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Original Pawleys Island PC-14GC Large Polyester Rope Hammock Green 60”x82” 13 Ft

$ 105.07

Availability: 10 in stock
  • Item Length: 13 Feet
  • Model: PC14GC
  • Item Height: 82”
  • Item Weight: 12 pounds
  • UPC: See Box
  • Condition: New
  • Manufacturer: Original Pawleys Island
  • Material: Polyester
  • Item Width: 60 in
  • Color: Green
  • Product Dimensions: 60”x82”
  • Brand: Original Pawleys Island
  • Shipping Weight: 12.55 pounds
  • All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
  • MPN: Does not apply
  • Type: Rope Hammock
  • Item model number: PC14GC

    Description

    Original Pawleys Island PC-14GC Large Duracord Rope Hammock Green 13'x60 Green.
    PLEASE SEE PHOTOS FOR MORE DETAIL. 2 Bed Size Polyester Rope Green
    ABOUT
    It was another muggy Lowcountry night a whole lot of years ago...
    ...and weary riverboat captain Joshua John Ward found himself frustrated once more, failing yet again to get a peaceful night's sleep. "Cap'n Josh," as he was widely known, ferried rice and other cargo from South Carolina's inland plantations to port in coastal Georgetown, just south of his home in the popular resort town of Pawleys Island. So he spent a lot of nights out on the water, and the grass-filled mattresses common on working boats back then only seemed to amplify the steamy summer heat.
    Customer Corner
    Out of desperation, Cap'n Josh figured he'd give sleeping in a hammock a try, though that option didn't bode much better for him, as he was certainly well aware.
    By Cap'n Josh's time in the late 1800s, sailors had already been using hammocks for beds at least since the days of Columbus (who often gets credit for "discovering" the hammock, too, after taking a load of New World hammocks back home with him to Europe). First the British Navy had adopted the practice, followed by many European and American commercial ships and, later, the United States Navy as well. However, those hammocks were small, hard to get into, cramped and prone to tipping.
    They were also made from canvas, which meant they felt rough, and were hot – sweaty hot. Some improvement.
    So Cap'n Josh's mind soon gravitated instead to rope hammocks, which he figured had to allow more air circulation around a sleeper's body, and thus cooler sleeping. However, rope-hammock design of his time produced something that was likewise coarse against the skin, and also wasn't all that sturdy. Not to mention it had bulky knots tied throughout.
    Nineteenth-century rope hammocks were, to put it mildly, uncomfortable for sleeping – and could lead to a very rude awakening if the poor-quality hemp or manila rope common back then ever gave way.
    So Cap'n Josh began some experimenting, bent on creating a strong rope hammock that didn't require knots in the hammock body, and one that was wide enough for more stable, more peaceful rest. It took him several tries before he hit upon his winning formula: heavy cotton rope in a double-latch weave, where individual ropes pull against each other to produce a lattice-like design.
    But the enterprising riverboat captain's greatest contribution to the art of hammock-making has to be his invention of the spreader bar. Cap'n Josh took staves – that is, slats – from wooden oak storage barrels and sawed them to his selected size, boring holes in them at equal distances apart. He then fed the rope ends from a standard mariner's clew knot through the newly bored holes, tying each threaded rope to a looped end of his woven hammock bed. This way, the only knots were away from the hammock bed itself.
    The two spreader bars held the hammock bed wide, the cotton made it soft and the heavy rope and double-latch weave kept it strong and secure.
    There's no record of how Cap'n Josh's sleeping changed following his handcrafted success in hammock-making. But we're pretty confident things improved dramatically for him, since the Original Pawleys Island Rope Hammock is not only still with us to this day, but is now possibly the best-known hammock brand in history, long ago having become the template for the classic American hammock style.
    Other than some improvements in materials through the years, the basic design of today's Pawleys Island Original is truly little changed from the time of Cap'n Josh. We're indebted to him for getting it right to start with, and we feel honor-bound to carry on his exceptional tradition of craftsmanship and quality.
    The Original Hammock Shop, begun in 1935 by Cap'n Josh's immediate family to better market the hammocks they were already selling, is still going strong today along the main road through Pawleys Island, South Carolina. When the shop first opened, it was among the only businesses in the sleepy Southern seaside town. The rope bodies of many Original Pawleys Island Hammocks available there are still woven right onsite; however, before one of our hammocks is complete, it must also be fitted with spreader bars (today we use lovely varnished white oak), a hand-woven clew knot (the attractive rope triangle at both ends of most hammocks) with a spray of harness ropes, and weather-tough hanging chains and O-rings (ours are among the heaviest, and safest, in the industry). Each hammock must then pass a final physical inspection at our coastal Carolina workshop to ensure strength and quality.
    And that's as it should be. Because if today's Original Pawleys Island Rope Hammocks didn't live up to Cap'n Josh's own incomparable tradition, we'd be losing a lot more sleep than our ferry-boating founder ever did before inventing the modern relaxation standard more than 130 years ago.