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  • The Red Onion Saloon, now a National Historic Building, was Skagway's most exclusive bordello. Built in 1897 with planks cut by Capt. William Moore, the founder of Skagway, the Red Onion Saloon opened for business in 1898, serving alcohol on the first floor while the upper floor satisfied more than the prospector's thirst.
    D040_522.jpg
  • Alaska.  New Northern Red Currant leaves and blossoms (Ribes triste) next to a birch tree trunk in the Campbell Creek Estuary Natural Area in Anchorage in May.
    083-1809-0035.jpg
  • The Red Onion Saloon, now a National Historic Building, was Skagway's most exclusive bordello. Built in 1897 with planks cut by Capt. William Moore, the founder of Skagway, the Red Onion Saloon opened for business in 1898, serving alcohol on the first floor while the upper floor satisfied more than the prospector's thirst.
    D040_454.jpg
  • The Red Onion Saloon, now a National Historic Building, was Skagway's most exclusive bordello. Built in 1897 with planks cut by Capt. William Moore, the founder of Skagway, the Red Onion Saloon opened for business in 1898, serving alcohol on the first floor while the upper floor satisfied more than the prospector's thirst.
    D040_451.jpg
  • The Red Onion Saloon, now a National Historic Building, was Skagway's most exclusive bordello. Built in 1897 with planks cut by Capt. William Moore, the founder of Skagway, the Red Onion Saloon opened for business in 1898, serving alcohol on the first floor while the upper floor satisfied more than the prospector's thirst.
    D040_450.jpg
  • The Red Onion Saloon, now a National Historic Building, was Skagway's most exclusive bordello. Built in 1897 with planks cut by Capt. William Moore, the founder of Skagway, the Red Onion Saloon opened for business in 1898, serving alcohol on the first floor while the upper floor satisfied more than the prospector's thirst.
    D040_442.jpg
  • The Red Onion Saloon, now a National Historic Building, was Skagway's most exclusive bordello. Built in 1897 with planks cut by Capt. William Moore, the founder of Skagway, the Red Onion Saloon opened for business in 1898, serving alcohol on the first floor while the upper floor satisfied more than the prospector's thirst.
    D040_439.jpg
  • The Red Onion Saloon, now a National Historic Building, was Skagway's most exclusive bordello. Built in 1897 with planks cut by Capt. William Moore, the founder of Skagway, the Red Onion Saloon opened for business in 1898, serving alcohol on the first floor while the upper floor satisfied more than the prospector's thirst.
    D040_438.jpg
  • The Red Onion Saloon, now a National Historic Building, was Skagway's most exclusive bordello. Built in 1897 with planks cut by Capt. William Moore, the founder of Skagway, the Red Onion Saloon opened for business in 1898, serving alcohol on the first floor while the upper floor satisfied more than the prospector's thirst.
    D040_436.jpg
  • The Red Onion Saloon, now a National Historic Building, was Skagway's most exclusive bordello. Built in 1897 with planks cut by Capt. William Moore, the founder of Skagway, the Red Onion Saloon opened for business in 1898, serving alcohol on the first floor while the upper floor satisfied more than the prospector's thirst.
    D040_435.jpg
  • The Red Onion Saloon, now a National Historic Building, was Skagway's most exclusive bordello. Built in 1897 with planks cut by Capt. William Moore, the founder of Skagway, the Red Onion Saloon opened for business in 1898, serving alcohol on the first floor while the upper floor satisfied more than the prospector's thirst.
    D040_432.jpg
  • Red Fox (Vulpes vulpes) Wandering on hunt.
    S004_806.jpg
  • Red fox (vulpes vulpes) curled up to conserve body heat as it rests in the snow, Arctic National Wildlife Refuge
    D012_202.jpg
  • Alaska . Skagway . The interior of the famous Red Onion Saloon .
    D007_475.jpg
  • USA, Alaska, Katmai National Park, Red Fox (Vulpes vulpes) walking in meadow along Hallo Bay on summer morning
    D041_777.jpg
  • Alaska.  Cluster of crimson Red Elderberries (Sambucus racemosa) among dark green leaves on the Kenai Peninsula in August.  Not generally considered edible, thoiugh flowers and eseeded fruits are safe for consumption.  Elderflower tea also has medicinal uses.
    D057_061.jpg
  • Alaska.  A limit of three Sockeye (red) Salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka) on a stringer layed out on a bit of grass on the bank of the upper Kenai River in June.  A fly rod and daypack rest nearby against the roots of a spruce tree.  The first run of reds into the Russian River is generally small and short, but the quality of the fish is superlative.
