Bright Green Pool of Water in Hadrian's Villa, Italy
Night Time Cityscape, San Juan, Puerto Rico
Park in San Juan, Puerto Rico, With a lot of Friendly Pigeons
The Venetian, Las Vegas
South Platte River, Colorado
Ft. Charlotte, Bahamas
If you have time to visit only one fort,
see this one. It is by far the largest and
covers 100 acres. Located on a hill overlooking the far west
end of the
harbour, Fort Charlotte commands an impressive view of Paradise
Island,
a good part of Nassau and the harbour. Built in 1788 by Lord
Dunmore,
this fort has a moat, dungeons, underground passageways and 42
cannons
, which have never been fired in an act of aggression. Tour guides
(working for tips) are happy to give you a complete history of
the fort.
It is one mile west of downtown Nassau, just off West Bay Street.
—Official Bahamas
Website
I look at you and see
My life that might have been:
Your face just ghostly in the smoke.
They're setting fire to the cornfields
As you're taking me home.
The smell of burning fields
Will now mean you and here.
— Kate Bush
Intense Sunset, Pebble Beach, California
Downtown San Francisco
It's just a job.
Grass grows, birds fly,
waves pound the sand.
I beat people up.
— Muhammad Ali
The
Royal Courts of Justice, London 
View From Montauk Point Lighthouse, New York
Watts Towers, Los Angeles
Bourbon Street, New Orleans
Keyport, New Jersey
The Kearny family settled the Keyport
area in 1714. Their plantation, which featured timber and
produce, and as many as 70 slaves and two sloops, prospered for
over a century. The plantation
was then divided and auctioned off, and Keyport was established
in 1830.
Keyport's rich history is captured in
the Steamboat Dock Museum at the foot of Broad Street at the
Bay and the Keyport Fire Museum and Education Center on Broad
Street.
—Keyport Online
Basílica de Nuestra Señora de los Ángeles, Cartago, Costa Rica
Basílica de Nuestra Señora
de los Ángeles (Our Lady of the Angels Basilica), a basilica in
Costa Rica, located in the city of Cartago and dedicated to the
Virgen de los Prados, officially
known as la Virgen de los Ángeles (the Lady of the Angels). The basilica
was built in 1639
and was partially destroyed by an earthquake.
The Basilica of Our Lady of the Angels
is dedicated to the Virgin of Cartago, a small
representation of the Virgin carrying the infant Jesus, said
to have been discovered by a
peasant girl in Cartago. Due to the dark complexion of the stone,
she is sometimes
affectionately called "La Negrita" or "Reina de Cartago" (lit.
Queen of Cartago). In 1824 an
official decree declared the Virgin of the Angels the official
patron of Costa Rica.
The Basilica is the object of extensive
pilgrimage and visitation by believers throughout the
country, many of whom join in the celebrated 22km walk to the
basilica during the romería
—Wikipedia
Steamy Costa Rica
The House of Memory, Raleigh, North Carolina
Photo Libraries