A pilot has paid tribute to the Queen by tracing her cypher on the flight path over Sandringham. Jamie Everett, 56, flew over the Queen's estate in Norfolk and traced 'ER' with the numerals II between in the skies.
He was in the air the same time as the Queen's coffin was being brought from Edinburgh to London, meaning that people watching Her Majesty's flight on tracking apps might have seen the surprise. The married-dad-of-three flew the plane, while his two sons Alexander, 22, and Horatio, 18, navigated the route alongside him.
Jamie decided to pay tribute to the Queen as he classes himself "very much as a royalist".
He said: "I knew I wanted to pay tribute. I was going to stand by the railway line if the coffin was going to come down by train.
"Because they decided not to do that, I thought it would be really fitting to do something in the air, while the Queen was in the air. I knew that I could make a pattern, so I came up with the idea of doing the cypher basically."
The businessman, who has been flying for 39 years, flew a Cirrus SR22 plane, which has a top speed of 200mph. Around 100 people tracked the 90-minute flight and Jamie didn't know that people were watching him until they came back down to the ground.
He said: "I did it as a personal tribute to the Queen, so I was just doing it for me really, to express my gratitude to the Queen. I was a bit surprised to find out. I didn't find out until the next day actually. The next day I was contacted by a few people, but at the time I had no idea people were watching it happen."
To pay your own tribute to Queen Elizabeth, click here.