LT COL, USAF (RET)
MANAGER, CEO, CC, MIFWIC, BOSS
Rich's Bio: The Very Short Version
Rich is a retired Air Force Lieutenant Colonel and CEO of Attitude Aviation. He is a former U-2 pilot, an internationally known air show performer, and an award winning instructor pilot. He flies everything at Attitude--and everything to the limit.
Rich's Bio: The Long Version
Rich holds the highest aviation ratings in both the military and
civilian worlds: US Air Force Command Pilot wings and the
Airline Transport Pilot license for both land-based and
seaplanes. He has over 10,000 hours of flying time in over 100
different aircraft, and he is equally at home soaring serenely
somewhere in the stratosphere or upside down fifty feet off the
ground at five hundred knots. As his air show announcer likes
to tell air show fans.
He has flown high, really high, low and really low, fast, faster, slow,
slower and backwards.
He has flown the biggest single engine jet in the world...and
the smallest.
He has flown the smallest single pilot jet in the world...and
the biggest.
He has flown the only jet in the world with a tailwheel.
He has flown supersonic White Rockets, stratospheric Black
Dragons and terrain hugging Hercules Heavy Haulers.
He has air dropped troops, guns and ammo---and livestock and
food and life saving medicine.
He has soared on tiny gossamer glider wings and coaxed a
thousand square feet of fuel laden jet wings to the edge of
space.
He has worked his aircraft into the .Coffin Corner. and held it
there, for hours---lots of hours.
He has made transoceanic and transpolar intercontinental
crossings in a single engine airplane...all alone...in the dark.
He has watched the shadow of the earth creep through the
stratosphere.
He has watched a lunar eclipse and the aurora borealis from
above 70,000 feet.
He has seen the curvature of the earth--first hand.
He has pulled G's and rolled and looped high performance
aircraft for over three decades.
This is the guy running Attitude Aviation.
Is it any
wonder Attitude is a different kind of flight school? Do you
think maybe the standards might be just a little higher at a
flight school run by a guy like this? You'd be right.
Graduating
from Mississippi State University with a degree in Aerospace
Engineering, Rich volunteered for the military at a time when
others were actively trying to avoid military service. He
graduated at the top of his Air Force pilot training class, with
a fighter qualification, when half the students didn't even make
it through the training. Despite his hard won fighter qual,
Rich's first assignment was the C-130 Hercules, a large four
engine tactical transport aircraft. Still totally a Type A guy,
he beat all the training timelines, got checked out in some
really interesting aerial delivery techniques and hit the
tactical airlift circuit well ahead of his peers, flying
tactical missions all over the world. He became one of the
youngest C-130 pilots ever awarded the title of Aircraft
Commander.
To build
high performance jet time and get back on the fighter track,
Rich volunteered to be an instructor pilot in the supersonic
T-38 Talon. As usual, he was top of the class in Instructor
Pilot training, Academic instructor training, Squadron Officer
School, Air Command and Staff College, and every other course of
training he tackled. He was "Proficiency Advanced" in every
level of training and excelled teaching fledgling pilots to
master supersonic jets. As the youngest Chief of Academics in
Air Training Command, he received numerous "Top Performer"
awards and over a dozen "Best Instructor" and "Best Academic
Instructor" awards. He helped manage and train over 1000 Air
Force pilots, including a number of the first women pilots ever
admitted to the ranks of the Air Force flying corps.
Actively
recruited for a headquarters tour at Randolph AFB, TX, Rich
became Air Training Command's expert on flight training and
drafted the flying training and academic syllabi still in use
today in Air Force Undergraduate Flying Training. He created
academic courseware and instructional audiovisuals. He authored
three textbooks and five instructor guides; and co-authored
others. He introduced computer assisted instruction to Air
Force pilot training. In short, Rich has helped to mold every
single pilot graduated by the U.S. Air Force in the past 25+
years!
And while he
was doing all that he flew a full schedule in T-38.s, teaching
pilots to be instructors, sort of a graduate level "Instructor
Pilot's Instructor Pilot."
Though Rich
was honored with selection by Air Training Command to be a
Career Trainer, he turned down this most comfortable of
positions, and instead volunteered for one of the most dangerous
peacetime assignments possible: the U-2 spy plane. The U-2 is
notoriously difficult to fly, and operates in a near space
environment, gathering intelligence all over the world. The Bad
Guys don't like spies, and the U-2 pilot does the same job -with
the same risks- whether there is a war on or not. For that
reason nobody ever gets assigned to the U-2. It is one of the
few all volunteer flying units in the world.
Later, as a
Battle Staff Officer at Strategic Air Command Headquarters
(Think .Dr. Strangelove.), Rich helped run U-2 operations world
wide before and during the Gulf War. He set up classified
missions all over the world for all sorts of government
agencies, CIA, DEA, NRO and all the other agencies you read
about in Tom Clancy novels. When the Air Force reorganized,
Rich found himself at the head of U-2 Operations. When the
Strategic Recon Center closed down, Rich found himself a new
job.
He
volunteered to become the Air Force Liaison to NASA on the west
coast. His aerospace engineering degree and the two Masters
Degrees he had picked up along the way, plus his operational
experience made him ideal for the position. Rich was also
accorded the title of Director at NASA Ames Research Center. He
ran liaison offices at Ames and also at Dryden Flight Research
Center, Edwards AFB, CA, coordinating Air Force and NASA assets
to everyone's benefit. Oh, he also got to fly NASA airplanes.
Rich retired
from the Air Force in 2003 and moved on to civilian life-well,
as civilian as Rich is likely to ever get--but he didn't leave
flying behind.
Flashback:
Years ago, about an hour after getting his Private Pilot
license, Rich rented a little Cessna 150 Aerobat and proceeded
to teach himself aerobatics. While recovering from a totally
unrecognizable roll and the ensuing high speed dive, Rich
realized that there was more to this acro stuff than met his
young eye. Though he survived that experience, he never forgot
the lesson.
So, before
he even retired from the Air Force, he began Attitude Aviation
in 1997 with partner Marilyn Bedford to teach performance flying
and aerobatics. He still manages Attitude, and it's now the largest, most unique fun flying
school in the U.S.
Rich also
flies air shows in a unique Aerovodochody L-39 known world wide
as the Firecat. He recently added a Siai Marchetti SF260 to his
air show stable. Not new to Soviet aircraft, Rich has flown
advanced aerobatics in his own Yak 55M, instructs in Yak 52.s
and L-39.s, and is one of only a dozen or so pilots in the US
qualified in the Yak 54.
Rich flies
every airplane at Attitude Aviation, and can take you to the
limits of each.
Rich's Resume:
Check out Rich's professional resume. Click here.
Our contact information is listed below, or just click here.