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My World: Foxx

foxx__1_by_rufusthered-dan3arq.jpg

A tale of a tail. Cheers, Mike
 
foxx__1_by_rufusthered-dan3arq.jpg

Michael,

This is so luxurious and has so much invested in its build that it must do something special for the doc
X! Is this just for swagger, like wearing Givenchy or what?

Asher

This animal takes pride in its tail and fully deserves the extra 'x' in its name. It's a special foxx. Back in the 1890s, its ancestral foxhole lay nearby what was then the biggest silver mine in the world. That residence today is within a provincial park that allows no hunting of wildlife. Foxx thinks humans kindly creatures and so takes delight to display its tail for inspection by eminent connoisseurs of fox-hood, as found on OPFI.
Cheers, Mike

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Paul Abbott

New member
This is a very interesting animal, thanks for sharing, Michael. This guys tail is nearly as big as himself on the whole, and what a tail it is. Usually animals that have distinctive features like this are for a reason, no?
 

Doug Kerr

Well-known member
Hi, Michael,


A stunning shot of a wondrous creature.

The foxes we are most familiar with here in New Mexico are not nearly so reddish, but rather are essentially gray (and one variety has that adjective in its name, the Mexican gray fox).

Interestingly enough, in the western form of the Cherokee language (spoken, for example, in the Cherokee Nation, which is located in the state of Oklahoma), the generic name for "fox" means, literally, "gray fox". But in the eastern form of the language (spoken generally by the Eastern Band of Cherokee, in the southeastern United States), the name for "fox" means, literally, "red fox"

Carla is of the Cherokee Nation (and is a registered citizen). Her Cherokee name is "Red Fox", and she presents it in Cherokee in the Eastern Band form (literally, "red fox").

Best regards,

Doug
 
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