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Drones banned from going near Meghan and Harry’s home, as baby nears

With the royal baby due any minute, drones have been banned from flying over Meghan and Harry’s house after a rogue pilot narrowly avoided disaster trying to get a pic.

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British police are cracking down on drone flights near Prince Harry and Meghan, Duchess of Sussex’s new home after a pilot barely avoided disaster trying to photograph the couple’s home.

The news comes asThe Sun revealed the royal couple are now on standby with Meghan’s due date today (Monday AEST).

Signs that warn drone pilots that it is illegal to fly in the area have been erected on the boundary of the northern reaches of Windsor’s Home Park which surrounds Frogmore Cottage.

The bright yellow signs read: “POLICE FLIGHT SAFETY NOTICE: DRONES PROHIBITED IN THIS AREA.”

It’s baby time for Meghan and Harry. Picture: AP
It’s baby time for Meghan and Harry. Picture: AP

The signs also specifically spell out, “Launching, landing or operating drones or remote controlled aircraft is prohibited in this area. Contrary to Article 95 of the Air Navigation Order 2006.”

They include a black silhouette of a typical amateur quadcopter carrying a video camera with a black line through it to reinforce the message.

The area where the signs have been erected is not currently hosting a large open air assembly of people.

The next open air event anywhere nearby will be the Royal Windsor Horse show which does not begin until May 8 and there is no mention of that event on the drone-ban warnings signposts.

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The couple will celebrate their wedding on May 19. Picture: AP
The couple will celebrate their wedding on May 19. Picture: AP

The signs have been erected by Thames Valley Police on main road through Windsor Home Park.

On April 6, a drone pilot risked disaster by trying to take aerial photographs of the royal couple’s new home, Frogmore Cottage, in the middle of the Heathrow passenger jet flight path.

A photographer walking in Windsor Home Park that day took photos of the quad-copter soaring hundreds of meters into the air right in the centre of one of the busiest passenger aircraft flightpaths in the world.

The drone flew south to north along the line of The Long Walk — the route Harry and Meghan took in a carriage on their wedding day last year — and hovered over Windsor Castle.

It then returned south down the The Long Walk and swerved east and headed directly to Frogmore Cottage before returning south where it came from and disappearing.

The drone flight took place between 5.02pm and 5.08pm local time on Saturday, April 6.

Meghan and Harry’s home at Frogmore Cottage. Picture: Getty Images
Meghan and Harry’s home at Frogmore Cottage. Picture: Getty Images

The photographer, who snapped the drone on a long lens with a professional high-megapixel camera, estimated the height of the drone to be more than 300 metres.

The maximum height a drone can be legally flown, even in an uncontrolled airspace, is 121 metres.

The route taken by the drone was within very tightly controlled airspace.

It was in what is called the London Central Zone (tightly controlled airspace over the capital city) as well as being right in the middle of the Heathrow arrivals and departures flight path.

It is also within proximity of Windsor Castle, which is a banned zone for drone flights. It is also illegal to fly zones within the confines of Windsor Great Park.

Meghan and Harry will soon become first-time parents. Picture: AP
Meghan and Harry will soon become first-time parents. Picture: AP

On that day, flights were coming in to Heathrow directly over Frogmore Cottage every two minutes for an eight hour period, flying as low as 460 metres, meaning the drone would have been only a few hundred feet from a passenger aircraft coming in to land at one of the world’s busiest airports.

In recent days, the royal helicopter has also been seen taking off from the Frogmore Estate —

something which might also be endangered by drone activity.

Meghan is currently resident at Frogmore Cottage in preparation for the imminent birth of Baby Sussex, the couple’s first child.

She has not been seen in public for a month. She was last photographed at the Ilapothecary herbal therapy clinic in Kensington Church Street in West London with her husband on the evening of Friday, March 29.

The couple moved to Frogmore Cottage two days later and in recent days, they have been joined by Meghan’s mother Doria.

Meghan is reported to want a home birth although royal courtiers are apparently more keen for her to give birth within the safer confines of a hospital maternity unit.

This story was originally published in The Sun and is reprinted with permission.

Original URL: https://www.news.com.au/entertainment/celebrity-life/royals/drones-banned-from-going-near-meghan-and-harrys-home-as-baby-nears/news-story/64534ac81b879f33c7836ede66fd3224