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Florida Man Zooms Through Air Like Superman In Squirrel Wingsuit

This is the moment a Florida man zooms through the air like Superman thanks to his Squirrel wingsuit and years of skydiving experience.

Daniel Darby, 32, from the city of DeLand in Florida is a competitive wingsuit pilot who started skydiving at the age of 18 and was BASE jumping the following year.

Daniel told Newsflash: “When I started skydiving I saw a bunch of my friends flying wingsuits and they thought it was the best thing ever. I waited a few years to try it out, but once I got the hang of it, and I got to fly by my first cloud, it was all I ever wanted to do.

Daniel Darby, 32 who is a competitive wingsuit pilot and coach from Florida, United States. (@dandarbybase/Newsflash)

“Wingsuits are not physically very hard to fly. There’s not a ton of pressure that you have to resist, they are fairly pressurised so they help hold you in place. But in order to reach the top speed your suit is capable of, you do need to push quite a bit.

“There’s definitely a learning curve when first flying a wingsuit, and you have to have 200 skydives before you can start, so that’s usually about one year of active/casual skydiving. You could do it faster, but that’s about average.

“I love to fly everywhere! Cliffs, helicopters, airplanes, paragliders – I want to jump off of it all! There are still a few ‘dream jump’ type locations in Italy, France, and Switzerland, but pretty much anywhere there’s a mountain, I want to fly down it.”

Daniel Darby, 32 who is a competitive wingsuit pilot and coach from Florida, United States. ( @dandarbybase/Newsflash)

Daniel said: “There are many different models of wingsuit, some go really fast, some start flying in very little altitude, some are great for barrel rolls and flying with friends. I tend to want to fly whatever suit is the fastest, that’s where I feel the best.

“I almost always fly in the Squirrel C-race. It’s a competition suit that is the fastest in the world. The parachute systems we use are designed with wingsuiting in mind, the container is extra long so we don’t have to reach back as much when it’s time to open the parachute, and the parachute itself is designed with the physics of being opened behind a wingsuit in mind.”

Daniel, who teaches skydiving and wingsuiting full time, told Newsflash: “Many wingsuiters wear a GPS tracker so we can see on a graph how fast or far we can fly. We later take that information and overlay it on a map to see where we can safely jump, we tend to be pretty analytical and data driven.

Daniel Darby, 32 who is a competitive wingsuit pilot and coach from Florida, United States. (@dandarbybase/Newsflash)

“I like to share my experiences with the world! Being able to fly is pretty special, and I think that there’s some misunderstanding surrounding these sports, and I just want to be a positive ambassador showing the general public that we’re not all crazy people, we just want to have a good time.”

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