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The author models six different styles of hiking hats.
What hiking hat style fits your trail personality? Our author is here to help. (Photo: Brad Kaminski | 国产吃瓜黑料)

How to Choose a Hiking Hat That Fits Your Personality

From bucket hats to visors, headgear blocks out the sun and helps define your trail persona. Our hiking columnist helps you choose which hat is best for you.

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(Photo: Brad Kaminski | 国产吃瓜黑料)

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Apologies to anyone who encountered me on the Pacific Crest Trail in July 2021, rabidly racing in circles through the wondrous in the northernmost reaches of California. Indeed, had you been peering down from , which juts from the brilliant forest like some rough-hewn countertop slab, and watched me sprint around the meadow below, you would have worried 1,600 miles of the PCT had finally driven me mad. But you see, I was just trying to get back my hiking hat鈥攆rom, that is, the diabolical deer who had stolen it. Not crazy at all, right?

To backtrack: Two years earlier, just days into my hike of the Appalachian Trail, a new friend had dubbed me 鈥淕unner,鈥 not because of my speed or because of some military past that does not exist. Instead, I looked like an athletic Elmer Fudd, with my zip-off cargo pants, yellow-tinted sunglasses, and blaze orange Filson hat. I wasn鈥檛 hunting wabbits, but I simply thought that鈥檚 how long-distance hikers moving across such ancient mountains and hollers were supposed to dress. Gunner became and remains my trail name, a badge of honor in spite of its embarrassing origins.

By the time I began the PCT, I understood trail fashion was much more flexible鈥攖iny running shorts from France, toe socks in all colors, a lightweight sun shirt in whatever shade I fancied. I also spent an absurd amount of time considering the perfect hat, which I saw as the bumper sticker of hiking couture, a way to say a lot about your personality and interests with a single pithy statement. So when I came across , a Nashville-based manufacturer kennel manufacturer for folks who hunt alongside dogs, I knew I鈥檇 found my match. My forest-green Gunner hat, with waterfowl taking flight behind the name, was not only a nametag but a little joke. I knew very little about guns or hunting, but here I was, a Gunner walking through the woods.

And now, this deer鈥攍oitering near a PCT shelter in the Klamath National Forest, waiting for us worn-out hikers to drop crumbs of the precious calories we carried鈥攈ad lifted it from a log, chewing on its sweat-stained rim for every bit of salty magic it could stand. I chased it around the woods for 15 minutes, at least long enough for the rest of my trail family to arrive, point, and laugh, less at the deer than my bad luck. It eventually disappeared with my hat clutched in its jaws, a victory swiped from the head of humanity. For the final 1,000 miles, I carried on in a series of hats I never really liked, occasionally grumbling about the Klamath deer that had replaced me as Gunner along the PCT.

Which hat fits your trail personality? (Photo: Brad Kaminski | 国产吃瓜黑料)

These days, I take my pre-trail hat selection perhaps a little too seriously, considering not only how it feels on my head but also what I want it to say about me. You鈥檒l likely find me in a blaze orange baseball cap鈥攁vailable at most any hardware store in any town in the United States for about $5鈥攈and-stitched with some memento of a state I鈥檝e already crossed. For the last few years, I鈥檝e often sported a patch from Cypress Gardens, Florida, found in a Santa Fe thrift store, atop my hat; it鈥檚 an invitation to talk about the most fun National Scenic Trail, the Florida Trail. My alternate, another orange beauty from a California horse-and-hiking outpost called Kennedy Meadows Resort, is a kind of nod to other PCT alums, a chance to rhapsodize about the of nearby Sonora Pass.

You can express yourself in so many silent ways on trail, from your backpack brand to the food you eat. Everything you carry is often a direct reflection of a value. But there鈥檚 no simpler, cheaper, and more functional way to do this than with a good baseball cap with, perhaps, a few well-chosen accessories. Sure, there are other hats鈥攖he bucket hat, the sun hat, even the humble visor. I don鈥檛 think these comparatively lame pieces of headgear work better or say something that flattering about you. Here’s why the ballcap still rules.

