paper
Well-known member
I've been a motorcycle camper for a few decades and with experience comes knowing what works and what doesn't.. One of my only complaints is camping on less than level terrain, and the issues that go with it.. Sliding all night, repositioning yourself, and then going back to sleep only to do it again. :x
I'd discussed hammock camping with a few people and while I thought I understood the practice, I was a LONG ways off.. I was under the assumption that you slept like a banana, were quick to fall out, that there was no protection from the bugs or elements, and that it wasn't comfortable.
Well, I was wrong, wrong, wrong, wrong, wrong. [-X
I did a little investigation and found out several things.. You actually sleep flat in a hammock because you sleep at an angle in the hammock, rather than straight from support to support. Also, you have to actually work to just get out of a hammock, let alone fall out. Today's hammocks have many options for protection from bugs, and there's numerous tarp options that keep you drier than in a tent, and last but far from least, comfort.. I sleep so well in a hammock I got rid of my regular bed and sleep in a hammock full time!! :shock:
Some of the other things I found is that hammocks have you in the breeze, so you sleep much cooler than in a tent.. So much so that you actually may desire insulation under you in temps as high as 80 degrees. This makes what might have been a miserable night in a tent, a comfortable night in a hammock when battling a warm night.
Anyway, I can go on and on.. But here's a photo of my hammock in a location that would have never been close to flat enough for tent camping.. This weekend had a day of rain and I was dry and comfortable under my tarp, enjoying a few beers with others.
What else is really odd is that it's driven me to make some of my own gear.. My underquilts (bottom insulation) are modified military poncho liners and I now make my own hammocks. At 49 I finally bought my very own sewing machine (I mean Thread Injector!!)
I'd discussed hammock camping with a few people and while I thought I understood the practice, I was a LONG ways off.. I was under the assumption that you slept like a banana, were quick to fall out, that there was no protection from the bugs or elements, and that it wasn't comfortable.
Well, I was wrong, wrong, wrong, wrong, wrong. [-X
I did a little investigation and found out several things.. You actually sleep flat in a hammock because you sleep at an angle in the hammock, rather than straight from support to support. Also, you have to actually work to just get out of a hammock, let alone fall out. Today's hammocks have many options for protection from bugs, and there's numerous tarp options that keep you drier than in a tent, and last but far from least, comfort.. I sleep so well in a hammock I got rid of my regular bed and sleep in a hammock full time!! :shock:
Some of the other things I found is that hammocks have you in the breeze, so you sleep much cooler than in a tent.. So much so that you actually may desire insulation under you in temps as high as 80 degrees. This makes what might have been a miserable night in a tent, a comfortable night in a hammock when battling a warm night.
Anyway, I can go on and on.. But here's a photo of my hammock in a location that would have never been close to flat enough for tent camping.. This weekend had a day of rain and I was dry and comfortable under my tarp, enjoying a few beers with others.
What else is really odd is that it's driven me to make some of my own gear.. My underquilts (bottom insulation) are modified military poncho liners and I now make my own hammocks. At 49 I finally bought my very own sewing machine (I mean Thread Injector!!)