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Whats the rules on drones

#Post
1

Neighbor flying drone lost it over our fence and jumped over to our property without permission.
Our gates are locked.

Edited by leson at 4:23 pm, Mon 18 Oct

leson - 2021-10-18 16:21:00
2

Looser weepers I would say. I believe that permission must be sought to fly over someone else's property and must not video "over the fence".

rak1 - 2021-10-18 16:31:00
3

" You think your drone flew into my garden? Oops, so that was what I stood on/weed whacked when I was gardening today? Oh dear never mind. Do you want the bits in a bag to take home?"

hound31 - 2021-10-18 16:42:00
4

Not to happy about it they didn't even knock on the door just jumped a 6 foot fence

leson - 2021-10-18 16:44:00
5

A bit rude but who really cares

loose.unit8 - 2021-10-18 16:54:00
6
leson wrote:

Not to happy about it they didn't even knock on the door just jumped a 6 foot fence

had a constant battle with elderly Asian neighbours coming into my property and plundering my veggie garden. Never asked, just took.

gabbysnana - 2021-10-18 20:08:00
7
gabbysnana wrote:

had a constant battle with elderly Asian neighbours coming into my property and plundering my veggie garden. Never asked, just took.

Invite yourself to their house at dinner time. After all, it was your food.

amasser - 2021-10-19 09:05:00
8
leson wrote:

Neighbor flying drone lost it over our fence and jumped over to our property without permission.
Our gates are locked.

Probably the drone rules are not especially relevant to this situation. More the trespass act.

pico42 - 2021-10-19 09:56:00
9
pico42 wrote:

Probably the drone rules are not especially relevant to this situation. More the trespass act.

To the letter of the law I believe you need permission to fly a drone over someone else's property

loose.unit8 - 2021-10-19 12:04:00
10
pico42 wrote:

Probably the drone rules are not especially relevant to this situation. More the trespass act.

Have the offenders been served a trespass notice? Without that the act is irrelevant.

Bear in mind that a member of the public can enter another's property as long as it is not with the intention of committing an unlawful act. Until they are trespassed.

tony9 - 2021-10-19 16:22:00
11
tony9 wrote:

Have the offenders been served a trespass notice? Without that the act is irrelevant.

Bear in mind that a member of the public can enter another's property as long as it is not with the intention of committing an unlawful act. Until they are trespassed.


Not if they have to jump a fence because they gates are locked

leson - 2021-10-19 16:31:00
12
loose.unit8 wrote:

A bit rude but who really cares

yes this

spead - 2021-10-19 16:40:00
13
leson wrote:


Not if they have to jump a fence because they gates are locked

By my count that's the fourth time you've been wrong today.

As per tony9 you must "trespass" someone (usually verbally or in writing) before the trespass act becomes involved.

loose.unit8 - 2021-10-19 16:47:00
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