Alex Price (
cryptoherpetology) wrote in
raianet2021-06-07 05:37 pm
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
![[community profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/community.png)
Entry tags:
text ↪ a. price
Hey, I don't want to make too many assumptions, but I imagine a lot of people here haven't slept in hammocks before. If you're not used to them, they can be pretty uncomfortable, so here are some tips I've picked up while camping that've kept me from too many sleepless nights in the woods:
- Sit down when you get in instead of trying to climb in horizontally. This will make it easier to avoid tipping.
- Lay diagonally so that your knees don't hyperextend while you're on your back. After that you can shift up or down to where you're most comfortable, and should even be able to lay on your side.
- Not so useful right now, but if you're losing heat, add a layer of blanketing under the hammock with a few inches of slack hanging. You lose a lot more heat in a hammock than you do on a mattress due to the air flow, and this way you'll catch some of your own body heat to insulate yourself better.
- Try hanging the food end a little higher if you find yourself slipping.
- A pillow under your knees might help more than under your head if you're sleeping on your back.
I was going to offer to teach some kind of formal camping/survival course, but schedules here can change quickly and I'm a pretty terrible public speaker.
Instead, I'm just going to make an open-ended offer to just be willing to teach anyone what I can as you need it. If you weren't raised to live in the woods for weeks on end to hide from the secret genocidal organization your ancestors defected from, or you just weren't in any Scouting programs as a kid, let me know what I can help you with and I'll do my best.
- Sit down when you get in instead of trying to climb in horizontally. This will make it easier to avoid tipping.
- Lay diagonally so that your knees don't hyperextend while you're on your back. After that you can shift up or down to where you're most comfortable, and should even be able to lay on your side.
- Not so useful right now, but if you're losing heat, add a layer of blanketing under the hammock with a few inches of slack hanging. You lose a lot more heat in a hammock than you do on a mattress due to the air flow, and this way you'll catch some of your own body heat to insulate yourself better.
- Try hanging the food end a little higher if you find yourself slipping.
- A pillow under your knees might help more than under your head if you're sleeping on your back.
I was going to offer to teach some kind of formal camping/survival course, but schedules here can change quickly and I'm a pretty terrible public speaker.
Instead, I'm just going to make an open-ended offer to just be willing to teach anyone what I can as you need it. If you weren't raised to live in the woods for weeks on end to hide from the secret genocidal organization your ancestors defected from, or you just weren't in any Scouting programs as a kid, let me know what I can help you with and I'll do my best.
no subject
What about your world? Were you a Boy Scout, or do you know most of this stuff from other experience there?
[ He's noting he hasn't said anything about needing to learn anything. ]
no subject
Well, we don't have cryptids. At least so far as I know.
I wasn't a Boy Scout. Actually I think they'd expel me before I got in the door, I was kind of the opposite when I was a kid.
[ When he was a kid, whereas now at the ripe old age of 16, he's grown. ]
My mom and I went camping a lot. I'm more used to gross humidity than acid rain, but it's enough. And my uncle made sure I saw military school, so I'm covered for weapons, too. I guess I'm as prepared as I could've been for hatching on an alien planet surrounded by strangers.