Was flying yesterday afternoon and the Phantom was attacked by swarms of bees. The bees didn't fare too well.
Somebody familiar with bees mentioned they might be drones looking to mate. I'm in NW Los Angeles. There are a couple hives nearby I discovered while walking my dog, but they weren't aggressive to us as we went by. Bizarre they would be flying that high.Interesting. Where are you located? Unless you just happened to fly through a traveling swam of migrating bees looking for a new place to build a hive, I don't know any type of bee that would aggressively attack a drone at that altitude except maybe Africanized Honey Bees (aka Killer Bees) due to the noise.
What did the props look like after landing?Was flying yesterday afternoon and the Phantom was attacked by swarms of bees. The bees didn't fare too well.
Blood, guts on the battery, body and props. Cleaned off pretty easily.What did the props look like after landing?
Yes, looking at the real time feed it wasn't readily apparent that there were bees swarming. Reviewing the full raw footage, they followed me home and broke off as I landed.Had same. Thought leaves were falling, but from where? Decended and saw the entire bee swarm come with it. Accended at high speed to 400' but couldn't shake em off. Still finding blood and guts months later. One and only time, that's enough.![]()
Excellent video and thank you for not using the Flight of the Bumblebee as the choice of music.Was flying yesterday afternoon and the Phantom was attacked by swarms of bees. The bees didn't fare too well.
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