Halloween Pennant at Avalon

Saturday, July 29, 2017,

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This bad boy is not a boy. It’s a female Halloween Pennant. How do I know this? Am I an expert on dragonflies? No, but I do know someone who is. Three years ago I needed help identifying a dragonfly I had seen on the south shore.A friend of mine put me in touch with an expert from the New York Dragonfly and Damselfly Survey. Annette made the identification and I came out sounding informed. This is not an easy trick. I reached out to her after I took this photo and Annette was gracious enough to help me out again. When she’s not bailing out clueless photographers, Annette is involved with  the Eastern Long Island Audubon Society as well as writing several blogs, one of which has to do with dragonflies. I invite all of you to visit her at Dragonfly Dazed. She takes wonderful photographs of these very cool insects. JK

Seaside Dragonlet

Friday, August 15, 2014,

20140718103136-5x7w2This is a female Seaside Dragonlet. I sound almost knowledgeable, don’t I? Hah! It’s all smoke and mirrors dear reader. I was able to recognize this as a type of dragonfly but I was at a loss from there despite the fact that I have four field guides that cover both dragonflies and damselflies. It was mostly a case of where to start. Honest. I didn’t know where to begin. These amazing bugs are all too similar to each other so I decided that passing the buck was my best option. Luckily, I have friends in the know. I sent this pic out to several of my friends at Four Harbors Audubon Society. While this is obviously not a bird, the folks at Audubon are not just about birds. They see the bigger picture. What’s more is that my friends have friends. You see, I know people who know people.  🙂   Sue K., my boss at Four Harbors Audubon, forwarded this pic to Annette from the Eastern Long Island Audubon Society. As fortune would have it, Annette is not just an expert on birds, but she’s also an expert at both Damselflies and Dragonflies. Annette has been a trained a trained surveyor for the New York Dragonfly and Damselfly Survey since 2005, and she was able to identify this critter for me. How cool is that? I take a pic of a insect I don’t know anything about and my birder friends put me in touch with those in the know and make me look informed at the same time. Life is good. JK