WARBIRD RADIO - Historic airplanes have a way of commanding attention in the air. On the ground, their survival depends on something quieter: organization.
On Episode 3 of Season 17 of WarbirdRadio.com, Kristin Schaick, executive director of EAA Warbirds of America, speaks plainly about what she believes the next chapter of warbird preservation requires: more hangars, more local organization and more people willing to step forward.
The Warbirds of America division operates under the umbrella of the Experimental Aircraft Association, a global organization of more than 300,000 members in over 100 countries. Its AirVenture gathering each summer may be aviation’s most visible celebration, but Schaick’s focus is on what happens the other 51 weeks of the year.
“We need more Warbirds of America Hangars,” she says during the conversation.
These hangars are local chapters — structured communities formed around historic military aircraft and the people who care for them. In Schaick’s telling, they serve as connective tissue: linking owners to maintenance expertise, pairing younger mechanics with aging masters of fabric and radial engines, and offering veterans and their families a place where the stories attached to these aircraft are understood.
The barriers to starting one, she insists, are lower than many assume. A small group of committed individuals, a defined mission and alignment with national standards are often enough to begin. What matters most is momentum.
Across the country, warbirds often sit in isolation — a T-6 tucked into the corner of a county airport, a P-51 maintained by a shrinking circle of specialists. Without deliberate organization, knowledge fades. When it disappears, it rarely returns.
Schaick, making her first appearance on Warbird Radio, traces her own path to the role. Her background reflects a blend of operational understanding and nonprofit leadership, but her emphasis is less on résumé lines than on responsibility. Preservation, she suggests, is not about reverence for the past alone. It is about creating systems that make continuity possible.
If hangars represent the local infrastructure, advocacy represents the national one.
Joining the episode is Sean Elliott, vice president of advocacy and safety for the Experimental Aircraft Association. Elliott outlines regulatory challenges that will shape general aviation in 2026 — pressures that extend well beyond the warbird community.
Certification pathways, operational rules and broader federal oversight are evolving. The effects will be felt by vintage aircraft operators, homebuilders, flight schools and private owners alike. Elliott’s message is measured but direct: engagement is not optional.
The regulatory environment does not distinguish between a polished Mustang and a modest two-seat trainer. Policy written in Washington affects both. And in an era when costs are rising and margins are tightening, clarity and representation matter.
For organizations like EAA and its Warbirds of America division, scale provides leverage. Membership numbers translate into voice. But voice requires participation.
The episode does not trade in spectacle. There are no engine failures recounted, no dramatic rescues. Instead, it examines the quieter mechanics of survival — the administrative frameworks and legal advocacy that allow the spectacle to exist at all.
Warbirds, for all their thunder, depend on ordinary acts: meeting minutes, safety briefings, insurance renewals and mentorship sessions that stretch long past sunset.
Schaick’s call for more hangars is, in effect, a call for more stewards. Elliott’s warning about regulatory headwinds is a reminder that history does not protect itself.
The airplanes may draw the crowds. But it is organization, discipline and local leadership that will determine whether they continue to fly.
For those interested in establishing a Warbirds of America Hangar in their own community, additional information is available through EAA Warbirds of America.
Episode 3 of Season 17 is available now at WarbirdRadio.com.
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