People

The People Behind the Operation

Volunteers. Pilots. Builders.

Brazos River Soaring Association runs on the donated time of pilots, instructors, mechanics, and members who believe that the next generation of aviators deserves a way in. Nobody here draws a paycheck for this. Everybody here shows up because they want to. These are the people you’ll meet on the field.

2Co-Founders
100%Volunteer Instructors
$0Paid Staff
AllSkill Levels Welcome
The Co-Founders

Two pilots who decided this should exist.

Brazos River Soaring Association was co-founded by Dick Keyt and Ray Lewis — two longtime pilots and aircraft builders who believed North Texas needed a place where young people could discover gliding without a five-figure barrier to entry. Everything on this site — the fleet, the field, the curriculum, the certificates — exists because they made it exist.

DK
Dick Keyt
Co-Founder · A&P Mechanic · Hangar Steward
[PLACEHOLDER — replace with Dick’s actual bio.] A career in experimental aviation and aircraft restoration. Hangar at 0TX1 in Granbury houses several of the airframes the Build curriculum trains on, including the Laister LP-49 suspended overhead and the donated ASK 13 “Woodstock” project. Teaches the machine shop and structural certs. The person who decided BRSA should have a real shop, not just a flight line.
RL
Ray Lewis
Co-Founder · Certified Flight Instructor
[PLACEHOLDER — replace with Ray’s actual bio.] Decades in the cockpit and the right seat. The CFI signature on most of the Soar certificates. Teaches ground school and the cockpit progression from first flight to cross-country. The person who decided BRSA should be a school, not just a club.
The next generation of pilots doesn’t need another expensive flight school. They need a hangar, a tow plane, a grass strip, and somebody who’ll teach them for free. The founding idea behind BRSA
Flight Instructors

Certified. Volunteer. On the field.

Every flight in the Soar discipline is signed off by a certified flight instructor. Every instructor on this list holds an active FAA CFI rating for gliders and volunteers their time at BRSA. Below are the instructors currently active on our flight roster.

RL
Ray Lewis
CFI · Glider
Primary flight instructor and co-founder. Teaches the full Soar progression from first flight to cross-country planning. Signature appears on most of the achievement certificates the club has issued.
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[Instructor Name]
CFI · Glider
[PLACEHOLDER — add additional CFIs here as they join the volunteer roster. Each instructor entry should include name, ratings, and a one-paragraph bio describing their specialty within the Soar progression.]
Shop & Field Crew

A&P mechanics. Crew chiefs. Volunteers.

The Build discipline runs on the people who know how to weld, machine, cover, finish, and rig an aircraft. The Learn discipline runs on the crew chiefs who teach ground operations every weekend. These are the people who keep the fleet airworthy and the field running.

DK
Dick Keyt
A&P Mechanic · Build Instructor
Leads the Build curriculum from his hangar at 0TX1. Teaches wood structure, machine shop, fabric work, and the airframe restoration projects that the curriculum is built around.
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[Crew Chief Name]
Crew Chief · Learn Instructor
[PLACEHOLDER — add crew chiefs and field volunteers here. These are the people who teach wing running, rope tending, launch directing, and the ground operations side of the Learn discipline.]
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[Volunteer Name]
Field Volunteer
[PLACEHOLDER — add additional shop and field volunteers here, including tow pilots, retrieve drivers, and anyone with regular field responsibilities.]
The Membership

Pilots. Students. Future Pilots.

Beyond the instructors and the shop crew, BRSA has a working membership — students at every stage of the Learn / Build / Soar progression, certified pilots who came up through the program, and a growing list of young people who walked onto the field one weekend and decided to keep coming back.

Students in Training

Young aviators currently working through the Learn, Build, and Soar disciplines. Some are months from their first solo. Others are still earning their ground crew certificates. All of them are why the operation exists.

Active Pilots

Members who completed the program, earned their FAA Private Pilot Glider certificate, and stayed to give back. Most of the volunteer crew on any given flight day came up this way.

Supporters & Mentors

Members who don’t fly anymore, or never did — but who write checks, donate materials, drive the retrieve car, or just show up to spectate and help launch. The operation runs on this group as much as on the pilots.

The Culture

What kind of place this actually is.

BRSA is a working airfield, not a flight school with a brochure. The people here are friendly, but the work is real. The instruction is free, but the standards are not negotiable. The atmosphere is informal, but the safety culture is not. If you’re looking for a place where aviation is taken seriously by people who love it — you’ll fit right in.

The unwritten rule

Everybody pitches in. The student who just earned a wing-runner cert helps run wings. The instructor who just landed pushes the glider back to the line. The pilot who isn’t flying today helps somebody else fly. Nobody stands around watching while others work.

Join the Team

Three ways to be part of this.

You don’t need to be a pilot to be part of BRSA. The operation needs people at every skill level — and supporters who want to see the next generation in the air without paying five figures for the privilege.

Fly

Start with a first flight. Walk onto the field and meet the crew. The Soar progression is open to anyone, no experience required.

Plan Your First Visit

Volunteer

Have a skill the operation needs? Welding, machining, fabric work, tow piloting, retrieve driving — we can use you. Reach out and we’ll find a fit.

Get Involved

Support

Gliders, hangars, and tow planes all cost money to maintain. Tax-deductible donations keep the fleet flying and the curriculum free for students.

Become a Sponsor