I had one of these years ago and would like to get another one but cannot recall what they are called specifically.
Short, stretchy tube of polyester or soft wool fabric you pull over you head and it covers you neck like a scarf. Got one originally at an Army-Navy store over 30 years ago but it is long gone.
Hubby calls the one he wears for skiing a gator…although that’s what I call the tubes I wear over my trouser legs when walking in bad weather. The fancy knitted neck tubes are called a snood.
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/Gaiter
Regarding the neck tube, I call mine the Turtle fur, after the brand name that commercialized the product. I use it like the term Kleenex.
Maybe, but the definition of “balaclava” I grew up with would entail something designed to cover the head as well, and shaped accordingly - like an inverted L almost, with a neck-hole one end, a face-hole the other, and a built-in bend like the heel of a sock.
A snood is a thing that covers your hair. You hear it all the time among Orthodox Jews, because women who don’t feel like wearing a wig, for whatever reason, may put on a snood. I own one, and a couple of head scarves, as well as a beret, because I hang out in Orthodox circles sometimes, and I don’t want to offend people.
The thing you pull over your head, I’ve always called a “dickie,” although I guess most people think of a dickie as a false shirt. If you want a turtleneck, or some other kind of collar showing under whatever your top shirt is, but you don’t want to wear two shirts, you wear a dickie. However, I had a knitted cotton one as a kid that I wore for warmth over my clothes, under my coat, and my mother called it a dickie.
Military refers to it as a gaiter, but that doesn’t mean that is correct. I have always called it a neck-warmer, hubby calls it a balaclava (but he also calls sweatshirts "sweaters).
You can cut your own out of a leg of an old pair of sweatpants. For cold weather motorcycle riding I put it over my head covering my face, put the helmet on and strap it, then through the visor tuck the fabric down enough to see. Works pretty good. Have to do Houdini- like breathing at stops to prevent fogging, though.
I’ve only recently heard them referred to as “neck gaiters”. I’ve had leg gaiters but really don’t think we’re talking about the neck equivalent. They remind me of the leg warmers bunched around their ankles that many girls wore after “Flashdance” was released, so I mentally name them “neck warmers”.