| FEATHER | A piece of flying equipment, naturally |
| OWING | Due to have no flying equipment (5) |
| JETPACK | Flying equipment worn on the back |
| TEAM | Old word for a brood of animals that is used to mean a set of draught horses working together; a co-operative unit of athletes; a squad; or, a string of flying ducks (4) |
| WEDGE | Style of shoe with a block heel; or, a collective noun for a flock of flying geese (5) |
| SWARMS | Dense bodies of flying bees, hence clouds of insects, crowds of people, showers of meteors, sequences of earthquakes or other myriads moving en masse (6) |
| GNAT | A common term for a variety of flying insects (4) |
| VOODOO | Magic formation of flying geese died, swallowed by a number of ducks (6) |
| BATSMOTEL | Horror drama that serves as a prequel to "Psycho" ... but set in a lodge full of flying mammals? |
| AVIATOR | The pilot of a plane, especially in the early days of flying (7) |
| HANGGLIDING | Activity of flying while suspended by a harness from a large kite-like device (4,7) |
| SPRAYS | Small bouquets, boutonnieres, corsages or nosegays of flowers and foliage; ornamental brooches resembling thus; or, clouds of flying droplets of scent or water (6) |
| AVIONIC | Starts a virtual industry of nerds including collectors of flying gadgets (7) |
| ESSO | Old rival of Flying "A" |
| QUAVER | Note brief question about a formation of flying geese (6) |
| PIGS | They"ve a fat chance of flying! (4) |
| ERICA | Name on the cover of "Fear of Flying" |
| PANAMERICAN | Airline with a fleet of "flying boats" |
| TRAINER | Machine that simulates the conditions of flying a plane (7) |
| DRACO | A genus of flying lizards (5) |