1) Write article.
2) Send it in to magazine (one at a time, wait for rejection before sending to another magazine)
3) Cash check that arrives months after magazine is published.
Sound simple? (Or simple minded.) Yes (to both). But it will work if you write something that really fits the magazine, and has not been beaten to death. Then you can talk with the editor about other projects. I have done this several times, and have got lucky with a few magazines. Now I work mostly for one magazine, have a relationship that works for both of us.
The Internet allows us all to publish. So write away and publish on your own! (I'm at
www.skygod.com) Then maybe move up to 'real' sites like AvWeb. A furloughed airline pilot writes really good stuff for Salon.com in an 'ask the pilot' column. Like this guy, you can make your own space for your words.
What I am trying to say, is that you do not need an English degree (my last English lessons were when I was 15) or special publishing inside contacts (I have never even met my editors). Write. Send. Repeat.
If you want to work full-time, then you will need to do more. But even then, having a few articles in print will be a good start. Good luck. I look forward to reading great adventures . . .
"Feathers shall raise men even as they do birds, toward heaven;
that is by letter written with their quills."
— Leonardo da Vinci
"Thousands of volumes have been written about aviation, but we do not automatically have thousands of true and special friends in their authors. That rare writer who comes alive on a page does it by giving of himself, by writing of meanings, and not just of fact or of things that have happened to him. The writers of flight who have done this are usually found together in a special section on private bookshelves."
— Richard Bach, 'The Pleasure of Their Company,' in 'Flying' magazine, April 1968.
"Or like a poet woo the moon,
Riding an armchair for my steed,
And with a flashing pen harpoon
Terrific metaphors of speed."
— Roy Campbell, 'The Festivals of Flight'