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FYI, the entire Blue Ridge Parkway, all 469 miles of it is a National Park. It's long and very skinny and if you get off the Parkway and past the fence, you are off federal land.
Facebook?? I would not respond at all don't even reply..if this is FAA legit business they will send you an official letter. Don't even respondYesterday I received a message on Facebook from someone claiming to be from the FAA. Looking at his profile it seems legit and he actually wants me to call him at his office. He says my videos concern him and there is an allegation of me flying commercially which I have not done. He wants my name and my FAA registration number and to discuss this. I don't mind discussing this with him but I do not feel comfortable just giving him my information especially when I have not done anything wrong. I have no idea what could be concerning in my videos either. Should I call the guy or does this sound like something I should avoid? It seems like a strange way for the FAA to conduct business in my opinion. But I guess he doesn't know who I am so this is the only way they can contact me.
Hey. Is a national park the same as a national forest?Also remember that it's not illegal to fly over the park. Even the FAA told me that. You just cannot take off or land within the park. So as far as knowing exactly where is legal and where isn't legal isn't that easy to know. We are talking about thousands upon thousands of square miles of forests and it's not like you can just always know if you're in the park or outside the park when it comes to something this huge. There are tons of houses all along the parkway where people live. So I guess these people can't fly a drone in their own yard either because it's within the park.
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Hey. Is a national park the same as a national forest?
"It turns out I posted some videos flying near the Blue Ridge Parkway which is off-limits and I was not aware of that."
What do you mean by "off-limits?" New Part 107 regulations require a remote pilot to fly basically by the same rules as Part 91 pilots, at a minimum. Did you consult your local (low altitude VFR) sectionals?? Find restricted or prohibited areas?
My humble advice, if you've called and verified the FAA's concern, is to speak with them cordially and resolve the issue.
vic bravo
Well I definitely know it's legit as I have looked up the guys name and he does work for the FAA. However, from a legal standpoint, do I have to tell him anything? I definitely want to discuss this with him but I don't feel the need to give him my name or registration number.
I recommend calling the local Ranger office of any National Forest you want to fly in. Some have areas where you can't fly (local rules, often unposted).Hey. Is a national park the same as a national forest?
Just throwing this out there... Is it possible that the spot I was flying in on the blue ridge parkway was actually a place I was allowed to fly? Just wondering if that's even a possibility.
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Actually I'm not on their radar because they have no clue who I am. They do not know my name or my phone number or my registration number. I have taken down my Facebook page and will also be taking down the YouTube page. I just wanted to post some cool videos for my family and friends to see. But the interesting thing here is that they said I was not breaking any FAA rules, I was breaking the national parks rules is how I understood it. It amazes me that we can drive our cars, walk all over the ground and everything else in national parks and nothing is said but if you fly a remote control helicopter there it's a problem. The Blue Ridge Parkway is 469 miles and goes through several areas where people live and small towns. So I really don't see how the entire Parkway is regulated as a national Park. I could literally exit off of the Parkway and be on a separate highway 5 feet away and that would be legal to fly there? I have never one time seen a sign anywhere on the parkway about flying drones nor do I see anything about national parks on most of it.
VAIL8150,
You are 100% correct if flying commercially for hire, compensation, or to further a business even though there is no compensation. He can fly as a hobbyist as long as the aircraft has an FAA registration. Flying in a national park violates both sets of rules, hobby or Part 107.
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