STORIED HEADGEAR - Gunning hats you have owned

Steve Sanford

Well-known member
Good morning, All~



Yesterday morning I received an e-mail from gunning partner Jamie Woods. He wanted to know if I had an old Jones Cap. I told him I was not certain whether I still had one - from back in my days on saltwater - but found it right away in "deep storage".




Having just been enjoying the many fascinating - and even harrowing - tales in Larry Eckhart's thread about boats we have owned, I was inspired to begin this one - another excursion back into the sands of time to distract us from Hurricane Covid. This time, the topic is "gunning hats I have owned".....



For my couple of decades gunning the waters around Long Island, I mostly wore a traditional Jones Cap - popular among duck hunters for about a century when I adopted it circa 1980.




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As per https://www.mollyjogger.com/products/timber-jones-cap "The original Jones Cap style was developed by the Jones Hat Company of St Joseph, Missouri established in 1881. Rugged cotton canvas, lined, and fold-down ear flaps. Designed for the fall and winter seasons."


It served me well for many seasons and was worn to the office many times as well. It did give way, though, to warmer headgear later each season when the Mercury dipped into the twenties and teens.



I lost my first Jones Cap at an off-season event. One of our younger colleagues was getting married and so his bachelor party was arranged by another colleague. Not the conventional "margins of society" affair (worthy of YouTube nowadays), this prenuptial celebration foregathered in the middle of Bellport Bay at the Pattersquash Gun Club's shack. I sailed over in my gaff sloop WILLET after work one mid-Summer afternoon. I recall approaching the dock in the lowering sunlight with the help of the "tin jib" - the 6-horse Johnson I needed in the warm light airs. In the spirit of the group, my Jones Cap sat atop my noggin.



I do not remember where I slept but I do know that I arose early. After a brief swim, I set sail for the mainland into a pea soup fog. Although sunny "over on the beach", my destination was shrouded in a thickening grey-white with clear vision limited to perhaps a hundred yards. I poked around until I happened upon the mouth of Carmans Rivers and ultimately made it to WILLET's berth and thence into the office on time. When next I needed my cherished chapeau, however, 'twas nowhere to be found.



To replace it - and I do not remember who made my first one or from whence I had purchased it (maybe Old Guide out of Massachussetts?) - I tried one from L. L. Bean. Although well-made, it did not fit right (my head was not built with most hats in mind). So, I found one from Duxbak that did the trick. Here it is with the patina that proves it had gotten lots of use.



View attachment Jones Cap - 2020.JPG




My next favorite topping was a woolen (blend I'm sure) Driving Cap. I bought it from the J. C. Penney right across the road from the old DEC headquarters in Albany. The details of such hats vary markedly. I liked this one for its color and - most important - its willingness to mold itself to the contours of my skull (a phrenologist's dream - or nightmare?).



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The darkish-grey hue - the same I use for wings on many decoys - fit right in amongst the dead timber and brush where we hide most of the time up here in dairy country. The wool shed just enough rain to keep me warm and comfortable. Paired with a grey fleece neck gaiter it would take me right 'til the end of the season - or at least until I dressed in "whites" for the last days.



It was lost somewhere in Brooklyn. My son lived for a time in the Flatbush section of this NYC Borough (once a separate city of its own - and home to the pre-Los Angeles Dodgers). On more than one occasion, my trusty Honda Element served as a moving van for Ben. I recall being parked across Flatbush Avenue from his apartment with a multitude of "personal effects" filling the hold of said Element. As we unloaded, the open doors and hatches let a stiff North wind scour right on through. When I later drove home to the rural benevolence of Washington County, I was left to conclude that the half-gale had absconded with my gunning hat. I have since envisioned it riding jauntily atop some homeless person....



It has been replaced with something similar - but definitely not the same.



So, please share your stories of your own head gear (or other irreplaceable garments, et cetera).



All the best,


SJS
 
Wore this LL Bean insulated hat for years. The damn thing would pop off of my big head, so it's a good thing it had chin straps. Note the 3/4 length camo rain parka. My first foray into camo hunting gear. I'm sure many of you "Old" guys sported one of these back in the 70s.

Matt


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Steve, remember my jones cap well. Think my mother got it for me one christmas. Had it for years. After years of use either my head swelled or it shrunk. Well you know how mom's are, she would wash it as it got that nice patina. It's still here somewhere.
Do you remember the old Hodgen 3/4 canvas duc rain coat? Had one for many many years till it finally gave up. It was top line clothing and a real investment back then. I notice your 3/4 coat...
I just gave up my old LL Bean 4/1 old camo pattern last year, hey they held up, great quality.
 
Not exactly what I'd call a gunning hat. My granddaughter brought this back for me ( has Dave on the back) after her trip to Disney World. Little did she know I would wear it out in public when we all got together. Now that she is a teenager, I think it's time to get it out again.

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Have to start with the official duckboats.net hat, this photo was from 2000. I'm not diligent enough to scan in any old photos for hat pics, but I'm sure there are some good ones.
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Not as classy as Dave's, but my favorite waterfowl hat is a wool stocking cap that Jen knitted for me over 20 years ago (photo from 2000). This first photo is the original hat that that needed ripped out and re knitted when my head apparently shrunk after a couple years.
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Looking sharp with a nice mixed bag.
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Pete and I both looking young.
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Back when I used to be tough.
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Matt Mahoney said:
Wore this LL Bean insulated hat for years. The damn thing would pop off of my big head, so it's a good thing it had chin straps. Note the 3/4 length camo rain parka. My first foray into camo hunting gear. I'm sure many of you "Old" guys sported one of these back in the 70s.

