This hammock doesnt just swing from side to side but also from head to foot. Supreme relaxation is achieved when a summer breeze can rock you in any direction, and when you can propel yourself in a swaying circle.
The inner, hanging cot is like a conventional hammock, but it is attached to the widest part of a horizontal, pipe oval that encircles it. From the narrow part of the oval, a series of cords on each side join to tie to a tree or one side of a ground support. Thus the hammock, with you and your book and your drink, can swing in two directions or more.-- FarmerJohn, May 03 2003 Aerial Chair http://www.designdi...65863&order_no=2&t=A sort of hammock. [Apparently out of commercial production since the original link was posted, so this is a substitute link.] [jurist, Oct 05 2004, last modified Oct 02 2006] Wouldn't this be rather difficult to get on to?-- chud, May 03 2003 Excellent, but I've spilled my drink.-- pluterday, May 03 2003 Wouldn't a "single-hung" hammock, similar to an innertube tire suspended with a four-point harness from a tree limb give you the maximum flexibility in omni-directional swinging? Or something like the aerial chair in the provided link?-- jurist, May 03 2003 chud: Mounting this should only include an extra step over the oval frame, compared to a conventional hammock.
jurist: The aerial chair would give the same freedom of movement but hardly the same sensation as reclining on a flat hammock with the center of gravity closer to the rotation axis(es).-- FarmerJohn, May 03 2003 New link appended, [Pellepeloton]. Thanks for calling it to my attention, but in the future that's what the "flag" buttons on each link are for.-- jurist, Oct 02 2006 random, halfbakery