We wanted to make a brachiation ladder for our children, but when I saw the instructions of how to make one in Glenn Doman’s book, I thought -- I can improve on that design to fit our needs better. I did learn some things that I would have done a little differently on my ladder now that I have it, but overall I like the portability and cost of the one we did.
I have tried to take a lot of the guess work out of the process for you, but if you don't want to make a brachiation ladder because the project seems daunting, but you really want a ladder, I found a link to a
carpenter who will make a brachiation ladder for you.
You can also look into hiring a local carpenter if you give them the plans.
I wanted my ladder to be smaller than 10 ft long and 8 ft high -- where would we put it if it were that big? So we made it 6 ft tall and 6 ft long with a base of 4 ft. I also wanted to make it portable, aka, easy to take apart. We sacrificed a little bit of sturdiness for the portability, but it was a decent compromise.
NOTE: I made ours just less than 6 feet long -- 69 inches. If we would have made it a foot longer it could have fit over a twin size bed length wise which might be nice for some of you.
Materials
We spent about $100 to make two ladders, one for me and one for a friend that was letting me use his garage and tools, so close to $50 a piece.
To make a brachiation ladder we needed:
Lumber - we bought framing pine wood. It's cheap, prolific (you can be choosy because there is so much), and easy to work with. We were pretty particular to pick out strait boards without big knots or blemishes.
NOTE: a 2x4 is measured before it gets sanded, so a 2x4 is really 1.75 x 3.75 inches. Don't let that throw your math off.
We bought:
1 - 8 ft 2x6
7 - 7 ft 2x4(you may need one or two more 2x4 boards if you want to make it taller or longer. I used the extra from the end of the ladder and frame to make the support braces plus a little scrap wood we had.)
7 - 3 ft long 3/4 inch oak dowels
2 - 4 inch bolts with nuts and 2 washers each (needs to go through two 2x4s and have room for the nut and washers)
4 - 2 inch washers with small center whole
2 - 4 inch small diameter bolt and wing nut (needs to go through two 2x4s and have room for the nut and washers)
If needed:
Box of 3 inch long wood screws
Wood glue
Sand paper
Tools:
Power drill / screw driver
Miter or chop saw
Drill press
Drill bits same size as screws for pilot holes and 3/4 inch for dowels
Tape measure
Power sander
Quick Square for measurements
Level
Making the Ladder
Before I get into the steps, I have to say that you can make a brachiation ladder all by hand, but that it will not turn out as nicely. Having the proper tools to cut and drill the wood is paramount to having a solid ladder. We did not have a drill press and drilled the holes by hand held drill. Some of the holes do not go in exactly strait and we had to sand them lots bigger so the dowels would go though the frame, then the ladder, then back through the frame. If you can, save yourself the trouble and use a drill press.
Step 1 - cut the boards. You will need:
4 boards, 72 inches long for frame sides Adjust these to the height you want the frame to be. We made a brachiation ladder frame set at 5 feet tall and the other one at 6 ft. We liked the 6 footer a lot more as far as height, but you decide.
2 boards, 69 inches long for ladder sides Cut two lengths of board the length of ladder you want. This is important to get right so that you have even spacing of rungs along your ladder - you want the spacing of your ladder rungs times the number of rungs + 1 1/2 inches on each end. So we wanted 12 rungs (we're counting spacing between rungs so 11 spaces between rungs) - that's 11 x 6 + (1.5 x 2) = 69 inches long. That’s pretty close to 6 feet. If you were doing rungs 8 inches apart you would probably do 10 rungs for (10 x 8 + (1.5 x 2) ) = 83 inches long -- one inch shy of 7 feet.
2 (2x6) boards for frame base Cut the 8ft long 2x6 in half for the base bottoms.
2 boards 22 1/2 inches long for top of frame If you can use the scraps from the other 2x4's for this, great.
2 boards 20 inches long for the ladder angle braces
2 boards 18 inches long for the ladder angle braces Cut these from scraps you have. You need to have these overlap to a length of about 31 inches. The measurement is not exact as you adjust the length as you put it together. The 20 inch long one does not need to be a 2x4, it could be a 1x4. I cut an inch off the corners on these boards to make them semi rounded so that I didn't have corners poking past the frame or ladder.
6 boards 12 inches long on the longest side for frame base and top support angles These need to be 45 degree angles on both ends and you will get more out of your board if you cut them at the angle already, then flip it over and cut the next one. Two of these can be from a 1x2 or other scrap wood.
10 dowels at 18 inches long
2 dowels at 26 inches long
2 dowel pegs at a tiny bit less than 3 1/2 inches To get the 10 dowels in the middle, you cut 5 in half. Measure each piece though because the dowels are not all exactly even and it's important that they are exact for your ladder. The peg pieces come from the ends of the 26 inch long pieces.
TIP: we set up a fence to bump the dowels against so that we had the exact measurement for each board and didn't have to measure each time.
Finished!!!
Wow! Now you have made a brachiation ladder. It's portable, adjustable, and yours.
Some final thoughts:
We sanded and painted the boards before we glued the dowels in. This made it easy to work on and not get paint on the dowels. I suggest you do some finish work on it before you get it all put together.
This design allows for some wiggle, but it is strong enough. In the next video, I hang from it and shake it hard. I weigh 165 lbs and can shake pretty hard. My little 2 year old would have a hard time making it move but just a tiny bit.
3/4 inch dowels won't hold more than a 6 year old and so the brachiation ladder doesn't need to be bigger than what a 6 year old could reach. We figure by the time our kids need something bigger and more solid, we will make a new one with 1 inch dowels.
The spacing between the bars of 6 inches is dangerous. Our boy can fit his body between the bars but not his head. That means that if we let him play on top and he were to fall through the bars, he could be seriously hurt. Just be careful and watchful. He is drawn to climb to and play on top. I haven't figured out If netting or some sort of board across the top would prevent that or not or how to set it up so that it would protect him. Any suggestions?
Dimensions of our ladder:
(4 - 2x4) height 72" -- ends up being 75 after you add the top and bottom boards (2 - 2x6) base width 48" (2 - 2x4) top width 22.5" inside frame width 19.5" ladder width 19.4" (5 - 3/4" oak dowel cut in half) rung width 18" (2 - 3/4" oak dowel) end rungs to hold ladder 26" (2 - 3/4" oak dowel) 3" piece to hold support, get from scrap of other dowels (2 - 2x4) ladder length 69" (12 rungs 6" apart = 66" + 1.5" at each end) (2 - 2x4) support beam length 31" other scraps to build the support triangles screws (2) 4" lag bolts with nuts and washers to hold supports to ladder (2) 4" bolts with washers and wingnuts