    D054_853.jpg
  • Alaska.  Wide-angle horizontal view of snow-covered Mount McKinley on a sunny day with high white clouds over the peak in late August.  A patch of blue sky is to the right of the peak and a large patch of bright red Alpine Bearberry (Arctostaphylos alpina) covers the foreground.  Most references list the mountain (also called Denali—Koyukon Athabaskan for "The High One") as 20,320 feet in elevation, the tallest peak in North America, with a greater real vertical rise (18,000 feet) than Mount Everest.
    D052_601.jpg
  • Alaska. Close-up of an adult Red Fox (Vulpes vulpes) walking quickly uphill in tundra with its mouth open while hunting in Denali National Park in July.  The largest of the true foxes, the Red Fox is also the most geographically spread of carivores with a distribution across the entire northern hemisphere.
    D050_877.jpg
  • Alaska.  Close-up of the head and shoulders of a Red Fox (Vulpes vulpes) as it pauses to listen for prey while hunting along the Denali National Park road in July on a very cloudy, wet morning.  The fox's fur is soaked and is clinging together in spiky strands.
    D050_854.jpg
  • Alaska.  Red Fox (Vulpes vulpes) changes direction while hunting in brushy tundra in Denali National Park in July.  The largest of the true foxes, the Red Fox is also the most geographically spread of carivores with a distribution across the entire northern hemisphere.
    D050_848.jpg
  • Alaska.  Adult Red Fox (Vulpes vulpes) carrying recently caught prey (two Arctic Ground Squirrels (Spermophilus parryii)) near the road in Denali National Park in July on a wet, rainy morning.  Squirrels and other small mammals, birds, and insects are common prey for foxes, and they will often cache excess food when it is plentiful.  The largest of the true foxes, the Red Fox is also the most geographically spread of carivores with a distribution across the entire northern hemisphere.
    D050_844.jpg
  • Alaska.  Blooming Northern Red Currant shrub (Ribes triste) growing in the top of a  decaying tree stump near the beach on Fox Island in Resurrection Bay in June.  Small purplish flowers cluster on a drooping raceme, and smooth, translucent red fruit usually ripens in July.  Edible and sought after, red currants are widely gathered and used throughout Alaska for jellies and jams and can be eaten raw.
    D050_411.jpg
  • Alaska.  Brilliant crimson leaves of Northern Red Currant (Ribes triste) adorn a shrub in mid-September near Byers Lake in Denali State Park.
    083-170127-0003.jpg
  • Female red phalarope (Phalaropus fulicaria) on tundra pond near Barrow Alaska
    087-170123-0046.jpg
  • Adult female red phalarope (Phalaropus fulicaria) on tundra pond near Barrow Alaska
    087-170123-0016.jpg
  • Alaska. Red Fox (Vulpes vulpes), Denali Natl. Park.
    D036_734.jpg
  • Red Bouys and boats
    D001_549.jpg
  • USA, Alaska, Round Island, Red fox (Vulpes vulpes)
    D002_547.jpg
  • Red Fox, Vulpes vulpes, fall, Denali National Park, Alaska. Digital original ©Robin Brandt #06_3334
    D008_746.jpg
  • North America; United States; Alaska; Denali National Park; Wildlife; Winter; Red Fox (Vulpes vulpes)
    131-1905-0024.jpg
  • Alaska.  Three brightly colored Northern Red Currant leaves (Ribes triste) against a moss background on the Kenai Peninsula in September.
    083-1809-0006.jpg
  • Alaska. Red Fox (Vulpes vulpes) in winter, north slope.
    031-1803-0067.jpg
  • North America; United States; Alaska; Denali National Park; Summer; Wildlife; Mammals; Tree Squirrels; American Red Squirrel;Tamiasciurus hudsonicus;
    131-1711-0049.jpg
  • North America; United States; Alaska; Denali National Park; Summer; Wildlife; Mammals; Tree Squirrels; American Red Squirrel;Tamiasciurus hudsonicus;
    131-1711-0048.jpg
  • North America; United States; Alaska; Denali National Park; Summer; Wildlife; Mammals; Tree Squirrels; American Red Squirrel;Tamiasciurus hudsonicus;
    131-1711-0042.jpg
  • North America; United States; Alaska; Denali National Park; Summer; Wildlife; Mammals; Tree Squirrels; American Red Squirrel;Tamiasciurus hudsonicus;
    131-1711-0004.jpg
  • Alaska.  An adult Red Squirrel (Tamiasciurus hudsonicus) eating the seeds of a White Spruce cone (Picea glauca) on Glacier Spit at Chinitna Bay in June.
