Twenty-eight year old Erik Hokuf is considered something of a prodigy in the world of warbird restoration. His remarkable work on a couple of rare Curtiss P-40K Warhawks garnered him respect as well as awards. At 2006’s EAA AirVenture show in Oshkosh, Wisconsin, one of Hokuf’s P-40s won Grand Champion Warbird. The two aircraft belong to businessman Ron Fagen, who has the same devotion to authentic restoration methods as Hokuf. Air & Space’s Bettina Chavanne spoke with Hokuf from his home base in Granite Falls, Minnesota, where his restoration company, Warhawks, Inc., is based.
A & S: Why do you think people are so interested in how young you are? Have you met any other people of your generation who are as avid about warbirds as you are?
Hokuf: That’s the first question I get when people come in [to Warhawks Inc.]. I was born in 1979. There aren’t many people my age actually restoring airplanes, although there are plenty of enthusiasts.
A & S: How did you become interested in warbirds?
Hokuf: I grew up on a farm in Minnesota. My dad was an industrial arts teacher and I had three brothers. Three of the four of us are now in aviation, and my dad surprisingly had nothing do with it. Neither did mom. No one in the family was involved in airplanes or aviation. It actually started with 4-H [the National 4-H Council is a national youth leadership organization]. One of the projects we had involved aerospace. You could build model rockets, plastic models, and radio-controlled airplanes. That’s what really got us interested in aviation.
My oldest brother, Shawn [age 35], went to the United States Air Force Academy. I was in junior high school when he was at the Academy, so that served as inspiration for me too. He got his pilot’s license when he was 17, and I was always tagging along. I got to ride in the back seat when he was working on his instrument rating. He’s an airline pilot for SkyWest now.
My younger brother’s an airplane mechanic for Bemidji Aviation. He still lives in Bemidji, Minnesota. The farm where I grew up is halfway between Bemidji and the Red Lake Indian Reservation, where my dad taught for years. My younger brother sort of followed what I was doing. I was so interested in airplanes and aviation by the time I got to high school that I figured out how to get a job at the airport as a mechanic the summer before my senior year in high school. I was a mechanic’s apprentice at the time. Then I worked on the job-training program in high school, so the second half of the school day I spent out at the airport getting high school credit and working toward my airframe & powerplant license. Very few people go that route today because it takes 30 months of on-the-job experience before you qualify. Then you take the same FAA test that technical school students do. I got my A&P license when I was 20, and at that time already had three years of experience.
A & S: How did you become involved with this P-40K Restoration project in particular?
Hokuf: After working for Bemidji Aviation, I worked for a charter company in Minneapolis for about four years. While I was there, I worked with Ron Fagen’s two nephews. That’s just one of my many connections to Ron. I knew of him because both of his sons went to college at Bemidji State University. Evan, Ron’s youngest son, is only two days younger than me. I used to see him up at Bemidji Aviation, when Ron would fly his P-51 Mustang up there. In an even stranger twist of fate, my parents actually grew up about 10 miles away from Granite Falls, so Ron knows my dad’s cousins and family.
I always knew about Ron and about his airplanes. When I was working with his nephews, I kept bugging them to tell their uncle that he needed to hire a new mechanic. One day, Chris actually did say, “Ron, you’ve got to hire this guy.” Then I didn’t hear anything for six months. One morning, a 6:00 a.m. call came in from Ron’s office. I was working second shift at the time. Finally, Ron said, “Come on out [to his headquarters in Granite Falls].”
A & S: Do you have any flying heroes?
Hokuf: I think that [Charles] Lindbergh is somebody I definitely look up to. His accomplishment, what he did at that time…it was very cool. As far as World War II aviation, a couple of books I can remember reading in high school…Robert Johnson’s Thunderbolt and Pappy Boyington’s book about the Black Sheep Squadron.


Comments
Very interesting story I still have not looked at all the rest of the pages. I was also interested in Charles Lindberg and Pappy Boyington's book about the Black Sheep Squadron and tried to watch most of his movies. My Dad Syvert Rodi got me interested in flying when I was about 10 years old or less riding with him to the airport while he took his flight training and then finally bought his own Piper J-3 Cub. The first one he smashed up trying to avoid hitting the powerline while taking off on an unknown field. The 2nd J-3 is a 1946 model with the metal spar in which I had restored at Madison,MN. And now plan on selling it as I hardly ever fly it anymore. I ended up getting all my rateings on the GI bill then ended up flying as a flight instructor at Kundert Aviation in Fargo, N.D. in 1966 then was hired to be co-pilot on Shultz & Lindsey Lear Jet so flew that for two years before they sold it. I really enjoyed flying at 41,000 feet most of the time. My Dad passed away in 1996 at 94 & half years old and he took off and landed at Starbuck,MN. that 4th of JUly weekend by himself while I was with him so he really enjoyed flying and Charles Lindberg was the one to get him interested also and always watched the Black Sheep Squadron. Sherlen Rodi Spicer, MN. 56288
Posted by Sherlen Rodi on May 6,2008 | 01:48PM
Wow this is an awsome story. The cool thing about it is that Im from Marsall, MN and Graduated at Lake Area Techs Aviation Maintenance program With an A&P license 2 weeks ago and we have a pitcure at the hanger with Ron Fagen and Gary Beck with their world war II aircrafts. My graduating class got to see their operation in Wapaton, ND. Everytime I drive to Granite Falls I look over and see Ron's Hanger dreaming someday to work their. Thanks for the Story Erik and A&S. PS.(Ron) Ever looking for a A&P Mechanic Im your guy (507)-828-0175
Posted by Matthew Maertens on May 26,2009 | 10:22AM