I keep seeing the minimum distance issue listed for whoopies, the minimum distance issue being that whoopies can only be made so small due to their required bury lengths. I saw a post about a year ago showing a simple way to solve this problem, but I can't find it now for the life of me. I'll try to describe it.
If you have a continuous loop on your hammock and use a Dutch biner (or normal carabiner) to connect it to the whoopie sling, you can double the whoopie over and loop it through the Dutch biner and go back up to the toggle. Example: Say the minimum distance of your whoopies is 5 ft and you need one that is 4 ft. Make the whoopie 8 ft long and double it over. Voila - 4 ft whoopie.
You can even triple the whoopie over if you need to for some reason. Maybe you need a 2 ft whoopie. Make it 6 ft and then triple it over (from toggle to Dutch biner, to toggle, back to biner). In this case, it would probably be better to use a biner in place of the toggle in the MSH.
~Dan
I just finished making my first set of whoopies. I can't wait to try them out. They seem much easier to use than the stock ropes that came on my Clark.
Making them was very easy thanks to SlowBro's directions on Hammock Forums here. I recommend using thin wire to pull the buried parts through, vice a yarn darning needle to pull it through. I tried both and the thin wire was way easier.
My only minor complaint was my choice of color, the green Amsteel Blue rope. I was hoping it was a little darker, but it is kind of a sickly faded green. Either way, it is very minor and I could not be happier with how they turned out.
I love to tinker with things, so I too question why anyone would buy whoopies. The rope was $0.34 per foot for 1/8" Amsteel Blue plus shipping (don't forget the Hammock Forums discount code at Redden Marine). I made mine that adjust from ~20 inches to just over 7 feet with 15 feet of rope each came to ~$10 plus shipping (~$9, but divided by another 70 feet of rope and some Lash-it). Overall it took about 2 hours and that was also being side-tracked with other things and gathering/making the tools. That also include buried eye splices on the fixed ends and buried ends on the tag end.
Enjoy,
Bevo
I like straps and cinch buckles. I would rather have my entire hammock suspension as one piece. I have found a tree strap left at a site. The setup is extremely fast since their is nothing to attach to each other... clip and pull, you're done.
I haven't tried whoopies yet, but they might be my next DIY project.
I prefer the webbing and cinch buckles myself.
I had a set of whoppies on my sons hammock, during a storm I acted in haste and cinched them down to far and could not retrieve the loop.
I since purchased webbind and buckles for both of son's hammocks to match mine on the Warbonnet.
I know this was a mistake I made but there is no such mistake that can be made with webbing.
I also use the webbing to compress the hammock inside the blackbishop bag. If you wrap them tightly the size decreases tremendously..
BEAS
From the Great Southern state of
TENNESSEE
Do your duty in all things. You cannot do more, you should never wish to do less. General Robert E. Lee
Why woopies?
Marlin spike hitches are cool!
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