When an unfamiliar dragonfly zoomed by me, one of my fellow photographers told me it was a unicorn, at least that is what I thought he said.
Sometimes when I am concentrating on a shot, I shut out my surroundings and I had had to ask him to explain his comment. It turns out that he said that it was a Unicorn Clubtail dragonfly (Arigomphus villosipes), a type that he had rarely seen in our local marsh.
I extended my 135-400mm zoom to almost maximum range and it still was tough to get a clear shot. The dragonfly flew off and returned to his perch a couple of times, but the log on which he posed was so far away that my shot doesn’t permit me to say with great certainty that it is a Unicorn Clubtail. It is clear, though, that it not a Common Whitetail or Blue Dasher, the two types of dragonflies that I see most often.
Overall, I like the effect of the triple view of the dragonfly—the dragonfly, its shadow on the log, and its reflection in the water, which, for me, helps to compensate for the softness of the focus.
Michael Q. Powell. All rights reserved
Good photo- dragonflies are beautiful, but they don’t always sit still long.
Still, It would have been cooler if you’d gotten a photo of an actual Unicorn. Your title was misleading to my inner 12-year-old self.
[…] Unicorn Clubtail (michaelqpowell.wordpress.com) […]
[…] Unicorn Clubtail (michaelqpowell.wordpress.com) […]