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  1. #1
    Senior Member Gravity's Avatar
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    Hammock 102: How to achieve hammock nirvana

    Disclaimer: The main piece of advice in this post has been entirely concocted by me. I have not seen this advice anywhere else in this or any other forum, blog, article, etc. Therefore, it may be one man’s experience and may not apply to the general population.

    Here is the executive summary:

    Before fully committing to the hammock experience for hiking and camping, you should setup a hammock inside your home or patio. Sleep there every night for two weeks, and at the end of that time you should know if you will be comfortable using a hammock for hiking and camping.

    It is crucial that you use a comfortable pillow. After spending too many nights not completely comfortable while sleeping on a hammock, I finally switched my very small hiking pillow (7x2x2) for a real pillow. The difference was night and day, and now I hang full-time, and even got rid of my comfy queen-size bed. The key to hammock nirvana was the right pillow. For hiking, I'll use a smaller pillow, but not the microscopic one I used before.

    Here’s the full advice about hanging indoors:

    When you are starting out, get yourself a simple hammock, the suspension to hang the hammock, and a summer-weight partial quilt. Nothing else is necessary at this point.

    Get a hammock without foot-boxes, shelves, knotty mods, integrated bugnets, etc. A simple hammock is inexpensive, and allows you to sleep “left-to-right” or vice versa. And if you are going to be hanging full-time, you will eventually enjoy positioning yourself in either direction. I currently sleep on my back, my left side, and my right side, in either the left-to-right, or right-to-left directions, and that adds to six different ways in which I am able to lay in my hammock. This increases my comfort and is healthier, as my body doesn’t have a bunch of weight parked on just one part of itself for an extended time.

    Another advantage of hanging inside is that if you don't achieve comfort right away, you can easily move to your own bed and still get enough rest to get you through your next busy day. I started by sleeping in the hammock only for a couple of hours, and then increasing the time as I got more and more comfortable. After nine or ten days, I was able to enjoy quality rest for the entire night. It takes a while to get yourself dialed-in, but after your experience and confidence increase, you'll be able to find those "sweet spots" in no time.

    Also, try to buy your hammock from a cottage vendor - they make good stuff and you will have the satisfaction of supporting a small entrepreneur. And even if you are of short stature, get an 11-foot hammock, as that will give you a better chance to achieve a comfortable flat lay, without calf-ridge and shoulder-squeeze. For the same reasons, pick one that is on the wide side, say, sixty or more inches. And finally, choose the right fabric for your body weight, as recommended in the web pages of your hammock vendor.

    I have seen several forum members start very enthusiastically, buy a bunch of equipment, and a short time later post a thread selling all their stuff and saying that hammock hanging is not for them. I hope this thread helps those who may be having doubts about continuing, as well as the newbies brimming with enthusiasm and plunking their dollars left and right. I think that hammock hanging should work for most people, but you have to take the time to do it right. At the beginning it may not seem as easy as sleeping on the ground, but with the right practice and equipment, it will become just as easy and a whole lot more comfortable.

    Go forth and achieve Nirvana!
    Last edited by Gravity; 08-31-2014 at 19:21.

  2. #2
    Herder of Cats OutandBack's Avatar
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    Nice writeup Gravity. An excellent way to see if hammocking is for you.

  3. #3
    Senior Member Rolloff's Avatar
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    Well done. Great observations.

    For me it took several nights, or partial nights, before I was able to get a comfortable night's rest. On the ground, it almost always took me until the third night out on a trip, to be able to sleep good on top of all the sticks and small rocks, I failed to find before setting up.
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  4. #4
    Trail Runner's Avatar
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    Great advice Gravity. This should probably be a Sticky.

  5. #5
    Senior Member Gravity's Avatar
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    How to hang an inside hammock
    - Locate the studs using a stud finder. Have patience, check and recheck.
    - Measure the distance between the two hang points.
    - Use this online calculator to determine how high on the wall to install the anchor rings:
    (http://theultimatehang.com/hammock-hang-calculator/)
    - Using one of the anchor rings as a guide, mark where the screws will go.
    - Drill pilot holes, and then drill in the screws. Done.

