Also, with the Lawson spreader bar hammock, how do you attach an UQ???
Also, with the Lawson spreader bar hammock, how do you attach an UQ???
"No whining in the woods"
The bridge hammocks with the "high" bars could be lowered simply by lengthening the bars. This would raise the center of gravity (the bed of fabric) and cause the hammock to be less stable.
Theres nothing like danglin in dixie!!!!
Murphy's Law: When one toilet breaks they all break.....its all a buncha crap.
Im an educated idiot. The more I learn the less I know.
FYI: If you want to know what type a certain bear is, sneak up behind it and kick it. Then,
run like crazy and climb up a tree. If the bear climbs the tree and eats you, it's a black
bear. If the bear just pushes the tree over and eats you, it's a grizzly bear : )
Do not walk behind me, for I may not lead. Do not walk ahead of me, for I may not follow. Do not walk beside me, either, just leave me alone.
--unknown
The Lawson hammock is not a bridge hammock. The design of the Lawson looks much more like a typical backyard spread hammock with a tent on top. I haven't seen this hammock in person, but I don't think that the spreader bars are "on the bottom." They will probably end up being above your head once you are in the hammock, just like in your backyard woven hammock. I'm guessing from the pics on their website that if you lay in that hammock it's going to dip in the middle from your body weight. A bridge hammock solves that problem with the cat curve cut of the sides, allowing you to lie flat in a straight line down the middle of the hammock.
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