EVENTS


Oct 11, 2008
EAA Chapter
Gathering
Kerrville, TX
details

2008 EVENT CANCELLED
General Aviation News Article
Jan 11, 2008


Eugene F. “Gene” Kranz of Apollo 13
was Honored Guest at June 2007 event [press release]

OUR HISTORY
 

The Southwest Regional Fly-In began in 1963 at Georgetown, Texas, spearheaded by the late Tony Bingelis, home-builder of personal airplanes and prolific author of books on the subject.  The organization comprised only a handful of EAA Chapters and every meeting had 30 or 40 attendees, with the result that little got done beyond the barest essentials of scheduling a get-together.  It was noteworthy progress when in 1965 the first actual fly-in program took shape.

In 1975 the SWRFI moved to Schreiner Field (ERV) at Kerrville, Texas, and began to thrive - and reorganize.  More EAA Chapters got involved, and each chapter sent two directors to meetings of the fly-in Board.  There was no required attendance; different people from the same Chapter would show up at successive meetings.  Such haphazard continuity meant that meetings were chaotic, drawn-out affairs dreaded by many and shunned by some.  It was Management By Large Group, and leadership turnover was high.

Nevertheless, more and more Southwestern custom airplane builders flew to Kerrville for the event.  Overflow attendance at the SWRFI made for problems.  Not least of these was the growth of Mooney Aircraft, whose production plant was expanding and taking more open land for its facilities.   Despite the many attractions of the pretty little city of Kerrville, its airport was really not big enough.

Some leaders at the time wanted to keep the SWRFI small.  Many other members saw that the fly-in had outgrown Schreiner Field; the leadership eventually voted in 1998 to move the fly-in to Abilene.

The following year SWRFI restructured itself with a Director from each Chapter, with attendance required.  This made the SWRFI Board smaller and more efficient, but attendance at Board meetings remained unreliable and continuity continued to suffer.  This led to the formation of an Executive Committee, including three Directors-at-Large, who did the actual work of running the fly-in.

SWRFI held forth in Abilene five years, in the face of poor weather and worsening attendance.  The Board arranged for a professional survey which revealed that the membership longed for nothing more than a return to the Hill Country near the center of the state. Kerrville was still too small, and other airfields declined the honor.

The response:  in 2003, SWRFI moved to that part of Texas where the Hill Country begins -  New Braunfels (BAZ) - and the next year reorganized again into a self-perpetuating Board - Board members elect other Board members - whose structure tracks that of most U.S. business corporations.

In only the second year at New Braunfels, a cold front and heavy rains on the eve of the fly-in revealed that while BAZ was about the right size and in a good location it lacked comprehensive drainage, sufficient ramp space and adequate capacity for handling a high volume of airplane traffic, particularly on the ground.

A new search for a suitable fly-in venue brought the SWRFI to Hondo, Texas (HDO) on the southwestern edge of the Hill Country.  The airfield at Hondo was once a major U.S. Air Force training base and has been well maintained over the years since.  Its four major runways and vast ramp space provide precisely the facilities required for a large gathering of home-constructed airplanes and their builders and admirers.  No airfield is perfect, but HDO comes very close; the 2005 Fly-In was a great success.

We invite you to look at the reviews for several of the previous years


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