I can only recall one or two times in my entire life where my jaw has actually dropped and one on those was when I saw the Grand Canyon for the first time.
Amazing footage! Since I'll likely never see this place live-in-person seeing what it looked like from this video was good enough for me. I went to Phoenix, Arizona from Illinois back in June of 2020 but part of my 2-day trip there didn't include a Grand Canyon visit. It looked like I saw some of the canyon during the plane ride to Arizona however.
I wouldn't think so, as long as you abide by FAA regulations and as long as you don't take off or land inside state or federal parks. No one owns the sky. Airliners and helicopters fly over it daily. Drone on. Just know the law and the FAA regulations.
According to the NPS you can't fly in any national parks. But you can take off and land just outside the border into the national park. There is a $5,000 fine and up to 6 months in jail. The NPS now have a fleet of drones to help in search and rescue so you could get caught that way too. Good luck
well it's not but still everybody is doing it. All these nice places are restricted areas but seems like there are no consequences. Wanted to buy drone but after seeing all their stupid rules about no fly zones I probably won't buy it.
MyDvaNaTripu The FAA has bot ruled this area a No Fly Zone. Technically you can launch from outside the park borders and fly into the park. You just cant launch or land within the borders.
@@Motionandstory That's not true anymore. You cannot fly over the Grand Canyon in any way, legally. Of course people still do it, and it makes things harder for those of us trying to follow the rules.