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Camping with no tent, hammock

When a fellow wilderness guide instructor convinced me to try hammock camping, I can tell you it was a frustrating couple of nights until I learned some valuable lessons. I knew I needed a Thermarest pad inside under me, even on relatively warm summer nights. The dang thing kept floating up and ending up on top of me. So very frustrating. I soon decided to take an old bed sheet, sew it to make a bag out of it and place my pad and sleeping bag inside. Problem solved. Later I bought Big Agnes bags with built in bottom sleeves to hold a pad. Problem solved again. How tight and at what level to tie the ends between trees is a very trial and error personal learning process to find the right level so you don't slide down where you don't want to be in the thing.

After we convinced other instructors to try their first night in a hammock, it became a comedy show to watch their antics until they learned too. Most became converts like me. Especially those of us who like to primitive camp away from designated flat treeless campsites and prefer to be in rough unlevel terrain at random lake shore sites, or when bushwhacking between remote ponds. A second extra lightweight large silnylon tarp over the integral netting and tarp completes adequate rough storm proofing gear. I feel that necessary extra weight and bulk to survive in very cold 4th season weather means you might as well just use an old school lightweight tent for better comfort.
 
I started backpacking with a tarp about 12 years ago. I wear a head net at night over a baseball cap. It is cool in the West except for the desert so the rest of the body is not exposed to bugs in a sleeping bag. Usually I still bring a tent for river trips because they can be more insects along rivers. Lately I have been just rolling out a pad and sleeping bag under some big trees. The big trees keep the dew off.
 
I've been using a Rhombus Hammock Hot Tarp for early spring, fall and early winter trips for a few years now. The design works great for my Warbonnet Ridgerunner hammock, with enough room for a stove and an area to sit in. I especially like the option to leave one or both ends open for airflow. I've seen videos of it being used on backpacking trips - I don't see that as a viable use, because to the weight and bulk. However, for canoe camping, it is great. I don't use it in the summer because there is no protection from insects (with exception of the netting on my hammock). Instead, I use a Nemo Bugout Shelter, which has double zippers on each end, allowing my hammock straps to go through and still close up enough to keep insects out. Like the Rhombus, there's enough room inside for cooking, sitting etc.
 
I have hammock camped most of my life, I was just a teen when I started, 13, maybe 14. I was hunting, fishing and camping in the lake swamp north of Lake Maurepas in south Louisiana and one of my uncles heard me complaining about how hard it is to stay dry in a tent on the "ground" in a swamp. I had taken to tying my flat boat between two trees and sleeping in it, cold and uncomfortable, but still dryer than trying to sleep on the ground. The next day he brought me an old army surplus hammock and a canvas oil tarp to go with it. I've been hammock camping ever since. Even if I didn't have any dry land at all, I'd tie my boat between two trees and hang my hammock and tarp above it. Worked great!

Fast forward 45 years.....

Now for the OP, you can absolutely side sleep in the right hammock. Like the previous posters have mentioned, an asymmetric hammock is going to be your friend. Once you figure out "the spot" it'll be the most comfortable sleep you've had in a long time. I have a Hennessy Deluxe Classic XXL, bottom entry, and I side sleep in a fetal position all the time. Like you, I have some lower back issues and that's my favorite way to sleep. I have also made quite a few hammocks and tarps for myself and friends, I'm 100% hooked on them over a tent. IMHO they're more comfortable and they pack down to a lot smaller size, perfect for expedition or extended off grid type travels. I love using it when I road trip on my motorcycles, drops right into a saddlebag. I even made an extra long tarp that will cover my hammock and my bike so it's dry the next morning. For winter time, I use a regular down quilt and an under-quilt on the hammock, I've camped to 5° F that way, snug as a bug.

Try a hammock out, I think you might like it.


Rusty
 
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