You Can Wear a Sun Hat or a Bucket Hat, but鈥

The sunhat is a common sight on the trail. (Photo: Brad Kaminski | 国产吃瓜黑料)

I turn 41 in a week. I am a fair-skinned dude with thinning hair, and I鈥檝e spent at least half of those years either going too hard at rock shows until late in the night or trekking for hours on end in the sun, rain, or snow. I don鈥檛 need any help looking older. But that is exactly what you get with a or a , pieces of anti-anti-aging technology so powerful I hear they are in with the kids again. Still, their appeal outdoors seems intuitive, right? A wider rim that encircles one鈥檚 head provides more shade on all sides. But have you ever worn a sopping wet bucket hat? How did that feel? And have you ever worn a wet bucket hat in rain that lasts three days or tried to strap that soggy mass to your backpack? Good luck with that. Both of these styles also serve as sails, so prone to being lifted by the wind that they include chinstraps that suggest a football helmet for the home gardener. I have no interest in strangling myself while I hike, and so I have no interest in bucket hats or sunhats.

You Can Wear a Sun Cap with a Neck Cape, but鈥

The neck cape will protect you from sunburn. But it will not help you fly away. (Photo: Brad Kaminski | 国产吃瓜黑料)

Sun caps are totally fine, especially if having or expressing a personality just isn鈥檛 that important to you. That鈥檚 OK! They鈥檙e lightweight, breathable, and totally bland, the hat equivalent of having a thankless 9-to-5 job that you settled into because your parents told you that your passion would never turn a profit. If you love suncaps and want to express yourself as, say, a furry who loves rabbits, add one of those capes that drape down like leporine ears. You鈥檒l look great, and thanks in advance for the laughs.

You Could Wear a Visor, but鈥

Van Halen frontman David Lee Roth models what could be a fantastic hiking visor. (Photo: Bernd Mueller / Getty Images)

Seriously, though, what is wrong with you? Do you want your scalp to be sunburnt? Are you so ultralight that you鈥檝e forsaken the cap part of your cap, or do you just want to look like ? Look, visors are good if you鈥檙e playing golf, but I鈥檓 just saying that because I don鈥檛 know enough about that tax-shelters-as-sport to disagree. Seems debatable.

You Could Wear a Headwrap, but鈥

Headwraps are great for bugs and sweat. (Photo: Brad Kaminski | 国产吃瓜黑料)

As previously mentioned, I鈥檓 a middle-aged white dude with thinning and (goddammit) graying hair but without, well, a god. There are religious, cultural, and phenotypic reasons for all kinds of head wraps that will never apply to me; if they apply to you, amazing. But during those hatless days after the deer swiped my gear, I did try to use a Buff and even a bandana on my dome. I hated it鈥攈ot, sticky, damp, dirty. It鈥檚 just not for me, but I respect the headwrap鈥檚 minimalism and versatility, no matter what form it takes.

Bottom Line: Nothing Beats a Baseball Hat

Nothing beats the good ol’ baseball cap. (Photo: Brad Kaminski | 国产吃瓜黑料)

Just think about it: For hiking, the baseball cap takes the virtues of everything I鈥檝e mentioned and eliminates their concomitant problems. It offers the front shade of the bucket or the sunhat while giving you a plastic band in the rear for looping a bandana or a Buff if you鈥檙e worried about the back of your neck. When it鈥檚 wet, it still acts as a little umbrella, keeping the rain out of your face, and a cheap cap with holes or a little webbing at the side is breathable enough. It鈥檚 not much heavier than a visor or a wrap, and if you don鈥檛 want it on, it鈥檚 small and collapsible enough to be stuffed into any empty corner of space you have when you switch to your cold-weather knit cap or your . If you need more sun protection, you should be always hiking with sunglasses, anyway.

And above all, it can say anything you want, from silly jokes that may help you find your friends on trail to the name of some favorite hang back home that reminds you of what awaits when the journey is done, like a daily postcard from the rest of your life. They鈥檙e cheap, ubiquitous, and totally easy to buy secondhand. If, say, a deer eats your prized selection because the salt on it was so good, you can find at least some sort of replacement at the next town you encounter. And by the way, if you ever see a dear wearing a Gunner hat near the Oregon border, thank it for the laughs.

Thanks to for the trail name and reminding me how important hats are as he begins his Continental Divide Trail hike.

Lead Photo: Brad Kaminski | 国产吃瓜黑料

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