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Old 29-05-2006, 03:48 AM posted to rec.ponds
Galen Hekhuis
 
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Default Are dragonflies territorial?

I was sitting out back at my (getting rather small, we haven't had much
rain) pond this afternoon and watched the dragonflies. There are oodles of
them that hang out around here, green ones, blue ones, speckled ones, a
bunch of different kinds and sizes. Some of the green ones would fly
underneath my chair and around me keeping the air as free of biting bugs as
any repellent I have ever used. It was sort of like having my own little
insect air force to protect me. As I sat and looked out over the pond,
however, there was one and only one dragonfly flying. It was big and it
was red. It would patrol over the pond, and then when it wanted to rest it
flew up to a nearby pine tree. Other dragonflies would start to hover over
the pond, and then the red one would leave it's perch and dive and chase
the other dragonflies until they left. Then it would patrol over the pond
for a bit, and then go back up into the pine tree. Other dragonflies would
start to hover over the pond again, and the red dragonfly came out of the
tree to chase them away again. This happened over and over, and this isn't
the first day, either. Are all dragonflies like this, or do I just have an
obnoxious bully at my pond?

Galen Hekhuis NpD, JFR, GWA
Hell hath no fury like a bird in the hand.
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Old 29-05-2006, 04:31 AM posted to rec.ponds
Koi-Lo
 
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Default Are dragonflies territorial? Dragonflies

*Note: There are two *Koi-Lo's* on the pond and aquaria groups.

"Galen Hekhuis" wrote in message
...
Other dragonflies would
start to hover over the pond again, and the red dragonfly came out of the
tree to chase them away again. This happened over and over, and this
isn't
the first day, either. Are all dragonflies like this, or do I just have
an
obnoxious bully at my pond?

Galen Hekhuis NpD, JFR, GWA
Hell hath no fury like a bird in the hand.

