Need a place to do some serious relaxing? Justin Newcombe explains the virtues of having a hammock at home and shows us how it's done.
There is something soothing about lying back in a hammock and gently rocking to and fro as the day drifts gently by. My advice to anyone about to embark on a landscape design is to do the research and you may as well do this in the bottom of a hammock rather than on your feet. I can't see why this doesn't apply to other things in our lives, like buying a car or shopping for clothes; choosing a dog or a life partner. Let's face it, there are plenty of things we politely stay awake for that we would in all honestly rather sleep through (the current financial crises - yawn).
When I decided to write this article, for example, in said hammock, I promptly fell asleep and almost missed my deadline.
The history of the hammock is pretty much tied to fishing and sailing. Columbus brought the hammock back to the old world after his first visit to the new world as evidence of his escapade. His sailors immediately realised the self-righting qualities of a hammock meant a much more pleasant sleep in big seas. Columbus realised he could jam more bods below deck at night, then stow the hammocks and resume operations in the morning, something the British navy soon adopted, with a high-sided seaman's hammock.
A hammock is a great way to keep off the ground in the bush or jungle. The jungle hammock eradicates insect and snake bites as well as the unenviable sleep on bumpy or uneven ground, great for your next expedition to the Amazon.