Drone Scene

Wondering where you can fly your drone in the UK — and get £5,000,000 public liability insurance cover? Welcome to Drone Scene!

Wondering where you can legally fly your drone in the UK? Drone Scene helps you find great flying locations and provides £5m Public Liability Insurance cover for complete peace of mind when flying throughout the UK and Europe.

What is Drone Scene? Drone Scene is the award-winning interactive drone flight safety app and flight-planning map — built by drone pilots, for drone pilots. Trusted by tens of thousands of hobbyist and professional operators, it is the modern, feature-rich alternative app to Altitude Angel's Drone Assist, featuring thousands of recommended UK flying locations shared by real pilots, and backed by a community of over 37,400 club members.

What makes Drone Scene the number one app for UK drone operators? It brings together live data including NOTAMs, Flight Restriction Zones (FRZs), Airports, Airspace Restrictions, and National Trust land boundaries, alongside trusted ground-hazard layers and detailed airspace intelligence — giving you the clarity and control to plan safe, legal flights on desktop or mobile, with no installation required.

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Trentham Gardens, Staffordshire added to Parks and Recreation in West Midlands by D0c.Col on 26/10/2023

The Trentham Estate in Staffordshire, England features in the Domesday Book of 1086 and was listed as a royal manor valued at 115 shillings. Trentham Hall was sold to James Leveson in 1540. Sir Richard Leveson had a new house built in the Elizabethan style in 1634 but it was demolished to make way for a later Georgian house. Sir William Leveson-Gower, 4th Baronet, built a new house on the site in 1690 and around 1730, John Leveson-Gower, 1st Earl Gower, erected a hall based on Buckingham House. This was to be substantially altered by his son, 1st Marquess of Stafford, between 1775 – 1778. The 2nd Duke of Sutherland commissioned Charles Barry, to add an extension to parts of the house that dated between 1833 to 1842 while working on a rebuild of the Palace of Westminster. The focal point of the building was a 10,000-square-foot (930 m2) campanile clock tower. The original approach to the hall was from the west, and had an Italianate grand entrance and a one-storey semicircular arcade range with side wings. Charles had continued to improve the house for another decade adding a new block with state bedrooms, dressing rooms, a servant's quarters and a clock tower all commonly referred to as the Riding School. Standing on the edge of a large cobbled stableyard it was the final major addition to the property and sadly now is virtually the only structure that remains of the 1851 imposing and once quoted "elegant mansion ".
The 18th and 19th Century Parkland that surrounded Trentham Hall was designed by Lancelot 'Capability' Brown, the Shakespeare of English garden design. The house served as the Staffordshire seat of the Dukes of Sutherland.
In the southern area of the Trentham Estate stands the monument to the 1st Duke of Sutherland. This colossal statue was raised in 1834 at the instigation of the second Duke, a year after the first Duke's death. The hall was one of many to be demolished in the 20th century, and was considered one of the greatest losses of the era. The River Trent no longer fed the lake in front of the hall, but still passed the edge of the estate. Sewage and effluent from the nearby potteries polluted it making life at the hall VERYvery unpleasant. The hall was abandoned as a residence in 1905 and was offered to Staffordshire County Council on condition that it be used as an institute of higher education. However an agreement could not be reached and with the council concerned that pollution from the Trent would render a residential institution at the hall undesirable, the county council declined the offer in 1906. The Duke of Sutherland then decided to offer the estate to the six Potteries towns the following year in the event that they went ahead with plans to merge into a single county borough, but after their 1910 federation, the new Stoke-on-Trent Corporation also declined the offer in 1911 due to its high potential cost of maintenance. This was to be the hall’s death knell and the 4th Duke of Sutherland ordered it to be demolished in 1912, although the sculpture gallery, clock tower and parish church along with a few other buildings, were saved from destruction, their Grade II listed remains are still on the Heritage at Risk Register.The 1758 ‘Capability Brown’ designed gardens were superimposed over an earlier formal design of Charles Bridgeman but the current layout of Trentham Gardens are based on the surviving Barry formal gardens of the 1840s and in 2012 the Trentham Estate was selected as the site of a Royal Diamond Jubilee wood. Since the turn of the millennium, Trentham Gardens has undergone a £120 million redevelopment as a leisure destination and it’s regeneneration includes restoration of the Italian gardens and adjacent woodlands. The goal is to avoid a theme park-like attraction, but instead offer "authentic experiences" for all ages.

