If you are lucky and persistent, it is not hard to photograph a perched dragonfly. Some of them are amazingly tolerant of the presence of a human and will let you get really close to them. Even when they do fly away, many of them will return to the very same perch.
If you want to really challenge your skills as a photographer and perhaps even your sanity, you attempt to photograph members of dragonfly species that fly almost constantly and rarely perch, like this male Prince Baskettail dragonfly (Epitheca princeps) that I spotted late in June at Jackson Miles Abbott Wetland Refuge. This dragonfly was flying irregular patrols low over the waters of a small pond at the refuge—sometimes he would fly relatively close to the shore, but often his flight path was unpredictable.
So how do I do it? I generally use the same 180mm macro lens that I use for close-up shots of dragonflies. However, I know that the lens tends to focus slowly and autofocus simply can’t acquire the subject, because it fills such a small part of the frame, so I switch to manual focus. I pre-focus on a general area and then as I track the dragonfly, I adjust the focus on the fly as he zooms by and fire away in burst mode. As dragonflies go, a Prince Baskettail is relatively large, almost 3 inches in length (75 mm), but it is really tough to get an in focus shot of one while he is flying.
On a second occasion when I was visiting the same refuge, I got a chance to try a variation of the technique. The dragonflies were patrolling high overhead as I stood in a grassy area at one end of the pond. The second shot was the best that I could manage—the wing pattern suggests that it is also a Prince Baskettail, but the eye coloration and the terminal appendages at the tip of the abdomen make me wonder if this one is a female. What I discovered is that it is actually a lot harder to focus on a dragonfly when I am looking straight up than when looking down at the water and my arms get tired a lot quicker when holding my camera up hight for an extended period of time.
© Michael Q. Powell. All rights reserved.
Beautiful post and photos. Thank you.😊
Thanks, Suzette. I always have fun photographing dragonflies, one of my favorite subjects.
Namaste, it’s me Benjamin! I really really like the first photo the best. Do you know why? When I made it bigger and bigger again I could find the different parts of this dragonfly’s wings and body. It looks like the flying dragonfly’s eyes are green goggles above a little nose and he is smiling! Thank you, Mr. Mike!
Thanks, Benjamin, for your wonderful comments. I too like the first one the best. I was able to capture more details when I was shooting downwards at the dragonfly and he was heading towards me. I too think that the giant eyes look like goggles and I am happy that you think he is smiling–I often think a dragonfly is smiling, but not everyone looks at a photo that way.
These are both great but I will also register my vote for the first as a favorite. All the reasons already stated plus the soft patterned background.
I’m with you, Michael. I decided to include the second one, because I wanted to talk a little about tracking the dragonflies in the sky. Unless they fly really low, it’s hard to get a good sky shot. 🙂
Nice! Persistence, practice, and a bit of luck… a fun way to while away a morning, Mike.
Thanks, Ellen. Some might get frustrated because it seems almost impossible to get this kind of shot, but I enjoy the challenge.
I give it a try for that same reason once in awhile, Mike.