    083-1707-0035.jpg
  • Alaska.  New leaves and blossooms on Northern Red Currant (Ribes triste) in Far North Bicentennial Park in Anchorage in May.
    083-1707-0019.jpg
  • Alaska.  New leaves and blossooms on Northern Red Currant (Ribes triste) in Far North Bicentennial Park in Anchorage in May.
    083-1707-0017.jpg
  • Alaska.  Close-up of a bright red clump of Alpine Bearberry leaves (Arctostaphylos alpina) nestled among lichen and crowberry along the Denali Highway in September.
    083-1707-0006.jpg
  • The Red Onion Saloon, now a National Historic Building, was Skagway's most exclusive bordello. Built in 1897 with planks cut by Capt. William Moore, the founder of Skagway, the Red Onion Saloon opened for business in 1898, serving alcohol on the first floor while the upper floor satisfied more than the prospector's thirst.
    D039_913.jpg
  • The Red Onion Saloon, now a National Historic Building, was Skagway's most exclusive bordello. Built in 1897 with planks cut by Capt. William Moore, the founder of Skagway, the Red Onion Saloon opened for business in 1898, serving alcohol on the first floor while the upper floor satisfied more than the prospector's thirst.
    D039_557.jpg
  • Round Island, Alaska. Red Fox (Vulpes vulpes) searching for birds nests for eggs.
    S010_501.jpg
  • Alaska. The colorful Red Car Trolley operated in Homer.
    D052_974.jpg
  • Alaska. Skagway Show girls at the Red Onion Saloon
    D040_457.jpg
  • Alaska. Skagway Show girls at the Red Onion Saloon
    D040_456.jpg
  • The Red Onion Saloon, now a National Historic Building, was Skagway's most exclusive bordello. Built in 1897 with planks cut by Capt. William Moore, the founder of Skagway, the Red Onion Saloon opened for business in 1898, serving alcohol on the first floor while the upper floor satisfied more than the prospector's thirst.
    D040_455.jpg
  • The Red Onion Saloon, now a National Historic Building, was Skagway's most exclusive bordello. Built in 1897 with planks cut by Capt. William Moore, the founder of Skagway, the Red Onion Saloon opened for business in 1898, serving alcohol on the first floor while the upper floor satisfied more than the prospector's thirst.
    D040_453.jpg
  • The Red Onion Saloon, now a National Historic Building, was Skagway's most exclusive bordello. Built in 1897 with planks cut by Capt. William Moore, the founder of Skagway, the Red Onion Saloon opened for business in 1898, serving alcohol on the first floor while the upper floor satisfied more than the prospector's thirst.
    D040_452.jpg
  • The Red Onion Saloon, now a National Historic Building, was Skagway's most exclusive bordello. Built in 1897 with planks cut by Capt. William Moore, the founder of Skagway, the Red Onion Saloon opened for business in 1898, serving alcohol on the first floor while the upper floor satisfied more than the prospector's thirst.
    D040_449.jpg
  • The Red Onion Saloon, now a National Historic Building, was Skagway's most exclusive bordello. Built in 1897 with planks cut by Capt. William Moore, the founder of Skagway, the Red Onion Saloon opened for business in 1898, serving alcohol on the first floor while the upper floor satisfied more than the prospector's thirst.
    D040_448.jpg
  • The Red Onion Saloon, now a National Historic Building, was Skagway's most exclusive bordello. Built in 1897 with planks cut by Capt. William Moore, the founder of Skagway, the Red Onion Saloon opened for business in 1898, serving alcohol on the first floor while the upper floor satisfied more than the prospector's thirst.
    D040_441.jpg
  • The Red Onion Saloon, now a National Historic Building, was Skagway's most exclusive bordello. Built in 1897 with planks cut by Capt. William Moore, the founder of Skagway, the Red Onion Saloon opened for business in 1898, serving alcohol on the first floor while the upper floor satisfied more than the prospector's thirst.
    D040_440.jpg
  • The Red Onion Saloon, now a National Historic Building, was Skagway's most exclusive bordello. Built in 1897 with planks cut by Capt. William Moore, the founder of Skagway, the Red Onion Saloon opened for business in 1898, serving alcohol on the first floor while the upper floor satisfied more than the prospector's thirst.
