I was hoping to show you a photo of copulating damselflies but by the time I'd fetched my phone they'd separated.
Damselfly is a wild guess; it might be mayfly. Apparently they can stay clicked together for several hours and we often see mating pairs flying around. Just before these separated one of them was in the water of the pond so I think that might have been the egg-laying bit.Instead we have a photo of a different damsel: the now traditional photo of my first swim of the year in the pool.
That's quite the attention-grabbing post title LOL! That insect is called a dragonfly in Canada.
ReplyDeleteI think we have dragon, damsel, and may flies. Not sure of the difference between any of them.
DeleteI would NOT want to maintain a personal pool, but if there was one handy I certainly would take advantage of it.
ReplyDeleteYou've got to!
DeleteAFAIK there are both damselflies and dragonflies in Canada.
ReplyDeleteI'm sure, AC. They have lasted since prehistoric times.
DeleteWe have many damselflies doing their thing in the garden, in the pond, among the weeds - they're not picky.
ReplyDeleteThey're not!
DeleteYour post title was quite an attention grabber
ReplyDeleteI'm usually rubbish at titles
DeleteWe have many kinds of damselfies and dragonflies and darners of various colors here. I love to see them. Especially since they hunt mosquitoes.
ReplyDeleteWe see lots of the gorgeous luminous blue ones by the river? Is luminous the right word?
DeleteQuite the title! Good for you it is warm enough for a swim not here yet.
ReplyDeleteCathy
The outside temperature is definitely high enough.
DeleteClickbait titles get logged and your blog marked accordingly. Avoid doing it.
ReplyDeleteAw, I'm rubbish at titles
Delete