>>2606763>hammock, limited for where you can hang it, insects, the net gets dirty, the wind chill is awful.There are ways to defeat all of these issues, some involve stupid expensive specialized hammock gear, but some can be cheap shit versions from Amazon, such as:
>Tensa4expensive and heavy but you can set up closer to the water where there are no trees and much less bugs, if any at all
>Bottom Entry Bug Net Hammocklike $200 for a good one, you can get factory made ones from Hennessy or custom made ones from small makers in the US like DutchGear and HammockGear and others, there's probably cheap versions on Amazon too. Just check your legs to make sure there are no cockroaches or ants/bugs already on you, if there are then shake/knock them off and get in the hammock, I've never had a cockroach get into my bottom entry.
>Lights / picrelyou can get some cheap ass battery powered lights, that will keep roaches away from the hammock area too, set them to gold/yellow bug light color so the mosquitos and moths wont care, turn them off with the phone app once you are in the hammock
>Underquiltfor beach windchill you just need a thin one, a 75 x 45 inch fleece blanket is probably enough and it's synthetic/washable so the salt spray is whatever. Same thing for the top, if you're cold use a fleece blanket or a synthetic quilt, I just use a polyester sheet on top but I've only hung on tropics beaches, never on a cold beach, in cold you just use a thicker blanket or double up like you would in a normal bed.
>Tarpyou can get any type of tarp you want. Look at the Tsunami Tarp from WarBonnett...you could bury the windskirt in sand and have a solid wall/floor connection, fold one half up to just make a windscreen at night, fold the bottoms up to just have a sun shade in the day, have a full height enclosure for a rainstorm, etc.