This one at least is an absolute. The land between the high and low tide lines is the property of The Crown and the general public has explicit permission to access and use it as common land. e.g. if a body like a council, the National Trust, etc. administers the adjacent shoreline they have absolutely zero jurisdiction to prevent you from operating a drone from or over it - the ANO/Drone Code continues to apply though.
The NT underpin their blanket ban with a
statement that runs along the lines of
"because most pilots are not registered and have not passed any competency test..." amongst other legal vagueness similar to that used by the Devon councils which is *already* out of date since legally all pilots of drones over 250g should both be registered *and* have passed a competency test (I assume EH, etc. all do similar but haven't specifically checked them all). Of their six bullet points, I'd say the first two are at least questionable and potentially plain wrong, and there are also issues with three of the rest. I have already raised this point with the NT, and I'm sure others have too, but I think giving them until nearer the formal adoption of the EASA regs in July to update this is fair and reasonable. Failing that, it only takes 50 signatures to have it raised at the AGM, which I'm pretty sure we could manage to amass via a thread here alone, let alone if it were cross-posted via BMFA, FPV, forums etc. (assuming it doesn't breach "no-politics" policies).
To be clear, I certainly have no objections to EH/NT/etc. doing a total ban on what could be considered formal (or even semi-formal) gardens around stately homes etc. over and above the ANO, but for the large tracts of open - and often deserted - open countryside this really needs an update. Sure, if there is on-going lambing, protected fauna, or some such, then fine - but that could easily be time limited in the same way they limit the requirement to have dogs on leashes during lambing season. For all other situations, they can just fall back to the criminal law specified by the ANO and let the police and criminal courts deal with any breaches.