Gaige
One of the Regulars
- Messages
- 269
- Location
- Sarasota, Florida
I was just looking at the Crush Cap from flightjacket.com, and I'm curious about the colors; it's available in olive drab and tan... what's the significance between colors?
Gaige said:I was just looking at the Crush Cap from flightjacket.com, and I'm curious about the colors; it's available in olive drab and tan... what's the significance between colors?
Gaige said:Makes sense to me. Thanks!
You're right, Mike; it was personal choice back in the day, too. A lot of guys preferred the garrison or overseas cap because it was easier to stow when you weren't wearing it. (That's the same reason the US troops adopted the side cap in WWI in preference to their campaign hats, which were a pain to carry around when you weren't wearing it.) The other side of the coin is that a garrison cap is completely useless as a hat, except to satisfy the military protocol for wearing one, and the crush cap just looked cooler. Always a tradeoff.Mike K. said:I'd have to go back and check my officer's handbook, but I think it was personal choice. I know personally, from my brief military days, that I had a choice of visor or garrison cap for everyday wear.
Dixon Cannon said:(I will admit the only thing I've never seen, and don't expect to, is Khaki tunic over OD trousers! Not likely!)
When I was active duty in the early 80s, we were no longer issued the barracks cover. Our mail clerk liked it, though, and wore one around, but he was constantly challenged by senior Marines who thought that it was no longer authorized. He ended up carrying a page from the current regs in his cover to show people that challenged him. I never had one while in the Marine Corps, but I took to wearing one when I went into the Air Force (and still do), but I ran into a similar problem with constantly being told it was no longer authorized (and used the same solution). I think it is becoming popular again throughout both services, though, because I am no longer the only zoomie wearing one, and I see them around 29 Palms daily.dhermann1 said:The term I recall was "Uniform of the day".
And Mojave, in marginal weather, like spring or fall, when it's maybe 50-ish, the garrison cap (aw hell, the piss cutter) gave a reasonable amount of warmth and comfort as compared to the cumbersome barracks cover. I don't know what Army protocol was, but we Marines never touched the brim of our barracks cover because it was spit shined leather, just like our shoes, which of course made them all the more of a pain. I am deeply chagrined when I see Marines of today wearing that abomination known as patent leather, shoes or covers.
Of course, like every uniform (including dress blues), the greens were once the uniform used for actual fighting. They were originally designed to be rugged, warm and durable under combat conditions.