plain old dave
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I had always understood the 'rule' to be straw after Easter, felt after 1st Frost...
TaxMan1 said:Not in Florida.........
ThinkandDrive said:And here I just bought my first hat. . . not just straw, but my first fedora.
$20 straw at Jos. A Bank. It was a price I just couldn't pass up, for my first.
scotrace said:I've got a new Panama that has been waiting for a good, sunny, warm day.
scotrace said:Straw Hat Day Approacheth....
akaBruno said:Sweating whether you like it or not... cools the body. The head does seem to retain body temps though.
Andykev said:It was "tradition" for the switch from felts to straw and vice versa to be as Dr. Strange stated:
"Back when the summer season wasn't bounded by Memorial Day and Labor Day, the old standard "Straw Hat Day" was May 15 (and correspondingly, September 15 for putting away straws).
But honestly, I would go by temperature!
This thread could have ended right then:eusa_doh:
It is like brown vs. black shoes with what color suit. If you have ever been out on a sunny day with your felt, and wished you had your straw instead, then you know when it is the right time to "switch". And damn the "fashion police".
Here is the SF Bay Area, in the summer we get our natural air conditioning, the FOG. You get up in the morning and it is cold, and you better have a jacket. By lunch, or if you move farther inland from the bay, to Walnut Creek or the Diablo area, you better have your straw.
You can ruin a felt hat by wearing it on a hot hot summer day, and sweating it to death. And get heat stroke at the same time.
I have even put a hat box in my trunk, and switch hats. Felt in the morning, and then swap with the straw in the trunk for the afternoon, and then back again when the fog rolls in during the evening. Our temp's can go to the 60's in the morning, 90-100 in the day, and drop (thankfully) to the 60-70 range again in the evenings.