Hey, y'all, I want to help us to be on guard for Canada, and I was thinking I should learn how to fly drones.
I have started looking at schools and at the Transport Canada website. I'd like to hear from those who know more about drone flight schools and fly drones themselves.
I've never flown one myself, even if I do find them rather cool. I'm too old and creaky (and too averse to hierarchy) to join the military, but I can make myself useful in other ways.
Should I get a small drone (below 250 g) and practice?
Are there virtual tools I could practice with? I wouldn't want to crash an expensive piece of gear while I'm learning to pilot it.
The best first step I think is to get a virtual drone simulator. There are free ones online that will give you a taste of how it's like to fly drones and will let you get a taste of what it's like. This alone will take you a long way towards being able to use them practically at virtually zero cost, or maybe at most the cost of purchasing a controller to more closely simulate a drone's controller.
Just look up FPV simulator, racer, or anything similar. There are free ones even on Steam.
I think it might depend what you're into, I don't know much, I've flown my Mavic mini a few times, and have been watching the Ukraine war at a distance.
But if you're into photography and videography you might get more enjoyment out of something like a 249g Mavic that has a solid camera and is an overall very solid drone.
If you're more into sports and piloting, you might have more sustained interest in an FPV drone where you use goggles to see through the stone's eyes as it flies. In that case I've heard good things about the DarwinFPV drones as they're a pretty dirt cheap entry point and you're likely to crash them.
In terms of usefulness for civil defense, I'm guessing that the most useful skillsets are probably FPV flying and drone building and repair, but I'm not sure. In Ukraine it seems like they use some off the shelf quadcopters like mavic minis for basic reconnaissance and observation, and then use FPV drones for carrying munitions and striking targets, and those are a mix of quadcopter style and more plane style.
Another option for civil defense preparedness is to do first aid training.
I've always had an interest in photography, so that might be my entry point. As I said to Dearche in this thread, I just tried a drone racing game and that was fun. I'll keep at it!
I thought about getting drone and training to help the cause, but then I remembered I am old and didn't grow up using a controller. I bought one a few years back and downloaded Steam, but my ADHD brain and hands are just not coordinated enough to be able to play even the simplest of games.
I'll have to find another way to help in the upcoming war.