Italy
220 placesin Puglia's Itria Valley, southeast of Bari
Alberobello Trulli
— a town built to come apart, and never did.
on the Coral Riviera, in northwest Sardinia
Alghero
— the walls go gold when the sea takes the sun.
in the Dolomites, under the Sassolungo
Alpe di Siusi
— the green that runs all the way to the rock.
on the Amalfi Coast, at the top of the steps
Amalfi Cathedral
— the gold at the top of the climb.
on the cliffs above Amalfi, south of Naples
Amalfi Lemon Grove
— — the yellow that hangs in the shade above the sea.
in Aosta, the Roman town under the Alps
Aosta Roman Gate
— — still the way in, two thousand years on.
running south out of Rome
Appian Way
— the road that outlived the empire that built it.
on the Friulian plain, near the head of the Adriatic
Aquileia
— — the floor outlived the city.
just east of Amalfi, where the Dragone reaches the sea
Atrani
— — the sea, waiting at the bottom of the stairs.
in the Val d'Orcia, south of Siena
Bagno Vignoni
— — the square that has always been water.
in the Langhe hills, south of Alba
Barolo Wine Country
— the fog the grape was named for.
in Ravenna, near the Adriatic
Basilica of San Vitale
— a green meadow that has not faded in fifteen hundred years.
on the western edge of Assisi, above the Umbrian plain
Basilica of St Francis
— the hill they renamed when the saint came home.
in Rome, where the Appian Way begins
Baths of Caracalla
— the roof is gone, and the room still towers.
on the southwestern coast of Italy, between Vesuvius and Capri
Bay of Naples
— a coastline that lives under a volcano.
where Lake Como forks into two arms
Bellagio
— — evening, and the lake goes quiet on both sides.
above the Lombard plain, an hour from Milan
Bergamo Alta
— — the hundred strokes that still close the gates at ten.
below the cliffs of Anacapri, on Capri's north shore
Blue Grotto Capri
— the light comes up through the water, not down.
in Florence, up the hill behind the Palazzo Pitti
Boboli Gardens
— — the hill the Medici shaped into rooms.
in the old red city of Emilia-Romagna
Bologna Porticoes
— — the warm red shade the city walks under.
in the upper Valtellina, below the Stelvio Pass
Bormio Old Town
— — warm water under a town of cold stone.
in the upper Valtellina, below the Stelvio Pass
Bormio Old Town Winter
— — the hour the snow turns blue under the bell tower.
in Venice, between the palace and the prison
Bridge of Sighs
— the last of the daylight, through a narrow stone window.
north of Venice, across the lagoon
Burano
— the colour the fog could not take.
on the hill above Cagliari, in southern Sardinia
Cagliari Old Town
— the high town the light leaves last.
on the eastern coast of Sardinia
Cala Goloritzé
— — a cove the landslide left.
in old Naples, off Spaccanapoli
Cappella Sansevero
— a cloth that forgot it was stone.
off the southeast cliffs of Capri, in the Bay of Naples
Capri Faraglioni
— three towers the sea left standing.
in southern Umbria, above Terni
Cascata delle Marmore
— — a river the Romans taught to fall.
above the plains of Puglia, in southern Italy
Castel del Monte
— — a crown set down on a bare hill, and left.
on the Naples waterfront, in sight of Vesuvius
Castel dell'Ovo
— a yellow fortress the bay keeps.
above Lake Albano, in the hills southeast of Rome
Castel Gandolfo
— — the cool the city climbs the hill to find.
on the Naples waterfront, between the port and Piazza Municipio
Castel Nuovo
— — the white arch the dark towers hold.
on the Tiber's right bank, just below the Vatican
Castel Sant'Angelo
— the angel that sheathed its sword over the city.
in the Lucanian Dolomites of southern Italy
Castelmezzano
— a village the rock made room for.
on the north coast of Sicily, under the headland
Cefalù
— the headland gone gold above the roofs, just before dark.
in the Aosta Valley, at the foot of the Matterhorn
Cervinia and the Matterhorn
— the horn that closes the valley.
