ohenry wrote:All of your dragonfly and damselfly shots are great. I'm just impressed that you can get as close to them as you do without them flittering off before you have the chance to get the shot.
Depends on the species, time of year, and what they are doing...
In the early spring the male dragons emerge first and wait for the females (the females don't show up for at least another two weeks, sometimes longer). The males will stake out territory around the lake, and as long as I move slowly they will eventually let me get close. I shot a lot of Black Tailed Skimmers during May of this year, but unfortunately they like to perch on the ground...
When the females emerge the males get nervous and they don't stay put. I managed to catch a few females within hours of them transforming from nymphs -but didn't get a chance to shoot an emergence (they normally make the change at night or in thick reads to avoid predators). You can tell that this one isn't very old because its color hasn't changed yet.
Now it's almost impossible to shoot the males unless I add a 1.4x teleconverter to my macro lens or use a telephoto. But occasionally I catch a male and female pair mating -seems that I can sneak up on them if they are "occupide"...
The Violet Darters (the dragons at the beginning of this thread) are a little different in behavior. When the males and females pair up they leave the lake, so I haven't had a chance to film them mating. Also if I can find one that is actively feeding I can get close to it -takes a little time and patience but it's possible. There are a couple more species of dragons at the lake that I haven't even shot yet -can't get closer than 2 or 3 meters from them before they take off...