Trentham Gardens is easily found in Google Maps and parking is plentiful, even on the busiest of days in the shopping village. TOAL was just behind the Church and can be accessed by walking passed the left of the garden centre over the river bridge between the white stable buildings and onto the public road behind the church. The Park"s staff are always noticeable around the park itself and although not in a FRZ they do not allow TOAL on their grounds.


My Channel @DocColVideo

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Co-ordinates: 52.96601, -2.201651 • what3words: ///bats.oath.knee

The originator declared that this location was not inside a Flight Restriction Zone at the time of being flown on 15/10/2023. It remains the responsibility of any pilot to check for any changes before flying at the same location. Landowner permission may be required before taking off.

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Brock Aquaduct, Wyre (By MartG1960)

Brock Aquaduct is where the Lancaster Canal crosses over the River Brock, at Brock near Preston.

Note that it is adjacent to Myerscough College, so best to stay on the North side of the River, and also avoid the power lines just to the East of the Canal.

I parked on StMichael's Rd next to Guy's Thatched Hamlet, and walked along the towpath to the aquaduct ( about a 20 min walk )

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Co-ordinates: 53.8577, -2.752193 • what3words: ///plank.ticking.regress

St Nicolas, Lewes (By grandad1950)

St Nicolas parish church is a grade 1 listed building in the south downs village of Iford in East Sussex.

It is good walking country and close to the River Ouse and the South Downs Way.

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Co-ordinates: 50.84842, -0.000649 • what3words: ///spits.fits.noble

Loch Doon Reservoir (By IanC2002)

Loch Doon Reservoir, near Dalmellington, East Ayrshire.

This trip was on the 15th October 2025.

Where I flew from there were no flight restrictions, in fact it was a launch point for may of the Canoests, Kayakers.

There are advisories not to swim as there are strong currents in this Loch, doesn't stop the hardy swimmers though, there are plenty.

The pin location has space for amount six, vehicles, but across the road, there is also a car park that would easily handheld handle another ten.

In one of my images you'll see a building, this is a café, but not cheap.

I'm going to drop another video that I took further up the road heading back to the main road. It was just one of those views that just needed to be flown.

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Co-ordinates: 55.28319, -4.397377 • what3words: ///embedded.composed.compiler

St Peter's Church Wintringham, Ryedale (By skysnapper13)

St Peter's Church is a redundant Anglican church in the village of Wintringham, North Yorkshire, England. It is recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a designated Grade I listed building, and is under the care of the Churches Conservation Trust. The architectural historian Nikolaus Pevsner described the building as "the most rewarding church in the East Riding with an exceptional collection of furnishings".

There is no mention of the church in the Domesday Book, but the chancel is Norman in style. The chancel dates from the 12th century, while much of the rest of the church dates from the 14th century. The east end of the church was rebuilt, and windows were added to the nave, in the 15th century. The tower, dating originally from the late 14th century, was repaired in 1818. The roofs were restored in 1887 by Oldrid Scott, and oak fittings were added to the chancel by Temple Moore in 1889–91. It was vested with the Churches Conservation Trust in April 2004. The Trust arranged for repairs, which were started in the following year and took two years to complete.

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Co-ordinates: 54.14682, -0.643176 • what3words: ///watch.stance.joystick

St Gregory's Minster, Ryedale (By skysnapper13)

St Gregory's Minster is an Anglo-Saxon church with a rare sundial, in Kirkdale near Kirkbymoorside, Vale of Pickering, North Yorkshire, England. It is a Grade I listed building.

The minster was built c. 1060 on the site of an earlier church, and is dedicated to St Gregory, who was pope from 590 to 604. Major modifications were completed in the 15th century and in the 1800s. The church was restored during 1907–1909. The building is similar in style and age to that of St Hilda's Church, Ellerburn.

The church is open during the day; volunteer stewards provide information to visitors and services are offered weekly. The maintenance of the fabric of the building is helped by financial contributions from The Friends of St Gregory's Minster. The Friends' Annual General Meeting is followed by the Kirkdale Lecture about the parish and its environs.

