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Reading Aero Club celebrates it's 75th year

Dave

New member
Reading, PA
Aircraft Year
1975
Aircraft Type
112/A
Reg Number
N1247J
Serial Number
247
The Reading Aero Club will be hosting an Open House June 14th and 15th to celebrate it's 75th year. I will be working both days at the Reading airport (KRDG) in Reading, Pennsylvania in support of this event. We will be having a spot landing contest along with a flour bomb drop, food, fun, and activities for everyone.

If anyone is looking for a fly-in destination that weekend you are certainly invited to come celebrate with us. I will have our Commander on the ramp displayed along with the Reading Aero Club's planes.

The local FBO - Reading Jet Center will be offering reduced fuel prices for those that fly in to the event.

You folks are like a second family to me, so I invite you all to come and enjoy.

All are welcome.
 
Re: Reading Aero Club celebrates it's 75th year

Just a reminder of our upcoming Open House next weekend June 14th and 15th.

We will have free food and drink at the club house for everyone. I do hope some of you choose to make the trip to Reading. When you land just ask to taxi to the Aero Club, or to the Open House.

See you there...
 
Re: Reading Aero Club celebrates it's 75th year

Here is a copy of the write up the local paper did for our flying club and the upcoming Open House.

6/7/2008


Reading Aero Club members bank on air time

By Don Spatz
Reading Eagle


Usually when guys get together, they go bowling or fishing, or play golf or some other activity.

When Steve Schory and his friends get together, they fly planes. Or train to fly. Or talk about flying.

Schory is president of the Reading Aero Club, the nation's oldest continuously operating flying club, now in its 76th year, which plans an open house at its Reading Regional Airport base all day next Saturday and Sunday.

The nation has hundreds of such aero clubs with the goal of promoting aviation; neither the commercial airliner kind nor the military kind, but the general aviation kind - the guys who want to fly around not because they've got somewhere to go but because they just want to fly around.

"It's soup to nuts here; we have a variety of people from a variety of backgrounds who just love to fly airplanes," said member Ted Hershberger. "They have a different way of looking at things. That's why we survived."

Chartered in 1932, the club now has 55 members from West Chester to Allentown, nearly all of them active flyers.

Its oldest member is 99-year-old Grant Blimline, a charter member who's no longer active but whose pilot's license was stamped by Orville Wright.

Its oldest flying member is its treasurer, 75-year-old Robert M. Keith.

They offer pilot training, fellowship and two planes - a Cherokee and a Cessna. Member pilots can take the planes for a weekend or so, for the cost of fuel.

"We keep the cost of flying as low as we can keep it," Keith said.

Members buy in for a one-time fee of $750 and are shareholders in the club facilities as well as the planes.

But membership is more than a financial stake. It's camaraderie and a commitment.

The members rebuilt and refurnished the clubhouse on the airport's west apron, from the roof to the carpet to the furniture to the Snapple cooler. They help the airport with its annual Christmas in the Air for children. Some pilot Angel Flights. Others teach. All have the passion.

All are members of the Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association, a lobbying group insisting that airspace stays open for citizens to use. And they have monthly meetings featuring speakers from corporations or an aviation bureau.

Most are men - many with wives who won't fly with them.

Member Robert Beissel said his wife won't fly with him but she'll fly with Keith. Keith said his wife won't fly with him, but will with Beissel. It's a matter of trust, they said.

A few of the nation's aero clubs are older than Reading's, but many went out of business for a time - especially during World War II, when nearly all general aviation was grounded - then came back.

The Reading club never closed, earning it the oldest continuously operating moniker.

But several others closed for financial reasons; they operated on nickel-and-dime budgets and had no money for repairs to planes or facilities.

"We're very conservative," Keith said. "We set aside money for maintenance and overhauls."

But they worry about their future. New pilot starts are down 14 percent, according to the Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association. The rising cost of fuel plays a large part.

The club has averaged between 50 and 60 members, but Schory doesn't want it to drop.

That's why the club is running the open house, to entice new members, partly with food and games, partly with short flights for donations, partly by offering trial memberships for $100.

If a prospective member wants to stay, he can pay the remaining $650 later.

The club has two older planes, reliable, but not fancy.

The industry that decades ago brought us ultra lights is changing again, to something called the light sport plane - a two-seater that people can fly without a pilot's license.

"We may have to get into them to survive," Beissel said.

But member Dave Kalbach said the club will wait until a leader emerges from among the several contenders and proves itself before the club would buy one.

"That's the conservative side," Kalbach said.
 

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Re: Reading Aero Club celebrates it's 75th year

Dave,
My wife and I both cracked up at the line about the wives who won't fly with thier husbands but would fly with the other guy.
Too funny.
 
Re: Reading Aero Club celebrates it's 75th year

"The industry that decades ago brought us ultra lights is changing again, to something called the light sport plane - a two-seater that people can fly without a pilot's license."

Dave,

A great article except for the last part of the sentence quoted above. People can fly a light sport plane without a medical, but they still have to have a sport pilot certificate. The press needs to be a bit more careful about requirements.

Other than that, good stuff!
 
Re: Reading Aero Club celebrates it's 75th year

Last minute reminder in case any gets into the area.

All are welcome to attend the Reading Aero Club's Open House. We will have our club plans on display, along with our Commander. There will be a few static displays, a World War II Grumman TBM fighter (way cool) the all new Eclipse Jet, and an L-39 Jet fighter.

Hope some of you can make it out this weekend. The event will be held both Saturday and Sunday June 14th and 15th. Thats NOW! So if you are looking for a destination come on down, up, or over to Reading.

Should be good flying weather today, watch for Tx stroms in the evening.

Hope to see you there.
 
Re: Reading Aero Club celebrates it's 75th year

I'm quite a bit late, but I wanted to thank Bill Hopkins for making it out to our event. Unfortunately I didn't get to spend much, if any time with him, but it was nice to have a Commander grace the ramp at our club house.

Thanks Bill, glad to have had you.

Dave
 
Re: Reading Aero Club celebrates it's 75th year

No problemo, it was a great day to fly. Nice club and people you have there Dave.
Thanks.
 
Re: Reading Aero Club celebrates it's 75th year

No problemo, it was a great day to fly. Nice club and people you have there Dave.
Thanks.

I tell them the same thing about all of you guys :)

Thanks again Bill - See you soon.

Are you going to OSH?
 
Re: Reading Aero Club celebrates it's 75th year

Yessir, Danielle and I will be tenting it. See you there.
 
Re: Reading Aero Club celebrates it's 75th year

I should still be going - Looks like Kathy won't be making the trip (work) so I'm trying to get someone to come along.

I'm pretty sure I'll be there.
 
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