in the hills between Florence and Siena
Chianti Vineyards
— the gold the cypress keeps after the light goes.
above the Tyrrhenian, in southern Basilicata
Christ the Redeemer of Maratea
— the figure that turns from the sea.
five towers above Cortina
Cinque Torri
— limestone on fire, just before the sun lets go.
above Cortina, in the Dolomites
Cinque Torri in Winter
— — stone the snow can't put out.
high in the Dolomites, west of Cortina
Cinque Torri Summer
— the long gold a summer dusk leaves on pale stone.
above the Lazio badlands, north of Rome
Civita di Bagnoregio
— the town the valley is slowly taking back.
in Rome, where the Forum ends
Colosseum
— the ring the centuries kept half of.
in the lagoons of the Po Delta, south of Venice
Comacchio
— — the colour the lagoon keeps at dusk.
on the Adriatic coast, south of Ancona
Conero Riviera
— white cliff, green water, no road down.
on a headland above the Ligurian Sea, the middle of the five villages
Corniglia
— — the village the sea never climbed to.
high in the Dolomites, under the Tofane
Cortina d'Ampezzo
— — the hour the pale rock turns to rose.
on the left bank of the Po, between Milan and Mantua
Cremona
— the brick city where the violin was born.
in the clay hills south of Siena
Crete Senesi
— the bare hills the sea left behind.
on the lagoon at the south end of St. Mark's Square
Doge's Palace
— — pink marble lace above the water.
high in the Alps of northeast Italy
Dolomites Snowfield
— — the rose the snow keeps after the sun is gone.
in old Mantua, south of Lake Garda
Ducal Palace of Mantua
— — a city behind one door.
high above Urbino, in Italy's Marche
Ducal Palace of Urbino
— two towers, and the valley falling away behind them.
above Trapani, on the western tip of Sicily
Erice
— the morning the cloud climbs the mountain.
in the walled center of Ferrara, north of Bologna
Este Castle
— red brick standing in the water it kept.
above old Florence, between the Arno and the hills
Florence Duomo
— — the dome the light keeps coming back to.
in San Polo, a few bridges west of the Rialto
Frari Basilica
— the gold at the end of the long brick dark.
in central Italy, west of Ancona
Frasassi Caves
— the cathedral the water left behind.
in Naples, across from the San Carlo opera house
Galleria Umberto I
— where the afternoon comes down through the glass.
in Milan, between the Duomo and La Scala
Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II
— the light a glass roof leaves on marble.
in the Vatican Palace, on the way to the Sistine Chapel
Gallery of Maps
— a country painted along its own walls.
the spur of the Italian boot, on the Adriatic
Gargano Coast
— white stone, and the blue it falls into.
on Italy's Ligurian coast, west of the Cinque Terre
Genoa Harbor
— — the lantern still burning at the harbour mouth.
in Abruzzo, the roof of the Apennines
Gran Sasso
— the last snow the south keeps.
the long S through Venice
Grand Canal
— — a street the water made.
on the coastal plain south of Salerno
Greek Temples of Paestum
— the gold a Greek temple keeps for evening.
on the slope of Monte Ingino, in Umbria
Gubbio
— — the winter the whole mountain turns to light.
outside Tivoli, an hour east of Rome
Hadrian's Villa
— — what an emperor built after he had seen the world.
below Vesuvius, on the Bay of Naples
Herculaneum
— where the wood should be ash, and isn't.
on a hilltop above the Adriatic, south of Ancona
Holy House of Loreto
— — a small house under a great dome.
in the Borromean Gulf, off Stresa
Isola Bella Lake Maggiore
— where bare rock was taught to bloom.
in old Verona, off Piazza delle Erbe
Juliet's Balcony
— the balcony the letters keep finding.
in the strait between Sardinia and Corsica
La Maddalena Archipelago
— wind-worked granite, and the sea holding every blue at once.
in Milan, a block from the Duomo
La Scala
— six tiers of gold, holding their breath.
