- Joined
- Jul 11, 2017
- Messages
- 88
- Reactions
- 28
- Age
- 45
No, they didn't hit each other.
As the obese woman tries to catch her breath after that 100' walk approaching her car with her 5 dogs, she yells at me with the Mavic not even 25' in the air, "Do you know those scare the **** out of dogs?". She follows up by saying, "This is supposed to be a peaceful place". As if the shooting range nearby isn't worse? Pow Pow Pow. I can still hear it as I reply, "This is the only legal place in San Francisco to fly. But I'll take it down. Just so you know." As she opens her mouth again, I interrupt, "I'm taking it down." She continues to jibber jabber, "It's very obnoxious," as I'm clearly taking the drone down to the parking lot. I take into consideration that she made the trip out here to have the dogs defecate in a place that isn't people's lawns, but does she do this daily? Maybe I should give her the benefit of the doubt. Still annoying.
A few things:
1. I get it, but you can't hear the drone nearly as loudly when it's 300' in the air. Perhaps she's used to the toy drones. Someone must've pissed her off the last time she saw a drone/quadcopter.
2. She was clearly leaving. The area wasn't cluttered with dogs. I picked a place that didn't have dogs nearby as I recognized she was heading towards the parking lot.
3. Does she really think that I don't know that she lets her 5 dogs do their business all over people's front yards when she's not making her trip up to Fort Funston? Don't even get me started about how many people get dogs in the City knowing their plan is to have their dogs urinate and defecate all over people's lawns. Guess what? If you don't live near a dog park, you don't have the luxury of owning a dog. Too many people think it's their right to do this and do that. Over sense of entitlement getting worse the past 15 years here.
4. Is she even a local?
My response by taking the drone down was more out of courtesy, acknowledging that this is a social issue. It's not a legal problem. Perhaps I should've brought the drone up higher and used this whole event as an opportunity to educate her on the volume decreasing as the drone goes up in altitude. With my kid sleeping in the car, I wasn't really in the mood to teach a stranger or get in a big fight.
As the obese woman tries to catch her breath after that 100' walk approaching her car with her 5 dogs, she yells at me with the Mavic not even 25' in the air, "Do you know those scare the **** out of dogs?". She follows up by saying, "This is supposed to be a peaceful place". As if the shooting range nearby isn't worse? Pow Pow Pow. I can still hear it as I reply, "This is the only legal place in San Francisco to fly. But I'll take it down. Just so you know." As she opens her mouth again, I interrupt, "I'm taking it down." She continues to jibber jabber, "It's very obnoxious," as I'm clearly taking the drone down to the parking lot. I take into consideration that she made the trip out here to have the dogs defecate in a place that isn't people's lawns, but does she do this daily? Maybe I should give her the benefit of the doubt. Still annoying.
A few things:
1. I get it, but you can't hear the drone nearly as loudly when it's 300' in the air. Perhaps she's used to the toy drones. Someone must've pissed her off the last time she saw a drone/quadcopter.
2. She was clearly leaving. The area wasn't cluttered with dogs. I picked a place that didn't have dogs nearby as I recognized she was heading towards the parking lot.
3. Does she really think that I don't know that she lets her 5 dogs do their business all over people's front yards when she's not making her trip up to Fort Funston? Don't even get me started about how many people get dogs in the City knowing their plan is to have their dogs urinate and defecate all over people's lawns. Guess what? If you don't live near a dog park, you don't have the luxury of owning a dog. Too many people think it's their right to do this and do that. Over sense of entitlement getting worse the past 15 years here.
4. Is she even a local?
My response by taking the drone down was more out of courtesy, acknowledging that this is a social issue. It's not a legal problem. Perhaps I should've brought the drone up higher and used this whole event as an opportunity to educate her on the volume decreasing as the drone goes up in altitude. With my kid sleeping in the car, I wasn't really in the mood to teach a stranger or get in a big fight.