DJI Drones in Castle Combe? Well, in this Cotswolds’ postcard-perfect village, that looks like it’s been plucked straight from Hogsmeade, with its honey-colored cottages and winding lanes so enchanting you half expect to spot Harry, Hermione, and Ron sipping butterbeer at the Three Broomsticks if you linger long enough. This Wiltshire gem, often called “England’s prettiest village,” has starred in films like War Horse, Stardust, and the original Dr. Dolittle. Steven Spielberg himself called it a “gift” of natural beauty while filming War Horse, transforming its lanes into a muddy 1914 setting for his World War I epic.

But lately, this magical village is making headlines for a less cinematic reason: tourists buzzing drones over gardens, windows, and even bathrooms, prompting a village-wide cry for a ban. As a drone pilot who’s spent years navigating the skies responsibly, I’m watching this unfold with a mix of frustration and déjà vu.
Drones Invade Privacy in Picture-Perfect Village
Residents of Castle Combe, home to just a few hundred people, are fed up with the hum of drones overhead. “No drone zone” signs now pepper the village—on windows, in the church, and at the car park—after tourists, chasing Instagram-worthy shots, pushed boundaries too far.
One local, retired Police officer Hilary Baker, 69, told The Sunday Times, “It’s almost like some visitors have lost their moral compass. When you go into your back garden and put your washing out and there is a drone hovering 20 yards above your head, it really quite rankles.”
Another resident reported a drone peering into his bathroom window while he bathed, a creepy violation that’s hard to shrug off. Last month, police were called when a pilot allegedly filmed kids in a garden and hovered at window level, verbally abusing locals who asked him to stop.
The Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) has clear rules: keep drones in sight, avoid crowds, and respect privacy. Yet, as Fred Winup, chairman of the parish council, noted, some pilots—often unaware tourists like the apologetic Californian who buzzed him at five feet—ignore or don’t know these guidelines.
Worse, some drones have crashed into trees or the church roof, raising safety concerns. “People do lose control of drones and they could take an eye out,” Winup warned. Wiltshire Council’s new car park sign reminds pilots that flying over private spaces likely breaks CAA rules, but enforcement feels like chasing shadows.

Social Media Fuels the Frenzy
Castle Combe’s Hogsmeade-like charm, amplified by its silver-screen cameos, draws thousands weekly, many inspired by TikTok and Instagram. A survey by Winup found over half of visitors discovered the village online.
The post-Covid tourism boom has only intensified this avalanche of tourists, many of them with cheap drones—some as low as $25 from sites like Temu—making aerial shots accessible to anyone with a smartphone and a dream of viral fame. I hope you don’t use your Neo to bother anyone! But in the town the sentiment is clear: what’s a cool shot for one person is a Peeping Tom for another.
A Village Pushed to the Brink
For years, Castle Combe residents have dealt with tourists picking flowers or wandering into private alleys, but drones have escalated the issue to new heights—literally. Suggestions of all kinds have arised: since shooting the drones like if they were pidgeons to buy anti-drone guns. While tempting for frustrated locals, such vigilante tactics risk hefty fines or jail under the Air Navigation Order 2016. The real issue isn’t just rogue pilots—it’s the lack of resources to police them. As one habitant said: “The police do not have the resources to oversee them, and the dangers are obvious.”
As a UAV pilot and videographer, I’ve flown drones for weddings, documentaries, and more, always with an eye on the rules and respect for others. But stories like Castle Combe’s hit a nerve. My biggest fear is that legitimate pilots—those of us who study CAA/FAA/DGAC guidelines, plan flights carefully, and prioritize privacy—will lose privileges because of reckless hobbyists chasing clout.
Every time a drone buzzes a bathroom window or crashes into a church, it fuels calls for blanket bans, threatening the freedom of responsible pilots. This isn’t just about one village; it’s a warning. If we don’t self-regulate—stick to the rules, respect boundaries, and maybe skip that “epic” shot over someone’s garden—the skies could close for all of us. And that’s a crash landing none of will ever want. Let’s attach your behavior to the golden rule of life, specially when travelling: “Treating others as one would want to be treated by them“.
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