ANGLER'S
WARM AND DRY IN THE COLD AND WET
by Louis
Bignami
Part Four: Head
Coverings
Boaters wear every hat imaginable
and some beyond imagination, such as the motorcycle helmet I saw on a
teen-ager in a zooming Whaler off Neah Bay one winter.
Up to half of your body heat loss is from
the head, neck and throat. So head "underwear" includes silk
and poly balaclavas which wick moisture off the skin, and for those who
don't itch, wool. Insulation comes in wool watch caps, caps with
fold-down ear muffs -- too many flaps seem designed to get nicely wet
until you flop them down -- and dense insulation such as Thinsulate(tm).
Weather-proofing in Gore-Tex, coated nylon, rubber etc. performs well if
you don't mind losing hearing acuity.
For all-round use it's tough to beat a
wool watch cap if you don't mind wet hair when it rains. If you do,
Columbia now makes watch caps with a waterproof Gore-Tex(tm) bladder
inside so your head stays dry. Add a poly balaclava liner below zero, or
if you power at high speeds. Cowboy-type sombreros suit hot weather
because they cast thick shade on your head, neck and throat. Note:
that's why desert Arabs don't wear billed caps. Models with chin straps
or which snap up on the side a la' Australian bush hats also stay on in
the wind and keep rain off eyeglasses better than any billed hat except
Orvis fishermen's long bill models. Traditionalists can use the
fisherman's long back billed hats a la' Captains Courageous.
I hear, but haven't tried that railroad
hats from King of the Mountain Sports work exceptionally well on high
speed boat runs. The coolest hat option looks downright weird. If you
bareboat in the tropics, look for a mini umbrella held over your head
with four stalks off a hat band. Other cooling options include expensive
solar-powered safari hats or foam hats you can soak in cold water. My
budget choice for the tropics is a Columbia fore and aft bill hat like
the Orvis with a mesh top. Since hot air rises, vents in the hat top
help cool heads.
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