I haven't used the drone too much over the last year, enough so that flying it and orienting it is pretty natural now, I'm not pushing the stick the wrong way any more and I'm comfortable enough with it so that if I lose sight of it, I don't feel any panic and losing sight of it is kind of inevitable if you're looking down to your phone to check information or take a picture, even if if it's only briefly. I did do a survey of my roof with it, needs work, the roof, not my survey technique. I have the shadows of a dive bombing seagull on my survey, who took exception to my drone but after a few passes, he buggered off.
So now I've started to use it more as a camera platform and am trying harder to envisage what will make a good drone shot. I took two today which I'd been thinking about as possibilities and was just waiting for the right conditions, in fact I was actually out a bit late for one and perhaps a bit early for the other. The golf course shot would have benefited from a lower sun and the pit from a higher sun but still I'm seeing some promise from what I can do. I should probably have experimented more with manual exposure, especially for the pit shot but I'll do that next time.
I also ran both of these through Gigapixel AI, which made a negligible difference in these cases
Bunkers on a local golf course
Old drainage pit on Cubbins Green