First of all, I'm bound to forget something. The
great thing about this board is plenty of people will point out things I missed and you'll end up with a really good picture of what's goin' on.
Don't rule out the Air Force Reserve (AFRES), either. It's pretty much the same thing as the Guard except the Reserve is Federal and the Guard is state. Don't worry about the differences just yet, it's not important at this stage of the game.
I've been in both the Guard and Reserve for 17+ years, now. It is definitely worth investing your time in.
At Fort Worth NAS, formerly Carswell AFB, there is the Air Guard C-130 wing and AFRES F-16 wing. Look in your phone book for Air National Guard and Air Force Reserve. In addition to the previously mentioned goang.com site try
www.afrc.af.mil
Yes, the Guard and Reserve pay. There is no difference in pay rates between the two. The pay is exactly what you'd make as an Active Duty member at your rank/time in service but prorated daily. The "drill" pay for each month's weekend is figured a little differently. It is base pay plus flight pay times two for each of the days. In other words you get four days pay for two days. It doesn't figure in any of the housing or subsistence allowances you'd get with Active Duty pay. Also, fliers get "Additional Flying Training Periods," also known as "AFTPs" or simply "TPs." These pay the same as your drill pay. A member can also get active duty days through the unit for deployments or projects at the base. As a newbie, back from training you'll get some "seasoning days." Those are active duty days so that you're around full-time and can be brought up to speed in the aircraft/mission. The number of days depends on the aircraft/mission. Oh, and you get a retirement, too. It's based solely on the number of days you worked. Those days count as "points" and are prorated against an active duty retirement as a percentage. 20 years of active duty @ 365 days a year is 7300 points. If you retired with 3,650 points (nice easy number) you'd get 1/2 the retirement an active duty person at your rank would draw. You don't start drawing it until age 60 but it beats a poke in the butt with a sharp stick.
I know that's a lot of info for right now. Believe me, it's worth it. The money's good and almost all of the part-time pilots fly for the airlines, so you'll have all sorts of connections, if that's what you want to do. By the time you're ready to apply the current state of affairs in the airline world might be finally over.
Best of luck. Be patient and if it's really what you want to do
DON'T give up. Woody Allen said 90% of success is showing up. If you really want it just keep showing up. It'll happen for you.
Garland, TX