South Tyrol, twilight
Lago di Anterselva
— the eight minutes after the sun is gone.
high in the Dolomites of South Tyrol
Lago di Braies
— — green water, still enough to hold the mountain.
below the Three Peaks
Lago di Misurina
— mountains, holding their breath.
high in the Dolomites
Lago di Sorapis
— the blue the storm leaves behind.
high in South Tyrol, near the Austrian border
Lake Anterselva Antholzer See
— the eight minutes after the sun is gone.
deep in South Tyrol's Antholz Valley
Lake Anterselva in Winter
— the colour the cold leaves behind.
in Lombardy's Valle Sabbia, west of Lake Garda
Lake Idro
— a deep blue the famous lakes forgot.
between Como and Maggiore, on the Italian shore
Lake Lugano
— the still, dark water the mountains lean over.
high in the Dolomites, below the Tre Cime
Lake Misurina in Summer
— the morning the mountains lie still on the water.
in the Dolomites, on the road to the Tre Cime
Lake Misurina Winter
— — the mirror the cold lays flat.
in Piedmont, just west of Lake Maggiore
Lake Orta
— — the small lake the painters kept to themselves.
high in the Dolomites, above Cortina
Lake Sorapis Frozen in Winter
— where the blue waits out the winter.
high in the Dolomites, above Cortina d'Ampezzo
Lake Sorapis in Summer
— — a turquoise the snow gives back in July.
west of Perugia, low among the Umbrian hills
Lake Trasimeno
— — the flat silver the wind hasn't found yet.
south of Alba, in the long hills of Piedmont
Langhe Vineyards
— the rows the fog comes through.
in the Square of Miracles, in Tuscany
Leaning Tower of Pisa
— a fall that never finishes.
in the old centre of Lecce, in Italy's heel
Lecce Cathedral
— — honey stone, holding the light long after dark.
high in the Alps, a pass from the Swiss border
Livigno in Summer
— the few green weeks between two long winters.
high in upper Valtellina, near the Swiss border
Livigno in Winter
— the blue the cold leaves on the snow.
in the Brenta Dolomites of Trentino, in northern Italy
Madonna di Campiglio Winter
— — the floodlit slope, the rest of the valley dark.
on the Ligurian coast, in the Cinque Terre
Manarola
— — the village the sun keeps last.
south of Grosseto, the last wild coast in Tuscany
Maremma Coast
— salt, pine, and a tower over an empty sea.
in Florence, a block north of the Basilica di San Lorenzo
Mercato Centrale
— the morning a city wakes for bread.
in Milan, southwest of the Duomo
Milan Navigli Canals
— — the water Milan kept when it covered the rest.
on the Po plain, between Bologna and Parma
Modena Cathedral
— Genesis, cut in marble that has gone the colour of honey.
rising over the rooftops of Turin
Mole Antonelliana
— — the spire that wouldn't stop rising.
in the hills above Palermo, Sicily
Monreale Cathedral
— where the walls keep the light.
above the Val d'Orcia, south of Siena
Montalcino Fortress
— — where Siena went on, after Siena fell.
on its hill above Cassino, southeast of Rome
Monte Cassino Abbey
— raised again, exactly where it fell.
on Lake Iseo, between Bergamo and Brescia
Monte Isola
— the slow walk to where the lake looks small.
high on a ridge, south of Siena
Montepulciano
— — a hill the colour of the wine it makes.
in the Tuscan hills between Siena and Florence
Monteriggioni
— a stone crown still holding the hill.
the northernmost of the Cinque Terre, on the Ligurian coast
Monterosso al Mare
— where a hard coast finally softens into sand.
above Catania, on the east coast of Sicily
Mount Etna
— — a mountain still writing itself.
on the Bay of Naples, east of the city
Mount Vesuvius
— a fire the bay has learned to live beside.
in the Venetian Lagoon, north of Venice
Murano
— the colour fire leaves in glass.
in southeastern Sicily, south of Syracuse
Noto
— the hour the stone turns gold.
the island heart of Syracuse, on Sicily's southeast coast
Ortygia Syracuse
— fresh water that rises at the edge of the sea.
