Smart graphic design for all your needs by BGD
I have a few I've made. Depending on the hammock use I've made them different sizes ... some as small as 1'x2' that are basically just big enough to hold my pocket clutter and a Gatorade bottle in my lounging hammocks up to 3'x5' for my overnight hammocks.
I did discover a 'bad' side effect of the microsized one this weekend. It was so windy that even with my rather large keyring full of keys inside it was able to be upset by the brisk wind we were having. It dumped my keys back into the hammock twice during an hour long lounging session. That little gear hammock looked like a kite at times. I may make one from mesh and see how that behaves.
Last edited by geneaut; 03-26-2018 at 10:33.
http://www.tothewoods.net/HomemadeGe...arHammock.html
I pretty much copied this shot for shot. The only departure I made was I used two pieces of shock cord rather than one continuous length. One continuous piece of shock cord was really difficult to work with if I wanted to scrunch it up and use it as a pack cover. It hangs under my hammock, with a simple zing it line suspension
I don't like having to put my pack under my hammock or hanging from a tree, so I decided to just run a SEPERATE ridgeline, and hang my pack from it. I can just slide it to the foot end of the hammock at night and it does not interfere with my lay, then just reach out and slide it next to me to access my pack. Keeps the pack off the ground, under the tarp, and everything at hand.image.jpg
"By all means, let's argue about whether or not a hammock will hurt a tree. All the while ignoring the fact that there is an island of garbage the size of Texas floating in the Pacific ocean. Or how about the fact that over 75% of the world's nuclear reactors are leaking..."
I like your footer quote....brilliant.
I use an old nylon fishnet type hammock underneath. I can put boots in it and the water, dirt just falls through. I put my backpack in it so I can grab stuff without it being on the ground. This was at a Boy Scout camp 2 summers ago.IMG_20150725_062529_422.jpg
Without Tea, there is nothing but darkness and chaos.....
I'm planning to make a gathered-end gear hammock, and prussik it to my ridgeline. I plan to position one end at the head-end apex, and the other end more or less above my head.
The weird par; one of the ends will be convex, so that when gathered it creates a deeper "pocket" at that end. That end will go above my head.
Here's my very professional design drawing
gear-hammock.jpg
Options I'm considering:
1. Make it out of no-see-um, for reasons of weight, but also to be able to see what's in there when I'm lying in my hammock.
2. Knotty mods to stop things falling out.
3. Attaching the sides to the side of my actual hammock, to keep it centered and stable (like the way the Dutchware peak loft is attached to the side of the hammock)
I went ahead and made this. The convex end turned out to be too troublesome, so I didn't do it.
The result - it works great, but a little differently to how I imagined. I sling the gear hammock reasonably tight to account for the stretch in the noseeum. Items in the gear hammock sag down low, despite the tightness. There's no need for knotty mods cos the three layers of material in the long seam are naturally tighter than the stretchiness of the single layer. I can throw my phone, my kindle, my wallet, a knife, a water bottle, a jacket, my top quilt...anything really, and it all stays there and is easy to retrieve, and doesn't get in the way of my head.
I like it much better than ridgeline organisers that require me to slot my stuff into narrow pockets. This is more "throw it up there", and yet whatever stuff I throw in is no harder to retrieve than fishing it out from narrow ridgeline organisers pockets.
It's about 105cm long and 60 cm wide. Those measurements were my initial guess based on dangling a cloth tape measure from hammock apex to, and turned out approximately right. If anything I could have gone a bit wider; 65 cm or 70 cm.
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