======================
I haven't seen anything quite like this around my ponds but do see the blue
and green ones chase each other around. It appears to me that each just
wants it's own space. The ones we see here in TN are mainly the greens and
blues. This year there are a lot fewer for some reason.
--
Koi-Lo....
Frugal ponding since 1995.
My Pond & Aquarium Pages:
http://tinyurl.com/9do58
..
rec.pond's FAQ are at: http://www.geocities.com/justinm090/faq.html
Aquarium FAQ are at: http://faq.thekrib.com/
I do not post rude or obscene messages.
~~~~ }((((* ~~~ }{{{{(ö ~~~~ }((((({*




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Old 29-05-2006, 07:16 AM posted to rec.ponds
~ janj
 
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Default Are dragonflies territorial?

I was sitting out back at my (getting rather small, we haven't had much
rain) pond this afternoon and watched the dragonflies. There are oodles of
them that hang out around here, green ones, blue ones, speckled ones, a
bunch of different kinds and sizes. Some of the green ones would fly
underneath my chair and around me keeping the air as free of biting bugs as
any repellent I have ever used. It was sort of like having my own little
insect air force to protect me. As I sat and looked out over the pond,
however, there was one and only one dragonfly flying. It was big and it
was red. It would patrol over the pond, and then when it wanted to rest it
flew up to a nearby pine tree. Other dragonflies would start to hover over
the pond, and then the red one would leave it's perch and dive and chase
the other dragonflies until they left. Then it would patrol over the pond
for a bit, and then go back up into the pine tree. Other dragonflies would
start to hover over the pond again, and the red dragonfly came out of the
tree to chase them away again. This happened over and over, and this isn't
the first day, either. Are all dragonflies like this, or do I just have an
obnoxious bully at my pond?
Galen Hekhuis NpD, JFR, GWA


Hmmm, I'll have to pay more attention, I've noticed a lot of empty
body-parts from dragonflies emerging lately. Another good reason not to
totally muck out the pond out in spring. I'm still waiting for the first
shovel full of dirt to get moved on the incoming filter for the lily pond.
~ jan
-----------------
(Do you know where your water quality is?)
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Old 29-05-2006, 03:33 PM posted to rec.ponds
Koi-Lo
 
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Default Are dragonflies territorial?


Dragon flies are neat to shoot with shot shells ina handgun like a .38
special.........those little suckers just disentergrate or dive into
the water or ground likje an airplane that got shot down. NOt quite as
neat as when you make a direct hit on a heron with a shotgun thats
about 100 feet up and does a giant swan dive, but neat just the same.


On Sun, 28 May 2006 23:16:35 -0700, ~ janj
wrote:
I was sitting out back at my (getting rather small, we haven't had much
rain) pond this afternoon and watched the dragonflies. There are oodles of
them that hang out around here, green ones, blue ones, speckled ones, a
bunch of different kinds and sizes. Some of the green ones would fly
underneath my chair and around me keeping the air as free of biting bugs as
any repellent I have ever used. It was sort of like having my own little
insect air force to protect me. As I sat and looked out over the pond,
however, there was one and only one dragonfly flying. It was big and it
was red. It would patrol over the pond, and then when it wanted to rest it
flew up to a nearby pine tree. Other dragonflies would start to hover over
the pond, and then the red one would leave it's perch and dive and chase
the other dragonflies until they left. Then it would patrol over the pond
for a bit, and then go back up into the pine tree. Other dragonflies would
start to hover over the pond again, and the red dragonfly came out of the
tree to chase them away again. This happened over and over, and this isn't
the first day, either. Are all dragonflies like this, or do I just have an
obnoxious bully at my pond?
Galen Hekhuis NpD, JFR, GWA

Hmmm, I'll have to pay more attention, I've noticed a lot of empty
body-parts from dragonflies emerging lately. Another good reason not to
totally muck out the pond out in spring. I'm still waiting for the first
shovel full of dirt to get moved on the incoming filter for the lily pond.
~ jan
-----------------
(Do you know where your water quality is?)


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Old 29-05-2006, 05:06 PM posted to rec.ponds
 
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Default Are dragonflies territorial?

they are territorial. Ingrid

Other dragonflies would
start to hover over the pond again, and the red dragonfly came out of the
tree to chase them away again. This happened over and over, and this isn't
the first day, either. Are all dragonflies like this, or do I just have an
obnoxious bully at my pond?



~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List at
http://weloveteaching.com/puregold/
sign up: http://groups.google.com/groups/dir?...s=Group+lookup
www.drsolo.com
Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I receive no compensation for running the Puregold list or Puregold website.
I do not run nor receive any money from the ads at the old Puregold site.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Zone 5 next to Lake Michigan


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Old 29-05-2006, 05:59 PM posted to rec.ponds
Koi-Lo
 
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Default Are dragonflies territorial?



Ohhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh., that answer is done with so much
authority......but it still amounts to a no brainer........


On Mon, 29 May 2006 16:06:57 GMT, wrote:
they are territorial. Ingrid

Other dragonflies would
start to hover over the pond again, and the red dragonfly came out of the
tree to chase them away again. This happened over and over, and this isn't
the first day, either. Are all dragonflies like this, or do I just have an
obnoxious bully at my pond?


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~
List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List at
http://weloveteaching.com/puregold/
sign up: http://groups.google.com/groups/dir?...s=Group+lookup
www.drsolo.com
Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~
I receive no compensation for running the Puregold list or Puregold website.
I do not run nor receive any money from the ads at the old Puregold site.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Zone 5 next to Lake Michigan


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Old 30-05-2006, 02:18 AM posted to rec.ponds
Snooze
 
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Default Are dragonflies territorial?


"Koi-Lo" wrote in message
...


If you're going to troll, at least keep pace with the current id shift.
Spoofing an obsolete nick doesn't have much value.

Here's the most recent identity.
From: "Koi-Lo" none


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Old 02-06-2006, 09:09 PM
Registered User
 
First recorded activity by GardenBanter: May 2005
Location: Belfast, N Ireland
Posts: 91
Default

Watching the ones here, the males seem to be territorial and I recollect it being for breeding rights. I get mainly one species here so cant comment on inter species interaction. Females seem to go were they will. That said, when numbers are balanced I had 14 coupled pairs laying in a pond maybe 12ft x 12ft.
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Old 20-06-2006, 12:12 AM posted to rec.ponds
 
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Default Are dragonflies territorial?


Galen Hekhuis wrote:
I was sitting out back at my (getting rather small, we haven't had much
rain) pond this afternoon and watched the dragonflies. There are oodles of
them that hang out around here, green ones, blue ones, speckled ones, a
bunch of different kinds and sizes. Some of the green ones would fly
underneath my chair and around me keeping the air as free of biting bugs as
any repellent I have ever used. It was sort of like having my own little
insect air force to protect me. As I sat and looked out over the pond,
however, there was one and only one dragonfly flying. It was big and it
was red. It would patrol over the pond, and then when it wanted to rest it
flew up to a nearby pine tree. Other dragonflies would start to hover over
the pond, and then the red one would leave it's perch and dive and chase
the other dragonflies until they left. Then it would patrol over the pond
for a bit, and then go back up into the pine tree. Other dragonflies would
start to hover over the pond again, and the red dragonfly came out of the
tree to chase them away again. This happened over and over, and this isn't
the first day, either. Are all dragonflies like this, or do I just have an
obnoxious bully at my pond?


Was it this one:

http://www.pbase.com/sirchandestroy/...85082/original

He's a jerk...

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Old 21-06-2006, 09:29 PM
Registered User
 
First recorded activity by GardenBanter: May 2005
Location: Belfast, N Ireland
Posts: 91
Default

Stunning photo, I wonder it something like that was the inspiration for the spacecraft in the sci fi series Lexx


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Old 22-06-2006, 04:14 AM posted to rec.ponds
~ janj
 
Posts: n/a
Default Are dragonflies territorial?

On Wed, 21 Jun 2006 20:29:30 +0000, sean mckinney wrote:

Stunning photo, I wonder it something like that was the inspiration for
the spacecraft in the sci fi series Lexx


Ah yes, I remember that show. Odd, but catching. ~ jan
-----------------
(Do you know where your water quality is?)

Also ponding troll free at:
http://groups.google.com/group/The-Freshwater-Aquarium
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