Antelope Valley Native living all of his Dreams


[info]This story originally appeared in AeroTech News March 21, 2014[/info]

Jacob Nelson - AeroTech News - Antelope Valley Native Living all of his dreams
Jacob Nelson – AeroTech News – Antelope Valley Native Living all of his dreams

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Linda KC Reynolds
Aerotech News & Review

It doesn’t matter if his life is up in the air or firmly planted on a stage, Jacob Nelson, 21, is living the dream; both of them- and working towards his third.

A native of the Antelope Valley (AV), located in the Mojave Desert, Calif., Nelson has always wanted to become a pilot. Now, he is a Certified Flight Instructor, working over the skies of the AV and sharing airspace with Richard Branson’s Virgin Galactic among other history makers. “Growing up here in the Valley was absolutely incredible, it was like having your own personal airshow every day!”

He also grew up with a passion for music – a passion which he still pursues today.      Spending his formative years in Lake Elizabeth, after T-Ball practice, Nelson and his team mates would go to the Rock Inn at Lake Hughes for lunch.  “It was great; all you could eat spaghetti and sodas for five dollars, plus they had a karaoke lady who would let us sing.” It was there that five year-old Nelson first picked up a microphone. He was hooked; he knew he wanted to be a singer.

“Jake has been singing before he could talk,” says his mother, Shawna. “When Jake was a baby and fussy, all I had to do was put on Wynonna’s (Judd) music and he would stop fussing and start smiling and humming. When he was around three, he came sliding into the kitchen singing one of Wynonna’s songs and announced to all present, ‘I’m going to marry Wynonna!’  Then he turned right around and ran back down the hallway.”  If you listen closely, you can hear Wynonna’s influence in his music.

Fortunately, his parents have always encouraged him to dream big and to pursue his passions, not just dream them. “We’ve always told Jake, if you want to do something, do it with passion and give it 150 percent,” said Shawna. “Like Jake says, do what you love, love what you do and it never feels like you’re working.” He claims he gets his talent from his father, Patrick, who is always singing.

Several years ago, Nelson, 10, was asked by Assemblywoman Sharon Runner to sing at a “Support the Troops Rally.” His family took him out to Wing and a Prayer in East Lancaster to rehearse.  As they were leaving a group of young test pilots and engineers from Edwards Air Force Base walked in. Fascinated with flight or anything to do with airplanes, Nelson told his parents he wanted to sing for them. “They were pretty happy since they just received their call signs that day,” said Nelson. “I sang Courtesy of the Red, White and Blue, by Toby Keith and by the end of the night, I was riding on their shoulders.” The pilots gave him a call sign, “Little Nest” because, the eagle rises from the little nest.

His new friends came to the performance. Soon after that, USAF captains Chris and Julie Elenbaum arranged for Nelson to take a ride in a Cessna through the Edwards Aero Club and the EAA Young Eagles program.  “Up in the air, looking over my Antelope Valley, right then and there, I knew I truly wanted to be a pilot. Hook, line and sinker. It was a defining moment in young Jake’s life,” laughs Nelson.

The second time Nelson flew with Cpt. Chris Elenbaum, he flew right seat. “When I handed over the aircraft controls to Jake, he was a natural. He practiced a few maneuvers, flew over his house and lined up for approaches- his grin was ear to ear.  And, even though his singing career has taken off, he has had that laser beam focus on his flying education,” says Lt. Col. Elenbaum who now works as Materiel Leader within the  Space Based Infrared Systems program at Los Angeles AFB.

The Elenbaums mentored him by suggesting what schools to apply to, news to watch and classes to take. In 2009 Jacob received the David P. Cooley Innovation Scholarship award. “They helped mold me into the man I am today.”  At 18, Nelson was the first in his class to solo at Phoenix-Mesa Gateway airport in Arizona. “It was October 10th, in 2010 at 10:00 am.”

Soon to be graduating from Arizona State University with a Aeronautical Management  Technology Degree with a concentration in professional flight,  he is a flight instructor CFII-MEI at Edwards Air Force Base Aero Club and works with a multitude of clients.

“Talk about a full-circle story.  I took my first flight in N104ED through the Edwards Aero Club. I had my first revenue flight as an instructor pilot in the same bird- It’s meant to be!” He has also traveled the country speaking to the FAA, Congress and the Air Line Pilots Association.

Since then, Nelson has met the Judds, still sings in front of thousands at the National Finals Rodeo in Las Vegas, the RAM PRCA CA Circuit Finals Rodeo in Lancaster, Calif., and tours California with his band, Jacob Nelson and the Tone Wranglers. “We were so honored to open for Tracy Lawrence last September,” said Nelson.

“Yes, people often say Jacob is so lucky. Yes, he is very fortunate, very blessed,” explains his mother, “but make no mistake about it, it was all him. We (his parents) don’t fly airplanes – that’s all Jake. He set his goals and he has worked extremely hard to reach those goals. He had to make choices, being a teenager and college student – some choices were tough. When he is teaching someone to fly, he knows he is molding a new pilot. If he is singing in front of two people or ten thousand he is passionate and giving it his all.”

Working towards his third goal, Nelson is focused on becoming a Captain for Southwest Airlines. “I have studied them- their financials, management, maintenance, their employees… Everyone there seems to respect the company and it shows. I think we would make a perfect fit.”

Jacob Nelson and the Tone Wranglers performed for the LA County Airshow at JetHawk stadium in Lancaster, Calif., March 21, hosted by the world famous Blue Angels. The concert benefited the Flight Test Historical Foundation at Edwards Air Force Base.


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