    Materials you will need
    - Spax screws (#14 x 2 1/2"). These are high quality screws (about $4 for ten).
    - Anchor rings rated 400 lbs. safe load, and 1200 lbs. (or more) breaking strength (about $5 for two).
    - See image:

    Last edited by Gravity; 09-02-2014 at 22:22.

  6. #6
    Senior Member Koolranch's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Gravity View Post
    How to hang an inside hammock
    - Locate the studs using a stud finder. Have patience, check and recheck.
    - Measure the distance between the two hang points.
    - Use this online calculator to determine how high on the wall to install the anchor rings:
    (http://theultimatehang.com/hammock-hang-calculator/)
    - Using one of the anchor rings as a guide, mark where the screws will go.
    - Drill pilot holes, and then drill in the screws. Done.

    Materials you will need
    - Spax screws (#14 x 2 1/2"). These are high quality screws (about $4 for ten).
    - Anchor rings rated 400 lbs. safe load, and 1200 lbs. (or more) breaking strength (about $5 for two).
    - See image:

    I like this set up, however I'm wondering how these screws would hold up in a 2x4? How have yours been? I'm 205#.

  7. #7
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    This is good info.After scouring the forums about hanging indoors. I jumped in with both feet so to speak. I have been hanging indoors about three months. The first few nights a few hours then into my bed. Each night was longer in the hammock. After two weeks I was in the hammock only. Now the bed feels foriegn to me and Im sure its in my mind but it doesnt have the "clean" feeling of the hammock. I sleep in a sleeping bag on the hammock. The sleep compared to a bed for me is amazing and no waking up to back pain.
    As far as mounting I used two 5/16 eye bolts threaded into the studs. The interior wall has a slight flex barely noticable so eventually I will add a 2x6 with a shelf on top covering three studs on the interior wall.
    Thanks to everyone here for all the gread info!

  8. #8
    Senior Member Gravity's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Koolranch View Post
    I like this set up, however I'm wondering how these screws would hold up in a 2x4? How have yours been? I'm 205#.
    The Spax screws have been fine, and I have another setup with smaller (12x) screws, that is also holding up fine. But I am only 150 pounds. Take a look at post #12 in this thread for more information.

    Another HF member who weights 225 lbs reports using the 14x screws on 2x4 studs, without problems. See that report on post #22 of this thread: https://www.hammockforums.net/forum/...g-inside/page3.

    The Spax screws are high-quality and you can read a bit about them here: http://www.spax.us/en/multi-material...l#.VHVgztLF_To

  9. #9
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    Do the anchor rings hang.....

    So, when I hang these anchor rings, do they hang directly across from each other? How far from the ground? Both same distance from the ground?


    Quote Originally Posted by Gravity View Post
    How to hang an inside hammock
    - Locate the studs using a stud finder. Have patience, check and recheck.
    - Measure the distance between the two hang points.
    - Use this online calculator to determine how high on the wall to install the anchor rings:
    (http://theultimatehang.com/hammock-hang-calculator/)
    - Using one of the anchor rings as a guide, mark where the screws will go.
    - Drill pilot holes, and then drill in the screws. Done.

    Materials you will need
    - Spax screws (#14 x 2 1/2"). These are high quality screws (about $4 for ten).
    - Anchor rings rated 400 lbs. safe load, and 1200 lbs. (or more) breaking strength (about $5 for two).
    - See image:


  10. #10
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    Quote Originally Posted by Woodsie8 View Post
    So, when I hang these anchor rings, do they hang directly across from each other? How far from the ground? Both same distance from the ground?
    I used the Hammock Hang Calculator to figure out both the distance apart and the height off the floor. Hang them on whichever walls will allow you the right distance -- in my case, I anchored from adjacent walls so I'm hanging across the corner. I hung them the same height off the ground -- if I want one side higher than the other, I'll just move my hammock closer to one anchor or the other.

    The location I picked also allowed me to anchor to studs that are next to a window on one side, and very near the corner of the room on the other. I know studs that are next to windows and doors are supposed to be stronger to hang from, I think the same is also true of studs that are near the corner of a room.

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