Matt

Matt- I had the Columbia version of that hat and the same coat- hard to sneak in it- I tore about the three days into owning it. It had certain very limited times when it was the greatest coat ever.
 
Those were simpler times John. I get a kick out of the advertising for vintage camo patterns. Vintage to me means no camo! Do we really need it to kill ducks??

Matt
 
Good morning, Matt~


My Dad had the same 3/4-length WWII "marsh camouflage" parka - by Hodgman. I bought the same one latter when I began making my own money in high school. I still have a later one my Dad bought from LL Bean.


And - as per your later sentiment - no gunner "needs" the modern camouflage patterns - in my opinion. Staying stock still in dun-colored attire suffices - especially if you cover your hands and face. Why anyone would use a camouflaged flashlight or other easily misplaced small gear I will never fathom....


All the best,


SJS

 
Good morning, Tod~


That hat knitted by your wife is the perfect color. My Mom always knitted watch caps for my Dad that were just too beige - too bright.


I love that last photo. Brings me back to my late-season days on Great South Bay - when I, too, was tougher - or so I believed.



All the best,


SJS

 
Steve Sanford said:
Good morning, Tod~


That hat knitted by your wife is the perfect color. My Mom always knitted watch caps for my Dad that were just too beige - too bright.


I love that last photo. Brings me back to my late-season days on Great South Bay - when I, too, was tougher - or so I believed.



All the best,


SJS

That is a irish yarn that she bought a couple of skeins of. I think she is out after making me a second to replace one that I lost (oops, left it on the deck and motored) and making one for Gus.

Not much traction on this thread, who would have thought. I know Carl has some headgear photos :).

maybe a beard thread...
 
Have had lots of hats over the years, one of the best was a bright yellow Helly Hansen cap I found floating in the bay. might have been the most comfortable cap I ever had, wore it everyday, including hunting, till I wore it out.

The bright yellow was in no way a deterrent to hunting black ducks. So much for fancy camo...LOL
 
tod osier said:
Steve Sanford said:
Good morning, Tod~


That hat knitted by your wife is the perfect color. My Mom always knitted watch caps for my Dad that were just too beige - too bright.


I love that last photo. Brings me back to my late-season days on Great South Bay - when I, too, was tougher - or so I believed.



All the best,


SJS

That is a irish yarn that she bought a couple of skeins of. I think she is out after making me a second to replace one that I lost (oops, left it on the deck and motored) and making one for Gus.

Not much traction on this thread, who would have thought. I know Carl has some headgear photos :).

maybe a beard thread...

Maybe a Coronavirus hairdo thread? I would imagine that those of us still with hair are reverting to the 70's look.
 
I have had some good ones...good strong juju in them...I believe I still have most of these hats but not sure...one I can think of is probably gone. My duck hunting and turkey hunting is done with the same couple of hats usually. Upland and fishing I will use them together.

One of my first...came from my dad and I spray painted a little. It made the trip with me to Argentina twice.

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One that I caught lots of grief over but it worked well to keep the hair out of my eyes and I could wad it up in my duck bag and I didn't worry about losing it....something that ugly would never be lost.

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This one is a fishing and upland hunting hat. It lasted many years until I accidentally smooshed it when I fell on it.

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The Toby's hat lived with me for many many years and we hunted, collected gator eggs with it, fished...it was my main hat for many years until I wore out the back metal adjusty thingy.

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My first upland hat became adorned with a little topknot over the years

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It has been retired mostly after saying hello to a porcupine

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Gator hunting headgear to wear under my hard hat light

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I do occasionally get cold so I do have a handful of fleece hats, though this is the only one I have not managed to lose

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After my first straw hat bit the big one, I got me a new one. So far it has been used for upland hunting and yard work.

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I do have a handful of ear warmers that I will wear over my hats to keep my ears warm when the wind is blowing. They do double duty in the duck blind and on the prairies and mountains

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Since my Toby's hat needs a little TLC, when my brother was in Afghanistan he sent me this hat and it has become my duck hunting and turkey hunting hat. You can see it also has it's own little top knot.

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I am sure I am missing one or two, but those are the most frequent "go to" hats.

Dani
 
gcs said:
The bright yellow was in no way a deterrent to hunting black ducks. So much for fancy camo...LOL

We used a bright yellow sit on top kayak. We really had no need to take the rattle can and paint it black

i-Zf7Z6Th-M.jpg

 
Whaaaaaaaaat???? That wasn't a stick? No wonder Steve was like...hey....go over there and get me that stick
 
That's a Scout. Drove that bad boy 26 hours one way to reach Meadow Lake Saskatchewan and beyond. Two guys drove and one tried to sleep in the back. DIY hunts back then were easy lots of ducks on the barley swaths and everybody let you on if you asked. The only request was 'don't shoot the chickens'. Farmers liked to hunt the sharptails - ducks not so much. BTW the hat is actually and Eddie Bauer - loved that old hat.
 
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