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Good height Tom Hunt wears a cowboy hat whose crown is a good height for his face.
Photos by Mamta Popat / Arizona Daily Star
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CORT WAREHOUSE/DRIVER Education Assessment Technology, Inc Social Studies Content Writer General CORT Warehouse Supervisor Construction Komatsu Equipment Co Mechanic Health Care Rio Salado College PA's/Online Instructors AccentA cowboy's crownForget straw and feathers. A real cowboy hat is made of wool felt or fur, is durable and useful, and best not be messed with by anybody but its owner.
Arizona Daily Star
Tucson, Arizona | Published: 02.17.2007
The subject is hats — cowboy hats. But we're not talking straw hats with low crowns, brims curled up the sides, feathers trailing down the back.
Those may look great with low-slung jeans, a T-shirt and battered boots. They may even fall into the "Western-style" category and adorn lots of heads at the 2007 Fiesta de los Vaqueros, which opens today, but they're not the real thing. They're not cowboy hats.
A real cowboy's hat is not frivolous, not an affectation; it is utilitarian — as much a part of the cowman's gear as his saddle or footwear.
It can be used to fan a fire, whip a horse or slap at pesky flies. It's also useful for shading a face and neck from the sun or keeping rainwater from running down a neck.
But, said Tom Hunt, whose family started ranching in Southern Arizona in the early 1900s, no matter how old or battered a cowboy hat becomes, it belongs to one person and one person only.
"Don't mess with another man's hat," Hunt warned. "That'll stir him up considerably."
A cowboy will spend his money on his head and his feet, Hunt said.
"He'll buy good boots and a good hat," he said. He may not spend much on everything in between.
Since the best hats are made of fur, putting them in a pricey category, it's understandable that a cowboy would be a tad possessive of his hat.
And careful, Hunt said.
"No matter how dirty, how old, how trashy your hat gets, you always put it down the same way: with the front brim over the edge of a table. Or you put it upside down or on its side.
"But you never put it full square on a flat surface because you don't want to flatten the brim."
When it comes to wearing a cowboy hat, there's a protocol that cowboys follow — true cowboys, that is. The ones who have grown up with the cowboy — read gentleman's — code of conduct.
Hunt's younger son John grew up hearing those rules.
"Every day," John said. So impressed was he by his dad's dictates that there's no doubt he'll pass on the code of conduct to his son, Cameron, 2.
"If you meet a lady on the street, you touch the brim of your hat (in salutation)," Tom Hunt explained. "If you're acquainted with her, you might tip your hat to her. If you know her well enough to stop to talk with her, you take your hat off. Take it off, too, if you step into an elevator or enter a house or restaurant."
And in a bar?
"It's permissible to wear your hat in a bar," Tom Hunt said, "but you never sit down to eat wearing your hat. Only snot-nosed buckaroos do that."
And what's a buckaroo?
"Somebody who thinks he's a cowboy."
● Contact Rosalie Crowe at 573-4105.
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