    D040_437.jpg
  • The Red Onion Saloon, now a National Historic Building, was Skagway's most exclusive bordello. Built in 1897 with planks cut by Capt. William Moore, the founder of Skagway, the Red Onion Saloon opened for business in 1898, serving alcohol on the first floor while the upper floor satisfied more than the prospector's thirst.
    D040_434.jpg
  • The Red Onion Saloon, now a National Historic Building, was Skagway's most exclusive bordello. Built in 1897 with planks cut by Capt. William Moore, the founder of Skagway, the Red Onion Saloon opened for business in 1898, serving alcohol on the first floor while the upper floor satisfied more than the prospector's thirst.
    D040_433.jpg
  • Arctic Coastal Plain, ANWR, Alaska, a red fox hunts for lemmings on the tundra
    D049_956.jpg
  • A red fox lays curled in a ball in the snow to conserve it's body warmth while resting
    D012_205.jpg
  • A red squirrel Tamiasciurus hudsonicus, feeds on a white spruce cone in the forest at Katmai,
    D008_951.jpg
  • Red fox pup
    D008_833.jpg
  • Red fox pup
    D008_832.jpg
  • Canada, Manitoba, Gillam, Red Fox (Vulpes vulpes) sitting on gravel road along Nelson River
    D058_305.jpg
  • USA, Alaska, Katmai National Park, Red Fox (Vulpes vulpes) walking in meadow along Hallo Bay on summer morning
    D058_185.jpg
  • USA, Alaska, Katmai National Park, Sockeye (Red) Salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka) spawning over Brooks Falls
    D012_834.jpg
  • USA, Alaska, Denali National Park, Red Fox (Vulpes vulpes) standing at edge of dirt road near Stony Dome
    D012_777.jpg
  • USA, Alaska, Denali National Park, Red Fox (Vulpes vulpes) licks chops after consuming Arctic Ground Squirrel
    D012_775.jpg
  • USA, Alaska, Denali National Park, Red Fox (Vulpes vulpes) walks along melting snow bank near Highway Pass
    D012_774.jpg
  • Canada, Nova Scotia, Cape Breton Highlands National Park, Young Red Fox standing at edge of spruce forest on summer morning on Cape Breton Island.
    D012_772.jpg
  • Alaska.  A cone of ripe red Devil's Club berries (Oplopanax horridus) on the Kenai Peninsula in late August.  Devil's Club berries are a favorite of bears, and the plant itself has many uses in both traditional and contemporary native American cultures.
    D057_062.jpg
  • Alaska.  Cluster of cream-colored Red Elderberry blossoms (Sambucus racemosa) among green leaves along the Byron Glacier trail in Portage Valley in June.
    D056_921.jpg
  • Alaska.  An adult Red Fox (Vulpes vulpes) trots through willow shrubbery while hunting in Denal National Park in July with several wildflowers adding a touch of color in the tundra.
    D055_891.jpg
  • Alaska.  A very wet adult cross phase Red Fox (Vulpes vulpes) sitting beside the Denali National Park road not far from Stony Hill as it pauses during an early morning hunt to listen and watch for prey in July.
    D055_447.jpg
  • Alaska.  Close-up of head and shoulders of an adult Red Fox (Vulpes vulpes) carrying two recently caught Arctic Ground Squirrels (Spermophilus parryii) in Denali National Park in July on a rainy morning.  Squirrels and other small mammals, birds, and insects are common prey for foxes, and they will often cache excess food when it is plentiful.
    D055_445.jpg
  • Alaska.  Adult Red Fox (Vulpes vulpes) carrying two recently caught Arctic Ground Squirrels (Spermophilus parryii) in Denali National Park in July on a rainy morning.  Squirrels and other small mammals, birds, and insects are common prey for foxes, and they will often cache excess food when it is plentiful.
    D055_444.jpg
  • Alaska.  A pert, birght-eyed adult Red Squirrel (Tamiasciurus hudsonicus) standing at the base of a spruce tree near its midden with tail raised in alert posture in September next to the Russian Lakes Trail on the Kenai Peninsula.  Red squirrels eat a wide-variety of foods including insects, seeds, bark, nuts, fruits, mushrooms.  Very vocal, they often bark at intruders for extended periods of time, and also chatter, especially to stake out territory and protect stored food supply.
    D052_608.jpg
  • Alaska.  Wide-angle vertical view of snow-covered Mount McKinley on a sunny day with high white clouds over the peak in late August.  A patch of blue sky is to the right of the peak and a large patch of bright red Alpine Bearberry (Arctostaphylos alpina) covers the foreground.  Most references list the mountain (also called Denali—Koyukon Athabaskan for "The High One") as 20,320 feet in elevation, the tallest peak in North America, with a greater real vertical rise (18,000 feet) than Mount Everest.
