The only real surprise was that it took so long. After a disappointing dearth of sombreros in Mexico City, it was three days into Prime Minister John Key's tour of Latin America before the inevitable happened.
A Colombian rugby representative was holding the sombrero vueltiao, a traditional black and white Colombian hat, while waiting for Key and Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos after their meeting in Bogota yesterday.
Everyone knew where it was going. Sure enough, the vueltiao was handed over and Key looked at it with that same sense of inevitability before observing to the media how much they had been hoping for such a moment.
He accepted his fate and the hat, popping it on his head and modelling it for the cameras.
It was a tad more symbolic than it appeared at face value. It was Key's first visit to Colombia and the bestowing of the national hat marked a successful meeting with Santos in which New Zealand agreed to support Colombia's bid to get into the OECD and Colombia agreed to back New Zealand's bid for a Security Council seat.