I live in rural Texas. I have flown my drone over horses at the owners suggestion, (Not an H, Just the 500 4K) The horses accepted it just fine, didn't seem to bother them at all even when I lowered to about 25 feet. Thought I was recording, but in my excitement, when I hit the record button, I turned the recorder off! I was clear LOS so I wasn't looking at the screen so much, just to check that the animals were in the frame, never even noticed the record indicator was not on. (DUH!)
So my suggestion is work on your multitasking, nothing like thinking your getting footage when you are not, and sometimes opportunities are rare and the "perfect shot" is a fleeting moment in time which can rarely be captured again... (unless you are working on a movie set and get another "take.")
Documenting real life/situations you usually only get one opportunity. Your practice in getting good skills and habits will go a long way to making you a great aerial videographer. Ever notice how the pros make it look so "easy." Its because the practice, practice, practice. So, fly every chance you get. Critique your work as if you were looking at someone else's and determine how you can improve the footage. Compete with yourself, and find your own style. Sure, look at other's videos for inspiration, you may find a mentor, but when the day is done, you are you, and your own style will develop. The key is to get so good, they can't ignore you. Different is OK Uniqueness will set you apart so long as there is a demand or following. You can't please all of the people so take critiques in stride, (don't argue or justify your reasoning or rationale because that person doesn't "get it" because you won't change their mind. But recognize that there are different points of view or limitations which prevented you from getting the exact footage you wanted. Consider the critique, and how you can convey your story, your way, and address the critic's point. Some critics can never be made happy, so don't let them hurt your feelings or slow you down. Keep after it...
You will come to understand that if you are being commissioned for some work, you will want to give the client/customer what they want. But if you are shooting for you, you can do whatever you want. It doesn't matter if you are a doctor, lawyer, singer, songwriter, author, plumber, or even a football player, if you are good/great at what you do, you will always be in demand. Your challenge is to seek CONSTANT improvement and never be CONTENT with where you are, ALWAYS seek to get better, and follow YOUR goals.