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Scenery, Homer, Harding Icefield, Kachemak Bay, Kenai Fjords National Park, Alaska, United States of America, North America
Scenery, Homer, Harding Icefield, Kachemak Bay, Kenai Fjords National Park, Alaska, United States of America, North America
Tufted Puffin (Fratercula cirrhata) with fish in its beak, Homer, Alaska, United States of America, North America
Commercial fishing boats of all kinds and sizes in Homer Harbor in Kachemak Bay, Kenai Peninsula, Alaska, United States of America, North America
Commercial fishing boats of all kinds and sizes in Homer Harbor in Kachemak Bay, Kenai Peninsula, Alaska, United States of America, North America
Commercial fishing boats of all kinds and sizes in Homer Harbor in Kachemak Bay, Kenai Peninsula, Alaska, United States of America, North America
Commercial fishing boats of all kinds and sizes in Homer Harbor in Kachemak Bay, Kenai Peninsula, Alaska, United States of America, North America
Headland on the Straits of Messina, famous for the six-headed monster in Homer's Odyssey, Scilla, Calabria, Italy, Europe
The Salty Dawg Saloon near the Homer Harbor on the Homer Spit in Kachemak Bay, Kenai Peninsula, Alaska, United States of America, North America
Claws of bald eagle, haliaeetus leucocephalus, weisskopfseeadler, homer, kenai peninsula, alaska, usa
Houses on stilts at the Homer Spit, Homer, Halibut-Fishing Capital of the World, Kachemak Bay, Alaska
Aerial view of Homer Spit, Homer, Kachemak Bay, mountains of Kachemak Bay State Park, Kenai Peninsula, South Alaska, Alaska, USA, North America
Teenagers (left to right: Emma Teal Laukitis, Marin Lee and Lindsay Henkelman) sled on a sunny winter's day in Homer, Alaska on January 13, 2008.
The Eagle Lady, 81-year old Jean Keene, attracts bald eagles (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) every winter morning regardless of weather with her banquet of surplus fish. Keene has fed a gathering of eagles at the Homer Spit Campground in Alaska every winter morning for 25 years. What started out as just 2 eagles eventually became 200 to 300 of the magnificent birds.
Dolly Varden char caught on Deep Creek on the Western Kenai Peninsula, Alaska September 2009. Flowing into Cook Inlet north of Homer, the waters of Deep Creek and the Anchor River host late fall runs of wild steelhead.
Rainbow trout caught on Deep Creek on the Western Kenai Peninsula, Alaska September 2009. Flowing into Cook Inlet north of Homer, the waters of Deep Creek and the Anchor River host late fall runs of wild steelhead.
Close-up view of a soaring bald eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) coming in to land at the Eagle Lady's place on the Homer Spit.
Fishermen with wild steelhead fished on Deep Creek on the Western Kenai Peninsula, Alaska September 2009. Flowing into Cook Inlet north of Homer, the waters of Deep Creek and the Anchor River host late fall runs of wild steelhead.
Wild steelhead fished on Deep Creek on the Western Kenai Peninsula, Alaska September 2009. Flowing into Cook Inlet north of Homer, the waters of Deep Creek and the Anchor River host late fall runs of wild steelhead.
Spawning Dolly Varden char fished on Deep Creek on the Western Kenai Peninsula, Alaska September 2009. Flowing into Cook Inlet north of Homer, the waters of Deep Creek and the Anchor River host late fall runs of wild steelhead.
American Bald Eagle stands on the rocky beach watching waves roll in at Kachemak Bay near Homer, Alaska.
The Eagle Lady, 81-year old Jean Keene, attracts 200 to 300 bald eagles (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) every winter morning with her banquet of surplus fish. Keene has fed a gathering of eagles at the Homer Spit Campground in Alaska every winter morning for 25 years. What started out as just 2 eagles eventually became a huge gathering of the magnificent birds.
Woman casts for wild steelhead on Deep Creek on the Western Kenai Peninsula, Alaska September 2009. Flowing into Cook Inlet north of Homer, the waters of Deep Creek and the Anchor River host late fall runs of wild steelhead.
Fisherman with Dolly Varden char fished on Deep Creek on the Western Kenai Peninsula, Alaska September 2009. Flowing into Cook Inlet north of Homer, the waters of Deep Creek and the Anchor River host late fall runs of wild steelhead.