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Co-ordinates: 54.26316, -0.962285 • what3words: ///stowing.digestion.noise

Enclosure Rites, Ryedale (By skysnapper13)

“Enclosure Rights” was produced by an artist called Jony Easterby, who is famous for his works empathy for the natural world and a sense of place within culture and social context. Drawing on the archaeological importance of the area, the sculpture consists of a new chalk path, edged with split oak posts leading up to a raised platform over-looking a dew pond. Jony Easterby worked with archaeologists to research the cultural landscape of the area and develop an artwork inspired by the ancient history. The sculpture actually sits next to an ancient ditch and dyke earthwork, so Jony drew upon bronze age barrow forms to create the shape. There are also a number of wooden carved oak figures known as “The Guardian Warriors”, based on a number of tiny carved chalk warriors found in the nearby Derwent Valley. It was believed the figures were based on members of the local iron age tribe who habited the area at the time of the Roman invasion known as the Paresi.

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Co-ordinates: 54.15688, -0.63763 • what3words: ///stages.cowboys.crunching

St Peters Rodmell, Lewes (By grandad1950)

Nestled in the South Downs St Peters Parish church dates from the 12th century in Rodmell in East Sussex. A grade 1 listed building.
If you like walking close to the river Ouse and the South Downs Way

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Co-ordinates: 50.83846, 0.017825 • what3words: ///turns.animates.speeding

Sudbrook hill fort, Monmouthshire (By gasbag43)

Positioned on a sandstone cliff overlooking the Severn Estuary, Sudbrook Camp is a coastal "promontory" fort that served as a vital Iron Age port and defensive hub. Its location was strategic, controlling the shortest crossing point between South Wales and the English coast—a precursor to the modern Prince of Wales Bridge seen in the panoramic photograph.

In the other images, the scale of the curving earthworks is striking. These triple-banked defences protected the landward side, while the sea provided a natural barrier.

The shots clearly illustrate the fort's greatest threat – coastal erosion. Over centuries, the Severn has reclaimed the southern half of the settlement; you can see the ramparts now terminating abruptly at the cliff edge.

The photos capture a "clash of eras." The Iron Age banks sit adjacent to the ruins of a 12th-century Norman chapel (see bottom right hand edge of 2nd photo) and the massive industrial infrastructure of the Severn Tunnel pumping station, highlighting Sudbrook's 2,000-year role as a gateway to Wales.

Archaeological digs have discovered evidence of a "takeover." While the fort was built and occupied by the Silures from roughly 100 BC, a layer of Roman pottery and coins dating to the AD 50s and 60s was unearthed on the 1930’s. This suggests the Roman military likely seized the fort to secure the Severn crossing during their brutal campaign against the Silurian tribes. Excavators found Roman coins ranging from the early conquest era into the later 2nd century. This indicates that even after its military importance faded, Sudbrook likely remained a thriving trading post or "beach-head" for goods moving across the estuary.

Traces of glass and metal manufacturing were discovered within the interior (the area that is now a football pitch in the photos). This suggests the community wasn't just farming; they were skilled artisans engaging in maritime trade.

I've added an AI mock-up of the site as it would have looked in tis heyday

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Co-ordinates: 51.58259, -2.715292 • what3words: ///jeep.landowner.topmost

Llanmelin Wood Hillfort, Monmouthshire (By gasbag43)

Locate on a limestone spur in Monmouthshire, Llanmelin Wood Hillfort is one of the most significant Iron Age sites in South Wales.

These photos capture the fort’s "multivallate" design—a series of massive earthwork banks and ditches that once defended the Silures, a powerful British tribe known for their fierce resistance against the Roman conquest.

Constructed around the 4th century BC, the site consists of a main elliptical enclosure and a distinctive "annexe" to the southeast, clearly visible in the images as the lower terraced area extending into the treeline.

Archaeologists believe Llanmelin may have served as the precursor to the nearby Roman town of Venta Silurum (Caerwent).

The images highlight the steepness of the natural slope, augmented by human hands to create an imposing vertical barrier. The secondary enclosures are also visible. These likely housed livestock or served as social spaces, indicating a sophisticated, permanent community rather than a temporary refuge.

The peculiar “L shaped: layout where the annexe joins the main camp suggests the fort evolved over centuries, growing in complexity alongside the tribe’s influence.

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Co-ordinates: 51.62941, -2.779898 • what3words: ///touches.irritable.albums

St laurence, Lewes (By grandad1950)

One of the oldest churches in Sussex dating from 998 is St Laurence parish church in the south downs hamlet of Telscombe. A grade 1 listed building.

Close by are great views of the rolling downs and the Mid Sussex motocross centre.

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Co-ordinates: 50.81276, -0.006385 • what3words: ///shuts.spouting.plank


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