SUMMARY What does it take to fly a 1965 Cessna 150 across the country to compete against the best collegiate aviators in the nation — and do it with a smile on your face? Ask the California Aeronautical University Flight Team. In this episode, host Shawn Staerker sits down with Melissa Johnston, CAU's Director of Aviation Operations and flight team coach, along with team members Jackson Kaspar (Safety Officer and newly minted CFI) and Sebastian Bernal (Alumni & Community Outreach). Together, they trace the team's journey from a scrappy, student-motivated startup to a nationally recognized program earning sportsmanship awards four years running and eyeing a top-10 finish at NIFA Nationals. They cover what it's like to practice before class, study weather charts for cross-country VFR legs in a 150, build real friendships in a competition van, and why the Lightspeed Zulu 3 makes 26 hours of flying in three days a whole lot more survivable. Plus — dream aircraft, dream destinations, and the great in-flight snack debate. This one is for every young aviator who has ever wondered whether joining the team is worth the extra effort. Spoiler: it is. KEY POINTS The Flight Team's Origin Story The CAU flight team was built from the ground up by students and one determined staff member. The university was initially uncertain — "What do you mean there's a flight team that competes against other universities?" — but early competition success and the program's networking value quickly made believers out of everyone. What NIFA Is and Why It Matters NIFA — the National Intercollegiate Flying Association — is the NCAA of collegiate aviation. With roughly 80 member teams across nine or ten regions nationwide, it's the proving ground where the airlines come to find their next generation of pilots. CAU competes in Region 2 alongside San Jose State University, Embry Riddle Aeronautical University (Prescott), and Mount San Antonio College. The Arc of Growth CAU's trajectory on the national stage tells the story clearly: 20th place at their first NIFA Nationals in 2022, up to 15th in 2023, a first-place landing competition finish, and four consecutive regional Sportsmanship Awards. Most recently, the team claimed its first-ever regional safety award — a milestone that reflects how deliberately this program has been built. The Day-to-Day Commitment Flight team membership means early morning flight practices, late-night ground event sessions, and fitting schoolwork into whatever gaps remain. Sebastian's approach: a detailed agenda, followed to the letter. Jackson's: jump in with both feet in week three and don't look back. Little Red — The Team's 1965 Cessna 150 "Little Red" is a 1965 straight-tail Cessna 150, Juliet model, and one of only two aircraft in the team's fleet. She's flown across the country to Oshkosh and back, competed at regionals (Jackson took second in the Power Off 180 in her), and serves as the team's unofficial mascot and biggest marketing asset. The Johnson Bar flaps are a feature, not a bug. The Lightspeed Partnership The relationship with Lightspeed Aviation started at Oshkosh AirVenture, when team captain Matt Anderson and co-captain James Lopez struck up a conversation with Lightspeed's president — with Little Red as the conversation starter. The partnership grew from there into a full sponsorship, with the Zulu 3 headset now a cornerstone of the team's cross-country capability. Key benefit: active noise reduction (ANR) in a cramped, loud, 60-year-old Cessna is not a luxury — it's a game changer. The Recording Capability Melissa and Jackson both highlighted the Lightspeed Zulu 3's flight recording capability as an untapped training tool — particularly valuable in complex airspaces like San Diego and Phoenix, where students can review ATC communications after the fact and identify exactly where things got confusing. Fundraising The team raises funds through an annual fly-in (held at L62 Buttonwillow Airport), door-to-door outreach, cross-country flyer drops at FBOs, raffle prizes, and a beloved campus tradition: Pie Your CFI. A nonprofit, the Aero Foundation, serves as the team's primary vehicle for donations. Additionally, proceeds from Plum Crazy pilot Vicki Benzing's merchandise go directly to the team. The Future of Aviation — and This Team All three guests agree: a pilot boom is coming. Aircraft are on order, airlines are building their fleets, and the industry will need trained, degree-holding aviators to fill the seats. Melissa's vision for the team: top 10 at Nationals. Jackson's: a national championship — maybe not in three years, but it's coming. Safety Culture Jackson serves as the team's Safety Officer and makes clear that the team's safety culture is a group effort, not a title. Sebastian describes the heightened awareness flight team members bring to every preflight and every uncontrolled field. Melissa draws the line clearly on competition days: the hotel is for fun; the ramp is for focus. TIMESTAMPS Time Chapter 0:00 Cold Open — Quote Mash-Up Teaser ~0:20 Opening — Host Shawn Staerker ~1:45 Interview Begins — How the CAU Flight Team Got Started (Melissa Johnston) ~3:00 Why Sebastian Joined — Finding His People at Nationals ~4:30 Why Jackson Joined — Decided Before He Even Enrolled ~5:30 The Coach's Perspective — Daily Life on the Flight Team (Melissa) ~7:30 The Student's Perspective — Practice, Commitment, and Early Mornings (Sebastian) ~8:40 Building Team Bonds — Competition as a Community (Jackson) ~10:45 The Operations Challenge — Managing a Flight Team Alongside Full University Duties (Melissa) ~13:00 What Is NIFA? — Breaking Down the National Intercollegiate Flying Association (Jackson) ~14:50 Traveling with the Team — Van Rides, Plane Rides, and Roswell Nachos ~17:45 The Red Baron Sportsmanship Award — What It Takes to Win It Repeatedly (Melissa) ~20:10 Flying Little Red — The 1965 Cessna 150 Experience (Jackson & Sebastian) ~23:00 The Lightspeed Aviation Partnership — How It Started at Oshkosh (Melissa) ~24:55 The Zulu 3 in Action — ANR, Comfort, and 26 Hours Across the Country (Jackson & Sebastian) ~27:30 The Recording Capability — A New Training Tool for Student Pilots (Melissa & Jackson) ~29:25 Fundraising — Fly-Ins, Poker Runs, Pie Your CFI, and Plum Crazy (All) ~34:40 Academics Meets Competition — How Classroom Skills Transfer to the Flight Line ~37:40 The Future of Aviation — Pilot Boom, Degree Value, and Pathway Programs ~40:15 The Flight Team in Three to Five Years — Top 10 and Beyond ~42:25 Safety vs. Competitiveness — Building a Culture That Does Both ~46:25 The Fun Stuff — In-Flight Snacks, Dream Aircraft, and Dream Destinations ~55:00 Closing — Host Shawn Staerker / Lightspeed Aviation Thank-You / CTA LINKS California Aeronautical University Website: caleroaviation.edu (confirm current URL before publishing) CAU Flight Team — https://www.instagram.com/cauflightteam/ NIFA — National Intercollegiate Flying Association Website: nifa.aero Lightspeed Aviation — Presenting Sponsor Website: lightspeedaviation.com Plum Crazy / Vicki Benzing Website: https://www.vickybenzing.com ArtCraft Paint—Website: https://artcraftpaint.com/ AviNaition USA—Website: https://www.avinationusa.com/