Boocoo Dinky Dow
  • Home
  • Buy the book
  • Excerpt
  • Blog
  • The authors

Hats off to vets and their boonies

11/11/2014

1 Comment

 
PictureGrady Myers in 1969
If you want to honor a Vietnam vet, you could pick no better hat to doff than a boonie, aka a bush hat. The brimmed cotton topper was a point of pride for infantrymen like Grady Myers.

As Grady recalls in "Boocoo Dinky Dow,: My short, crazy Vietnam War," he found his on a dusty parade field in Dak To. 

"Bleached by the sun from green to tan, it had a narrower brim than the newer bush hats. It would definitely give its wearer that old-timer look, and I was pleased to find that it fit my big head.

"The baseball-style cap I’d been wearing was scorned by many of the infantrymen, who associated it with training
. But I had creased its bill and roughed it up to make it look reasonably veteran-ish—enough so that Johnson, who had lost his hat during guard duty the night before, was delighted when I passed it along to him."

Picture
At a recent "Boocoo Dinky Dow" book reading, veteran Ray Heltsley showed with pride a camouflage pattern boonie that had seen two tours in Vietnam -- first on the head of a friend, then on his own. The word "SURF" is stitched on it.. When I asked Ray later for details, he replied:

"The boonie hat was given to me by a former O'Dea High School classmate, Tim Crowder, who went to Vietnam as a Marine in 1966. He told me that he won it for taking 2nd Place in the Da Nang Surfing Championships. The fluorescent pink material inside the hat is a piece of an aircraft signalling panel. When the hat is turned with the panel pointed upward, you can pop it open and closed and it becomes a visible signal so that an aircraft can spot your location."

The back of the hat is trimmed with luminous tape called following tabs, Ray added.

"They glow in the dark, so that the person behind you can follow you silently without losing track of you and breaking silence by calling for you. It's all pretty much Ranger protocol, and most of the people in the line units didn't do this kind of stuff."

Vets like Ray are delighted by the detailed descriptions Grady put into his memoir. The hats, the knives, the ham-and-lima-bean meals remind them of their time of intensive living in Vietnam -- which, along with its profound miseries, had traditions and habits they will never forget.

1 Comment

    

    Julie Titone is co-author of the Grady Myers memoir "Boocoo Dinky Dow: My short, crazy Vietnam War." Grady was an M-60 machine gunner in The U.S. Army's Company C’s 2nd Platoon, 1st Battalion, 8th Regiment, 4th Infantry Division in late 1968 and early 1969. His Charlie Company comrades knew him as Hoss. Thoughts, comments? Send Julie an email.

    RSS Feed

    Archives

    November 2018
    March 2018
    February 2018
    January 2018
    November 2017
    May 2016
    November 2015
    May 2015
    April 2015
    March 2015
    November 2014
    October 2014
    September 2014
    July 2014
    May 2014
    March 2014
    February 2014
    December 2013
    November 2013
    October 2013
    August 2013
    July 2013
    June 2013
    May 2013
    April 2013
    March 2013
    February 2013
    December 2012
    November 2012
    October 2012
    September 2012
    August 2012
    July 2012
    June 2012

    Categories

    All
    1st Air Cavalry
    Against Football
    Ambush
    Apollo 8
    Art School
    Audiobook
    Barracks
    Betty Rodgers
    Bill Crist
    Bob Benzon
    Bob Robbins
    Boise
    Boocoo Dinky Dow
    Book Signings
    Boonie Hat
    Branson
    Bravo!
    Bush Hat
    Carroll McInroe
    Charlie Company
    Chicago
    Christmas 1968
    Creighton Abrams
    Dak To
    Dan Webster
    Dave Mueller
    Dennis Harris
    Depression
    Dispatches
    D'Wayne Hodgin
    Ed Bremer
    Ernest Hemingway
    Ford Thunderbird
    Fort Lewis
    FORWARD
    George Callan
    Grady Myers
    Grady Myers
    Guest Readers
    Hawk
    Helicopter
    Infantry
    Jane Cherney
    Jeffrey Fellin
    Jess Walter
    Joe Tschida
    John Titone
    Joint Base Lewis Mcchord
    Joint Base Lewis-McChord
    Joseph Heller
    Julie Titone
    Ken Rodgers
    Khe Sanh
    Krfp Radio
    Krfp Radio Interview
    KSER
    Letters
    Library
    Maree Mchugh
    Memorial Day
    Michael Herr
    Michael Simpson
    Microphone
    Morgan Sports Cars
    National Veterans Art Museum
    Native American
    Neill Public Library
    Oak Harbor
    Patrick Flanagan
    Paul Ridley
    Pilot
    Plei Trap
    Podcast
    Ray Heltsley
    Reunion
    Richard Nixon Quote
    Sherman Alexie
    SPAM
    Spokane Public Library
    Spokesman-Review
    Steve Almond
    Steve Orr
    Teddy Fisher
    Texas Tech
    Tim Woodward
    Tom Williams
    Veterans
    Veterans Day
    Victor Villanueva
    Vietnam Archive
    Vietnam Helicopter Crew Members Association
    Vietnam Veterans Memorial
    Walt Morrow
    Washington Dc
    Washington State University
    Willys Jeepster
    World War II
    Zack

    RSS Feed