...
Shemaghs are the cats ***; they are an awesome and versatile piece of kit that should, I believe, be issued to every troop. I've had one for 15 years now.
Being wary about them though is a fair assessment. It is dependent upon your CoC - not some Pte or Cpl who insists that if you haven't been there, done that - that you are not "entitled" to wear. That's a horseshit statement from those types; sadly the CF has more than a few of those types these days.
Owning one is a smart move: whether your CoC
wherever will allow you to wear them though is a different matter. If they do, you're in. If they don't ... pray for them to be posted out --- soon.
Else one would still own one when they finally have a CoC or a posting to a location that does allow their wear.
The issues with wearing them (or not) are caused exactly because they aren't issued kit (at least to the general masses - they have been bought and given out in-theatre to some). We had troops wearing them last year in-theatre and I had zero issues with that - I never said a peep. The RSM however was not of the same mindset. The rule came down that they "were for wear OTW only" as there was no requirement to wear them inside as our 14 hour workdays in KAF for 9 months with 12 days of HLTA were, apparently, a "pretty jammy go". I chatted with RSM, but lost. The very next day, I watched, very frustratedly, as our AoA troops who worked their asses off in 50 degree temperatures to pull the Leo armour were engulfed in a massive sandstorm (as was I, but I wasn't doing the manual labour) ... they were absolutely encrusted in crap. Behind their BEWs, their clothes, their entire faces and hair ---- everything. I'm sure that Jesus wept.
Had that sandstorm occured the morning before when they were still wearing shamaghs, they'd have been able to wipe the constant sweat from their heads, faces, eyes and the shemagh itself would have wicked much of the moisture from their uniforms. As an added bonus, they'd have been able to pull the shemagh up over their faces to protect their eyes and keep the dirt out of them during the sandstorm; best of all, they'd not have had to inhale all that infamous KAF poo dust and dirt into their lungs for the duration. All because they were slotted into an inside the wire CFTPO instead of an OTW CFTPO. No change to 'the rule' occured. Apparently, the only people who sweat, work hard and get dirty are OTW and it is a fact that sandstorms obviously stop dead in their tracks when they reach the wire of KAF. :