So in other words it's more comfortable for the back, but you can't dangle the legs. I like to add a little swing action with my legs when lounging, which is my primary reason to not go towards a HH.
Would it be possible to tip the hammock back a bit to sit on the side for the same effect? Or would that stress out the spreader bars and stitching?
LC sitting on the side is exactly how you get in and I am sure there is a limit to what it will hold. However so far 1.9 holds my 200 pound butt up and I sit i mine.
Peace Dutch
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absolutely. I sit in mine. Its a great way to face the fire and share comraderie with your buddies. I can also sit in mine using the end as a back support while I "snuggle up" with a good book. The Jacks' bridge is where I got the basic design, and with the help of Grizz and others you shouldnt have a problem making all the necessary cuts to the fabric. Mine is an hourglass shape with a parobola curve that is 40" on the end tapering to 34" in the middle (finished size after sewing channels)
good luck and god speed on your endeavors. and btw, welcome to HammockForums!
Thanks mikeinfhaz for the welcome, and thanks for the info. I'm going to have to add a bridge hammock to my project list.
What materials do you use for the spreader bar?
I can sit in my basic bridge which uses webbing as the support. The DMB uses rope and I find that to be horribly uncomfortable to sit on. My spreaders are wooden dowels with metal bolts through although I am not at all interested in weight or portability since it is my wife's hammock and her distance from the car has be strictly limited by her own requirements for camping with me.
I may be slow... But I sure am gimpy.
"Bless you child, when you set out to thread a needle don't hold the thread still and fetch the needle up to it; hold the needle still and poke the thread at it; that's the way a woman most always does, but a man always does t'other way."
Mrs. Loftus to Huck Finn
We Don't Sew... We Make Gear! video series
Important thread injector guidelines especially for Newbies
Bobbin Tension - A Personal Viewpoint
I bought the tent repair poles from QUEST in the .625 diameter. Others have used wood, swiffer handles, trekking poles and other stuff. Campmor sells the fly poles for the Eureka Timberline tents and those look like they would work too. I got the brown 1.9 ripstop from Ed Speer. 1" steel rings from Ace hardware. 3/4 webbing from Quest too.
Check out the pics at the bottom of this site.
http://www.jacksrbetter.com/index_files/BMBH.htm
"Every day above ground is a good day"
i have no discomfort with my end gathered hammocks, and i am very fond of their slight curvatures. i have a memory foam mattress on my bed that is quite good. good enough to where i can now sleep on my back for the most part (which was always impossible before this mattress), but i am always wishing i could incline the torso just a few inches like i experience in my hammock. i don't see laying perfectly flat as having an advantage, especially with regard to sleeping on your back. i think the thing with more flatness, is more comfort on your side, but there are trade offs. end gathered hammocks seem to have more room for side sleeping, but are less flat and some people experience hip torque when laying on your side with your legs straight out. bridges will generally feel flatter laying on your side with the legs straight and could be an advantage if you sleep that way alot. the bridges are quite narrow, some more than others, so there will be less room for laying on your side with your knees up for instance. (that's not to say there aren't bridges wide enough to sleep in the fetal position, but there's just not as much width for knees, elbows, etc.)
Last edited by warbonnetguy; 08-07-2008 at 08:21.
I've tried always to be careful to say only that laying in a bridge hammock is different . Mine have always been wide enough for me to go fetal when I like, no issues. I sleep comfortably on my side in mine all the time.
BUT I do appreciate the slight curvature at the head end of gathered end hammocks. I can sleep on my back in those more comfortably than in my bed at home, and like doing so. The only problem is that curvature at the head usually means knee hyper-extension, but so long as I get something under my knees that's fine.
At the end of a long trail day the difference in comfort between gathered end hammock and bridge hammock is minuscule compared the difference between laying on the ground and hanging in just about any useable camping hammock.
Grizz
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