
And closer than you think. No cape, no engine - a wing, a mentor, and a first step most people never take. This is how you take it.
The sky stops being a ceiling and becomes terrain.
For a few minutes the noise goes quiet and it's just you, a wing, and a line through the air. That feeling is the whole sport. Everything we build - the coaching, the guides, the community - exists to get you there safely and keep you progressing.
You don't arrive a natural. You arrive current, curious and coachable. We handle the rest.


You don't need to be fearless. You need a current licence, the right people, and a first step.
Wingsuit flight starts on canopy. Solid skydiving currency and canopy skills come first - here's the honest pre-course checklist.
Read the checklist →Your first flight with a vetted coach. The single most important decision you'll make - choose on quality, never price.
Find a coach →Body position, currency, the unglamorous basics. Build the right habits from flight one.
Field notes →Get into the network. Ask questions, watch debriefs, and find people flying where you want to be.
Find an event →
WS1 is survival. Now you build the pilot - repeatable, measurable, honest.
WS1 is survival; WS2 is competency. Most students fail the transition the same way - and it's avoidable.
Read why →Flocking, acro, XRW or performance - choose a direction and find a coach who lives it.
Browse coaches →Structured camps beat scattered jumps. Progressive coaching, matched groups, honest debriefs.
See camps →Turn vague 'fly better' into numbers. Use the guides and a coach to track real progression.
Get the framework →
Go deeper, not just bigger. The thinking that separates good pilots from safe ones.
Terrain reading, decision-making and the quiet side of risk - the work most pilots never slow down for.
On the podcast →Run flocking jumps, mentor newer pilots, or become a vetted coach in the directory.
Join the directory →Progressive bigway camps and the annual gathering. Fly with the best in the network.
Find a bigway →Contribute to field notes, the podcast and the standards that move the whole sport forward.
Get involved →