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Russ McDonald and Lynn Oswald lounged in plastic chairs in front of a row of hangars and looked out across the runway while they chatted. In the distance they could see red and orange patches beginning to color the Wasatch Mountains on the west side of Utah's Heber Valley.  It was beginning to look like fall.

A standard flying day at the Russ McDonald Heber Valley Airport can look a  lot like an Oshkosh air show. But at this point Russ and Lynn (right) were  through flying for the day. The crowd of

onlookers had departed and they could  just relax and enjoy the late afternoon calm.

Not that flying is work for these two, mind you. In the hangars immediately behind them sat Russ's North American P-51D Mustang  fighter, his Pitts Special aerobatic biplane, and Lynn's North American AT-28 Trojan trainer/attack bomber.

For Russ and Lynn, like so many other pilots at Heber Valley Airport,  flying is simply a way of life. And these two retired airline pilots have the skills and the machines to make life here pretty good.

At Heber, Russ and Lynn are the rule rather than the exception. This small airport is home to an amazing group of  aviation enthusiasts and a most unusual collection of airplanes. If you were to  browse through the hangars you would also find such items as a MiG-15 jet fighter,a WWII T-6 Texan trainer, a Strikemaster jet fighter-bomber, a Provost jet trainer and Ed Strauchen's immaculate 1942 Boeing-Stearman biplane.

I found Strauchen in his hangar tinkering with the yellow and red Stearman's massive radial engine. Like Russ and Lynn, Ed is typical of the flyers that populate the Heber Valley Airport. Once a Navy F-4 Phantom pilot, Ed was until recently a Boeing 767 captain for a major airline. Now he's having a lot more fun. "I moved out here from back east in 1989," says Strauchen. "There wasn't much at the airport back then. 'Rustic' would be a generous description of it. The FBO did have an indoor toilet, but it was really cold."

What changed the "rustic" airport, says Strauchen, was Delta Airlines' purchase of Western Airlines. Virtually overnight, Salt Lake City became a major Delta hub. Many of the Delta pilots coming in chose to settle in nearby Park City. Heber Valley, just 15 miles to the south, had the only airport anywhere near the popular ski resort town. "That put an extra 500 pilots into this area all at once, and the airport really took off."

Now there are two kinds of people at the airport, according to Strauchen.  "There are the flying enthusiasts--people who fly just for the love of it--and another group who keep airplanes there primarily  for transportation." One look at Ed's hangar will tell you to which group he  belongs. When they decided to share their love of flying and their marvelous  collection of planes with the public, Ed and other enthusiasts recently turned Ed's hangar into the Heber Valley Air Museum.

"We had all these neat airplanes already here," Strauchen said, "and I had this big hangar. So it all just came together." The initial stimulus came from Steve Guenard, a former USAF F-106 pilot who flies for a major airline. Guenard helped Ed and Ed's wife, Myra, rebuild their Stearman, and is now restoring his own Stearman. He also owns a Piper J-3 Cub which hangs in the museum.

"Steve always wanted to have a museum here," explained Ed. "He had a lot of things from his military flying days and I had stuff from my Navy flying," said Strauchen. "But what really made the Heber Valley Aero Museum possible was the World War II guys."

The "World War II guys" were B-17 pilot Jack Wells, P-47 and P-40 pilot Harry Moyer, military glider pilot Bernice Watts and B-24 bombardier, Malcolm Macgregor. They became an integral part of the museum, bringing in two display cases full

of WWII memorabilia. Ed's and Myra's daughter Bradley, a London museum curator,  assembled the collections of displays that share Hangar One with the airplanes.

Not everything fits in the one hangar. Russ McDonald explained, "My hangar is an annex of the museum. So many people want to come see a Mustang, that it just made sense." McDonald figures he spends about 5 hours a day at the airport anyway, so he just opens his hangar to the public while he is there. Lynn Oswald's hangar housing his former Royal Laotian Air Force AT-28 Trojan, also serves as an annex of the Heber Valley Aero Museum.

Aero Museum President Ed Strauchen says that the local FBO, or fixed base operator, Wasatch Aero, is also a key part of the Heber Valley flying mix. "Since Nadim Abu-Haidar bought the company three years ago," he said, "the commercial side of the airport has really made great strides." That helps the museum.

It also helps add a lot of luster to the occasional EAA fly-in or Heber Valley Aero Museum air show. Abu-Haidar, a former Navy F-18 pilot, has his own interesting collection of planes. In addition to a fleet of new Katana and  Skyhawk trainers, Nadim brought in a state-of-the-art Edge 540 and Extra 350 aerobatic monoplane.

On a recent day the ramp was crowded with pilots, townspeople with their children, Boy Scouts and aviation groupies like me. The show started with Ed Strauchen dropping a skydiver out of his Stearman then circling the parachutist as he descended. Ed and Steve Guenard then made formation passes over the field with two Stearman biplanes in close formation, followed by aerobatic displays by Russ McDonald's silky smooth P-51 Mustang and Lynn Oswald's thundering T-28 Trojan. Nadim Abu-Haidar then dazzled the crowd with an aerobatic routine in his Edge that seemed to closely mimic a gymnastic tumbling act. Then came routines by Carl Penner's T-6 Texan, and the Strikemaster jet. Just like Oshkosh.

Like the museum itself, this show was free to the public. The pilots put on the shows for the same reason they operate the museum. "We want educate the public on aviation and aviation history," said Ed Strauchen. "And we want to share our love of flying."

A show like this is always scheduled for the annual fly-in hosted by the local EAA chapter on the first weekend after Labor Day. But they do parts of it whenever the urge to fly hits them. When any one of them takes his plane up for a ride, which happens daily, it usually turns into a show for the folks on the  ground.

So the next time you are in the Salt Lake City area, stop by the Russ McDonald Heber Valley Airport and Heber Valley Aero Museum and say hello. Heber City is a 45-minute freeway drive from Salt Lake. You can also reach it by driving northeast up into the mountains from Provo They'll all be happy to see you."

Article By John Taylor

On January 16, 2003 Ed Strauchen was tragically killed in the crash of a Yak 52 trainer. Donations in his honor may be sent to:

The Edmund R. Strauchen Memorial Fund
The Heber Valley Aero Museum
P.O. Box 680405
Park City, Utah 84068

For more information call (435) 649-0856

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Heber Valley Aero Museum
Heber, UT  84036