I love the dragonflies! ππͺ° π I remember from my childhood, I was in a boat with my father on the river and I saw a "dead bug" floating on the water. I picked up this "dead bug" and my dad told me it was a dragonfly larva. I really thought it was dead at first. But after a while she started to move. Then the insect's thorax split open and the dragonfly's head appeared. It was an incredible sight! My father couldn't believe as well that I was holding a newly born dragonfly in my palms. It was a wonderful feeling and really beutiful thing as I could admire the birth of a dragonfly in my own palm. (Dragonfly larvae crawl out of the water during moulting and cling to a solid surface usually - be it a reed thread or any other surface. This larva what I took out of the water probably dropped into from the surface where it was clinging and probably would have died if I hadn't saved it - it might be eaten by a fish.) I held it in my palm for long hours. It was beautiful to see how the dragonfly climb out of its pupa, slowly spread its wings and gradually begin to dry. After it dried and its body hardened, it flew away from my hand. But this memory was forever burned into my brain as a child. To this day, this experience is a fond memory for me.
Tényleg πππ (Nagyon jót nevettem most ezen.) Ezentúl én is így fogom hívni. A "sárkány légy" elnevezés a magyar után nem igazán jön be. Hogy miért lett a neve "szitakötΕ" azt nem tudom, talán a rovar szárnyának a szitaszerΕ± erezetére utalhattak vele, ami egyben hasonlít a kötött (knitting) textil anyagra.
Na ezért is szép a magyar nyelv! (De örülök neki hogy inkább ezt a nyelvet tanultam meg elΕbb, mint a lengyelt.) π
Tényleg πππ (Nagyon jót nevettem most ezen.) Ezentúl én is így fogom hívni. A "sárkány légy" elnevez