Over here in Germany, I haven‘t come across public or forum discussions regarding using drones to hunt, but I suppose that the range of opinions would be as wide as discussed on here. That said, we are seeing the increasing use of drones, equipped with thermal cameras, by hunters (shooters/stalkers) during May and June every year on meadows. During normal rainfall years, farmers would be looking to mow the meadows for silage 3 times a year, with the first cut in May or early June. That‘s a critical period for countless newborn roe fawns, who lack a flight-response instinct during the first 4-6 weeks of their life and thus risk ending up under the tractor. Traditionally, we‘ve always kept close contact with the farmers to determine the date of the first cut, so that we can walk the meadows the day before, to either find fawns (to carefully relocate them) or disturb the does (who will then relocate their fawns). It’s both an arduous- and imprecise task, given that the first growth is up to a metre high at that stage. In recent years, however, thermal imaging drones have been a game-changer: large numbers of fawns are now being spotted from above, which helps to avoid injuries or loss of life during the next day‘s harvest. Interestingly, whilst some of the drone pilots are hunters themselves, many are not. What they have in common, however, is a “purpose” to fly and put their hobby to good use and it gives them access (on the day) to flying over varied properties and landscapes.