Travel Photography > Photos taken in USA and tagged as landscapes
Salmon Bay and the walkway that extends along the cypress lined banks allows you to share the natural habitat of a variety of birds and other "critters."
Looking across the snow-covered lawn towards Dewey, Smith College.
The neon lights of Neilson Library's belly dance through the thickly falling snow, and the sky darkens as I come out of class. Smith College, Mass.
the cover of my book, A Journey into Michelangelo's Rome (Roaring Forties Press, 2008)
I didn't actually take this but it was tekn in California. I love storms so I thought it was amazing <3
We did, peeking out the window to see snowflakes swirling around the autumn colors. Here, outside the alumnae house, a tree seems to bloom under the first snow of winter!
The first snow in NoHo dusted these autumn leaves outside the Catholic church.
Some hang gliders were taking advantage of the stiff winds. The sand dunes are eroding about 3 feet (1 m) per year.
Much of Cape Cod is actually made of or covered in sand dunes. Erosion is a big problem in the area.
These support a wide variety of wild life, especially fish and birds.
Provincetown is the farthest town on Cape Cod. It only has about 3,400 year round residents - most leave during the winter to avoid fearce 'Nor Easter storms.
On the way to Sedona. Setting sun against the ubiquitous saguaro Cactii.
This is the approach from the Atlantic Ocean to the towns Buckport and Bangor, Maine.