I had this thought a few times I think might be worth giving a try if someone hasn't already.
When figuring out the lengths for my suspension, I often measure the hammock, assume a proper hang angle, and then make the strap + UCR/Woopie as long as can be where I'd still be able to reach high enough.
Derrick explains some of this with his calculator. If you pick two trees that are say 30 feet apart, you could technically use them, but you'd probably need to climb them to get the suspension high enough in order to get the hang you want. You'd ideally need the suspension a bit over 10ft high.
For more, see the calculator here
Aside from trees being too far apart -not a horribly common problem- you also run into issues when the trees are too big.
It dawned on me that having tree strap extensions, if setup right, could possibly provide a solution for not just the latter but also the former issue. Assume a Dutch clip on your tree strap and a fixed look on the other end. Your extensions are then dog bones made with webbing. Now I know people do this already and just add the extension on for bigger trees, but what I've never heard of people doing, is using the extension to form a step to get higher on a regular tree.
if you took your dogbone and ensured the loops were big enough to get your shoes into, you could put it around the tree as high as you can reach, step into the hanging loop, and step up high enough to get your actual tree straps around the tree where you need them. Step back down, remove the extension from around the tree and put it on the end of the tree strap.
Of course, that's assuming the length of the extension just happens to leave the loop hanging at the right height for you. Not too high to step into, not too low to be useless. One could take up slack if needed though with a few careful knots.
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