k5083 wrote:
Texas certainly isn't the west coast, and as phrased, the original question's premise is dubious. However, if it said "the west coast and Texas," it would be closer to true.
Weather and money are certainly factors. But the striking thing about the northeast is that even considering the indifferent weather, the Boston-NY-DC axis has fewer warbird owners than any other part of the country with a similar number of high-net-worth individuals.
Fund traders, i-bankers, dot-com and biotech CEOs, lobbyists - these are guys with high-eight, nine, and even ten-figure net worths. A Mustang would be pocket change for many of them. But, they don't own a Mustang, or even a Lancair. There is a cultural element at work. The big-money toys here are houses by the shore, and boats; lots of boats. Not so much planes.
Could be the weather in part, but I think it's also the time -- we have a harder-working, more obsessive Type-A kind of rich dude here than I see in Texas or Cali. Not as much time to learn to fly, let alone stay proficient in high performance aircraft. Also we have a greater number of, and more tightly clustered, major airports and fewer general aviation friendly airports close at hand. This is "small sky country."
August
There have been a few owners from the Cultural/Political Central area that have owned warbirds but kept them in other places, such as Stallion 51 in FL.
It isn't easy as you mention operating Warbirds or even GA aircraft in that busy airspace.
I guess thats ok with the Feds but hurts GA Future.