I am usually fully clothed in mine so there is not a great deal of skin to fabric contact.I don't sweat much at night in summer either and definitely use the underquilt at some point during the night then too.
I am usually fully clothed in mine so there is not a great deal of skin to fabric contact.I don't sweat much at night in summer either and definitely use the underquilt at some point during the night then too.
Your hammocks smell like you regardless of whether or not clothing or baby wipes, etc. Breath, body odor, skin cells, hair, where your clothing has been or what they’ve touched. The hammock fabric does not smell like new. Your hammock smells like your friends’ house; the assisted living center, your clothes hamper, your campsite, that rainy and muggy trip that saturated your quilts and mixed together that funk like a salad dressing.
I sleep full-time in a bridge hammock and it gets washed on the gentle cycle using a mild detergent (Woolite works good) every other week. My camping hammocks generally get washed after each trip.
"Behold, as a wild a** of the desert, go I forth to my work." -- Guerney Halleck
I sleep in a hammock every night. Gets washed before every trip, and in between, once per month....unless it starts to smell.
If you have any breeze and can hang it outside, almost takes less time to dry than it does to give it a good soak and a scrub.
I'll use dawn dish soap, but prefer just a little of Dutch's RejuveX Sil/Down cleaner in a 5 gal bucket. Keeps the sling clean and restores a little DWR.
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If hammocks were white (like sheets) y'all might view this differently. I just throw mine, minus hardware, in my top loader, and wash the critter. Hot (125f) water and whatever detergent I have at the moment. For netted hammocks, consider a mesh laundry bag for peace of mind.
Dave
"Loneliness is the poverty of self; solitude is the richness of self."~~~May Sarton
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