progress at the moment. My exterior window looks out on my front yard, which has a few nice trees, and across the street is a plant that makes architectural styrofoam. Yeah, it's kind of a weird neighborhood. I guess way back in the day it was basically like three farms that have now been turned into about 15 individual properties ranging from a half acre to like six acres. it's a little weird living across from a styrofoam plant, but they're awesome neighbors and I can use their forklift whenever I want. Plus it's quiet where we are. You wouldn't even know there were houses here unless you were delivering a pizza to one of them (even then I usually have to talk them in so they don't get lost), and all the neighbors are cool, or quiet enough that I don't realize they aren't.
Right now my shop is a bit of a mess with three cars (Vette, MR2 and now the stock car and all its piles of parts) in here, but I imagine however much or little was in here I'd still find a way to make it a mess. We also just got tire mounting and balancing equipment, which takes up a bit of space as well. There's also little wok areas for "clean" stuff, woodworking, metal grinding, a work area for my dad that I'm not allowed in because I'll mess it up, and a table with the garage entertainment system with a TV, some studio monitors and some old analo.g synths. A couple of our cockatoos live in the shop full time, and all our parrots have spaces down here where they spend a lot of the day. We built these big 4 x 8 x 6 aviaries on wheels that can get rolled around in and out of the shop that they hang out in during the day, and at night when I'm down here. having the birds here limits the amount of aerosols and volatiles I can use, but honestly I don't mind that at all, since that stuff makes a mess anyway. If I need to do anything involving fumes, I schedule it for a time when I can have them well outside and allow the shop to thoroughly vent before they come back in.
The benefit of working from home when the shop and the projects are here is a double-edged blade. You never have to punch out, but you also never GET to punch out. Luckily I love every minute of what I do, and the ability to take a few minutes during the day and go play with the parrots or feed the fish in the pond or watch the ducks makes it even easier to survive the lack of boundaries.
My typical workday is 9-5 at my desk, then back in the shop when my wife goes to bed, which is usually pretty early since she's a teacher. So like 9-12 or 1 back in the shop, and usually part of that is desk time checking emails or writing something if it's fresh in my head or doing housekeeping with file management or whatever.
And, yeah,same thing with me on the iPhone usage. I'm on the Apple Upgrade program, so I get the newest iphone every year, but the photos are absolutely stellar since about the iPhone 10 came out. It's really my favorite camera at this point, and gets used for both stills and TONS of b-roll video.
So, yeah, that's how the sausage gets made. It's not sexy, because really it just comes down to putting in the hours to produce the product. Sure, some of it is track testing Z51 C8s, and I certainly don't take those opportunities lightly and I'm thankful every time they come up, but most of it is just good old fashioned "work."