Soaring above the pack
Nick Macy has taken a childhood passion and turned it into an national championship winning pastime
H&N Regional Editor
When Nick
Macy talks about racing so fast that
he’s flying, he’s not kidding.
Macy’s racing vehicle is an
AT-6, a single-engine World War II era
airplane nicknamed the “pilot maker”
because of the plane’s role in preparing
military pilots for combat.
His 1949 plane, which he named
Six-Cat, has been in the Macy family
since 1966. That’s the year his father,
Paul, bought Macy’s Flying Service, the
Newell-based crop duster airplane
service.
“I started flying with my dad
when I was real little,” says the
50-year-old Macy. “I couldn’t reach the
pedals.”
For the past 20 years, Macy
has put the pedal to the metal. He and
Six-Cat, which was retooled for speed,
are regulars at the annual Reno Air
Races each September. This past year
Macy won his fourth national
championship in the AT-6 division.
“I get all the glory but the
crew does all the work,” he says of
winning,
crediting crew chief Gary Hemphill,
cousin Tom Macy and other Tulelake Basin
family members and friends who donate
time and skills. “They’re helping me
achieve. It’s their victory, too. It’s a
team effort.”
Macy — who previously won top
honors in 1999, 2000 and 2003 — now has
the second most wins in the AT-6
division. In this year’s race, which as
always had six other finalists, Macy
literally flew away from the field,
covering the five-mile circular course
in about a minute and 17 seconds. He had
an average air speed of nearly 236 mph,
6 mph faster than the second-place
finisher.
“It’s kind of my hobby and I
enjoy it,” he says. “I’m very much
blessed to be doing something like
this.”
Macy’s desire to fly started
as a small boy, and so did his dream of
winning at Reno, which he terms the
“grand-daddy” of airplane races.
“I went to my first race at
age 10 and I fell in love with it. I
dreamed of doing it and winning, and I
am,” he says.
His wife, Beth, admits
the races are difficult for her to watch
because planes fly in tight formations
at high speeds. The element of danger is
omnipresent. She may have reason for
future concerns. Their daughter,
Marilyn, 13, and sons, Nolan, 16, and
Gus, 8, have shown an interest in
flying.
“There might be somebody else
to carry it on,” Macy says.
The Reno air races are a
family affair, involving relatives,
Tulelake Basin friends and others Macy
met while earning a degree in
agricultural science-pest management at
the University of Nevada at Reno.
Macy earned his pilot’s
license at age 18. After college, he
spent 20 years flying a crop duster. In
more recent years he’s been managing the
company, “so I really savor the chance
to fly at Reno.”
During an average year, the
company’s three crop duster pilots may
put in 600 to 700 hours applying
herbicides and fungicides on fields
growing potatoes, onions, alfalfa, small
grains, rice and peppermint.
The flying area focuses on the
Klamath Basin, but reaches north into
Southern Oregon, east to Nevada and
south to Susanville, Calif.
“Good pilots seem to make it
look easy,” Macy says. “It’s not a very
easy job. We have a lot of environmental
pressures, a lot of restrictions. We’re
out there
to help the farmer raise a better crop.
It’s nice to go out there and get the
job done.”
Fine-tuning
Macy also makes racing — his
event takes less than 80 seconds — look
easy, but most people aren’t aware of
the months spent fine-tuning the plane
and seeking ways to gain speed.
“It’s like a stock car race,”
he explains. “We can’t modify the wing
span, we can’t change anything
structurally on the plane. The engine
has to be stock.”
Over the years, Macy and his
crew have reduced Six-Pack’s weight —
the 35-foot long plane has a 42-foot
wing span and
weighs about 3,800 pounds — and
increased its speed 20 to 25 mph. He
says the current cost for a “good, fast
and clean” AT-6 is about $180,000.
“Before the race we’re doing a
lot of test flying ... different
variations to see if we can get more
speed,” Macy says, noting there are
other challenges. “I have to be mentally
prepared as much as anything else.”
He loves flying, and has no
plans to retire.
The struggle to stay No. 1
“Every year is a struggle to
stay in the No. 1 spot. There’s a lot of
good airplanes, a lot of good pilots,”
Macy says. “As I get older I enjoy it
more. As long as I enjoy (competing) I
would like to continue. I think it comes
to capabilities, and enjoying it for
what it is.”