    D052_043.jpg
  • Alaska.  Adult Red Fox (Vulpes vulpes) standing in short tundra near the Denali National Park road in July as it pauses during a hunt for prey.  (Distracting dry grass stem removed.)
    D050_885.jpg
  • Alaska.  An adult Red Fox (cross phase) (Vulpes vulpes) sitting beside the Denali National Park road not far from Stony Hill as it pauses during an early morning hunt to listen and watch for prey in July.
    D050_852.jpg
  • Alaska.  An adult Red Fox (cross phase) (Vulpes vulpes) trots across a grassy area of tundra in Denali National Park in July on a rainy morning.  The largest of the true foxes, the Red Fox is also the most geographically spread of carivores with a distribution across the entire northern hemisphere.
    D050_849.jpg
  • Alaska.  Animal interaction in the park.  An adult Red Fox (Vulpes vulpes) trots up the Denali National Park road next to a Park Service tour bus full of visitors looking on in July.
    D050_847.jpg
  • Alaska.  An adult Red Fox (Vulpes vulpes) with wet fur standing in tundra near the Denali National Park road in July while grasping a recently caught Arctic Ground Squirrel (Spermophilus parryii) in its mouth.  Squirrels and other small mammals, birds, and insects are are common prey for foxes, and they will often cache excess food when it is plentiful.  The largest of the true foxes, the Red Fox is also the most geographically spread of carivores with a distribution across the entire northern hemisphere.
    D050_845.jpg
  • Alaska.  A Red Squirrel (Tamiasciurus hudsonicus) hanging from a White Spruce branch (Picea glauca) near the top to the tree on a clear day in September just after it has cut off a cone with its sharp teeth so the cone will drop to the ground where it can be gathered and stored for winter use.
    D047_618.jpg
  • Red phalarope (Phalaropus fulicaria) feeding on edge of tundra pond near Barrow Alaska
    087-170123-0005.jpg
  • Walking around downtown Dawson City I saw this red door framed by the gray frame and gray windows on either side. A few steps are in the foreground. Yukon, Canada.
    014-170123-0063.jpg
  • Alaska.  A Red Squirrel (Tamiasciurus hudsonicus) sitting upright on a branch while eating a White Spruce cone (Picea glauca) on the Kenai Peninsula in August.
    083-161122-0003.jpg
  • USA, Alaska,  A red fox of late summer, travels along an alpine lake in the Talkeetna Mountains of Hatcher Pass.
    D045_130.jpg
  • USA, Alaska, A red fox of late summer travels in the rocky alpine of the Takeetna Mountains near Hatcher Pass.
    D045_128.jpg
  • Red fox and kit<br />
Round Island Sanctuary<br />
Bering Sea Alaska
    D035_547.jpg
  • Alaska. Becharof National Wildlife Refuge.. A red fox pup near den opening. (Vulpes vulpes)
    S008_079.jpg
  • Red Fox (Vulpes fulva) in the grass.  Kodiak National Wildlife Refuge, Alaska.
    D034_993.jpg
  • Round Island, Alaska. Red Fox (Vulpes vulpes) searching for birds nests for eggs.
    S010_501.jpg
  • Red Fox, Vulpes vulpes. Kits Portrait. Round Island: Alaska.
    S004_586.jpg
  • Red Fox Kits
    D017_010.jpg
  • Alaska. Aniakchak National Monument. Aniakchak Caldera. Red Fox Pups Wrestling. (Vulpes vulpes) Red foxes are most commonly a rusty red, with white underbelly, black ear tips and legs, and a bushy tail with a distinctive white tip.
    S008_026.jpg
  • Alaska. Red Fox (Vulpes vulpes) resting in the warm, afternoon sun of an autumn day in the tundra, Denali National Park.
    D056_008.jpg
  • Alaska. Red "Cross" Fox hunting ground squirrels in autumn with brilliant fall tudra color, Denali National Park.
    D055_942.jpg
  • Alaska. The colorful Red Car Trolley operated in Homer.
    D052_974.jpg
  • Alaska. Red Phalarope (Phalaropus fulicarius) male in breeding plummage, feeding in an arctic tundra meltwater pond, Barrow.
    D052_082.jpg
  • Alaska. The colorful Red Car Trolley operated in Homer.
    D051_463.jpg
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