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Barnard Castle from the air in rain with DJI mini 3 Pro 2023
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- čas přidán 14. 08. 2024
- Barnard Castle
A stone castle was built on the site of an earlier defended position from around 1095 to 1125 by Guy de Balliol. Between 1125 and 1185 his nephew Bernard de Balliol and his son Bernard II extended the building.
In 1216 the castle was besieged by Alexander II, King of Scotland. It was still held by the Balliol family although its ownership was disputed by the Bishops of Durham. When John Balliol was deposed as King of Scotland in 1296 the castle was passed to the Bishop of Durham. Around 1300 Edward I granted it to the Earl of Warwick. In the 15th century the castle passed by marriage from Anne Beauchamp, 16th Countess of Warwick to her husband, Richard Neville, 16th Earl of Warwick. In 1477 during the Wars of the Roses, Richard, Duke of Gloucester (later Richard III) took possession of the castle by right of his wife, Anne Neville. It became one of his favourite residences.
During the rebellion of the Earls of Northumberland and Westmorland, in the reign of Elizabeth, the castle, which was then the property of the crown, was garrisoned by Sir George Bowes, of Streatlam. During the Civil War, the castle was besieged by Cromwell, to whom, after a severe cannonading, the garrison surrendered. After frequent grants and reversions, the castle, lands, and appurtenances, were purchased by Sir Henry Vane, an ancestor of the Duke of Cleveland, himself a Viscount Bernard.
Sir Henry Vane the Elder, Member of Parliament and important member of Charles I household, at first his Governor, later his Treasurer, purchased Raby Castle, Barnard Castle and Estate for £18,000. He chose to make Raby his principal home and de-roofed and removed stone from Barnard Castle to repair and maintain Raby.
The castle is in the custody of English Heritage and is open to the public. Of particular interest are the ruins of the 12th-century cylindrical tower and the 14th-century Great hall and Great chamber. It is a Scheduled Ancient Monument, and was designated as a Grade I listed building in 1950. The remains of the medieval chapel of St Margaret in the outer ward are listed as Grade II.
MAKING THE FILM
I am a UK CAA & EU EASA registered UAV pilot with valid Op and Flyer ID's and my drone is a DJI mini 3 Pro, which weighs less than 250g, therefore I can fly within VLOS up to an altitude of 120m (400ft) AGL in the Open A1Category. I am allowed to fly over uninvolved people but am not allowed to fly over a congregation/crowd that cannot dispurse in the unlikely event that the drone falls out-of-control! The flight was not inside a FRZ. I was able to launch the DJI mini 3 Pro from a Public Path and VLOS was maintained with the assistance of a spotter.
It started to rain quite heavily whilst filming, so I cut short my intended flight plan and decided landing it was a far better strategy than continuing the flight and either damaging the drone or losing control (or both)!
Filmed and Edited by Colin Lawson
Music
Inbound by Scott Buckley released under CC-BY 4.0.
Scott Buckley music available for free download from: www.scottbuckl...
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Good images
Thank you. 🤗
Very nice again Colin. It never fails to amaze me at how conurbation has surrounded places like this - our need to build houses and businesses on the doorstep of these sites is spoiling the wonder of ages past.
Thx Paul. It is a wonder that a lot of fortifications are sited in the midst of towns that often bare their name. I guess their purpose was to protect the area from assailants and the villagers and town folk clung to them for security. Then expansion of the populous takes over! 👍
Really good video again Colin
Nice aerial views too.
Thx Abdul, loving your support. 🤗
awesome shots and nice flying my friend well done liked it 👍
Thx Matey, much appreciated. 👍
Smooth footage 👍
Thx Robo. 👍
Very good and stable drone flight. Interesting shots. Great film editing. Good job. I fly too. Greetings from Poland. I subscribe.
👌👍👍👍
Thank you for your kind comments and sub. I have returned the favour and subbed you too 👍
I really enjoyed that brilliant production. It a stunning castle. 😍 And autumn colours. 🍂 I have never been there . Its now on my to fly list. 😊 lovely footage 👌
Thx Yvonne. Really pleased you liked it. Was worth getting the drone soaked, and had to terminate the flight. I didn't have an ND filter on it this time either (and I never take video without one usually). Still, all is well as I used it at Wray Castle and Sizergh the next day and all ok. 👍
@@DocColVideo I haven't flown in the rain before. I guess the draft off the props would keep most rain out. Well done
@@ladyintheskyuk I've been caught out a few times but seems pretty robust. Ordering a mini 4 Pro before the weekend so selling it soon! 😂
Great. You will be all excited over the weekend 😁
@@ladyintheskyuk That I will Yvonne. 👍😆
Colin i did have better weather than you, I hope the Mini 3 suffred no side effects,
its great to hear a spoken description of the site you were covering, so well done you. 👏👍.
Thx Steve. Dried it off over night. Camera was dry so no probs. Consigned to the shelf now I have the m4. RIP.🤣
Did you see Dominic Cummings there 😂😂😂
Yes, its now on the list of local opticians! Buzz! 🤣🤣