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← Back to 2018

Spirit in the sky

by Sarah Holden
Jordan Heil, 29, of Lexington, completes a preflight inspection before a morning lesson at Mount Sterling-Montgomery County Airport.
It’s 8 a.m. and the Mt. Sterling landscape stretches for miles before the horizon. The sun streams in the cockpit windows as pilot Devean Teasley, 25, leans forward to adjust the controls and turns to the flight student next to him to make sure he’s completed the pre-flight inspection checklist properly.
 
“It’s close to as being a bird, I think, as possible,”  says Jordan Heil, 29, of Louisville. “I think I forget about everything else. Flying is pretty awesome.”
 
He has been taking lessons at the Mount Sterling-Montgomery County Airport with Devean for more than six months.
 
The airport is managed by Kentucky Airmotive, Inc., a airport management company owned by Daniel and Lisa Hill. They purchased the company in 1992 from Danny’s father, pilot Ronald Hill, 80, a Mt. Sterling resident for more than 40 years.
 
Under Danny’s management, a runway expansion was completed, opening up the possibility to serve larger aircraft and fulfill a vision for growth.
 
“It started off small and we just kept growing it and doing more things and hiring more people,” Danny says.
 
Flight school, passenger and freight charter service, avionics repair, aircraft maintenance, aircraft leasing, contract fueling, aerial photography, airplane storage and a “call when needed” contract with the U.S. Forest Service and Kentucky Division of Forestry are among the many services offered by Kentucky Airmotive.
 
“I’m really proud of Danny for making it the airport that it is,” says Lisa, who handles all the company’s finances.
 
While much of the team goes about their daily tasks independently, a spirit of camaraderie can be felt at the airport.
 
Jay Jones, a flight line attendant and former Air Evac Lifeteam pilot at the airport, has a simple explanation as to why he loves being there.
 
“We are like family,” he says. “Anywhere else I’ve ever been, there’s been a small percentage of people that don’t want to get along with other people, or they don’t want to do their job and consequently other people have to chip in. It’s not like that here. Everybody works together. Pulling for a common cause.”
The team pushes a plane back into the maintenance hangar for service and repairs.
After each flight lesson, students and pilots complete an aircraft logbook, recording significant information about the flight.
Mike Goss, aircraft mechanic, works on safety wiring of the carburetor drain on a Cessna 172 airplane in the maintenance hangar at the airport.
Ronald Hill, 80, a resident of Mt. Sterling for more than 40 years, started Kentucky Airmotive, a company responsible for managing airport operations, in 1972. Ron sold the company to his son, Daniel Hill, in 1992 but has had an active presence at the airport since that time.
Flight student, Andrew Prothro, 37, and pilot Matthew Simpson, 28, prepare for take-off during a flight lesson.
View from the air over downtown Mt. Sterling.
Flight line attendant Jay Jones, 69, pushes a plane back into the hangar at the end of the day. Jay performs duties related to moving, parking and servicing aircraft, including fueling, washing and preparing planes for lessons.
Ron Hill, father of Danny Hill and former owner of Kentucky Airmotive, in his workshop at the airport.
Devean Teasley, 25, a pilot and flight instructor at Mount Sterling-Montgomery County Airport, took his first flight lesson there at age 14.

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