on the tufa cliffs of southern Umbria
Orvieto Duomo
— the gold the evening finds in the stone.
downriver from Rome, where the Tiber meets the sea
Ostia Antica
— — the harbour the river left behind.
above the olive plain in Puglia, the heel of Italy
Ostuni
— — a white town above an old sea of olives.
at the eastern tip of Italy's heel, on the Adriatic
Otranto Cathedral
— the tree that grew across the whole floor.
above the Roman Forum, in the centre of Rome
Palatine Hill
— — the orange light on imperial brick.
southwest of Turin, in the old hunting woods
Palazzina di Stupinigi
— — the bronze stag still watching the woods.
in old Palermo, on Sicily's north coast
Palermo Cathedral
— a cathedral the centuries kept rebuilding.
in Vicenza, between Verona and Venice
Palladian Basilica
— green copper riding above the white arches.
in Parma's cathedral square, west of Bologna
Parma Baptistery
— — pink stone, holding the late light.
between two valleys, in summer
Passo Sella
— the week the meadow turned pink.
high in the Dolomites, between the Sella massif and the Sassolungo
Passo Sella in Winter
— — the rose the rocks keep, then the blue.
high in the Dolomites, on the saddle below the Sassolungo
Passo Sella Summer
— the green the snow gives back, between two walls of stone.
on a hilltop in Umbria, central Italy
Perugia
— the hour the whole town walks the same street.
atop the Capitoline Hill, above the Roman Forum
Piazza del Campidoglio
— the star drawn in stone, laid four centuries late.
in old Siena, where three hills meet
Piazza del Campo
— a shell of warm brick, tilted toward the tower.
just inside Rome's old north gate, below the Pincio
Piazza del Popolo
— where the road from the north first becomes Rome.
in the old centre of Florence, in front of the Palazzo Vecchio
Piazza della Signoria
— the colour bronze gets when it stays outside.
Arezzo's sloping square, in eastern Tuscany
Piazza Grande Arezzo
— — the square that leans into the late light.
in Rome's centro storico, just west of the Pantheon
Piazza Navona
— — the fountains running where the runners ran.
at the centre of Rome, below the Capitoline Hill
Piazza Venezia
— the white marble the evening turns to gold.
above the Arno, looking back at the duomo
Piazzale Michelangelo
— the hour Florence turns the colour of its rooftops.
on a ridge above the Val d'Orcia, in southern Tuscany
Pienza
— a whole town, drawn once and built at once.
on the field at Pisa, beside the leaning tower
Pisa Baptistery
— a single note the dome keeps for ten seconds.
in Florence, across the Arno from the Uffizi
Pitti Palace
— the hour the stone goes amber.
from the Alps to the Adriatic
Po River
— the slow water that made the plain.
on Puglia's Adriatic cliffs, south of Bari
Polignano a Mare
— — white houses at the exact edge of the blue.
the southern Apennines, where Basilicata meets Calabria
Pollino National Park
— — a pine that has held the ridge for twelve hundred years.
below Vesuvius, on the Bay of Naples
Pompeii Forum
— still open to the sky, still facing the mountain.
in the hills of Umbria, above the Tessino gorge
Ponte delle Torri
— the green falls away, and the stone keeps crossing.
across the Arno, in old Florence
Ponte Vecchio
— the river under a street of gold.
on the northeast coast of Sardinia
Porto Cervo
— — a coast that named a colour.
on the Ligurian coast, east of Genoa
Portofino
— — a half-ring of painted houses around water holding still.
on the Ligurian coast, just south of the Cinque Terre
Portovenere
— — the last stone the light leaves before the open sea.
on the Amalfi Coast, south of Naples
Positano
— a cliff the colour of fruit, just before dusk.
on the Amalfi Coast, between Positano and Amalfi
Praiano
— — where the coast holds the last of the sun.
on the floor of Val di Fiemme, under the Latemar
Predazzo Ski Jump
— — the held breath at the top of the in-run.
in the Val di Fiemme, under the Latemar
Predazzo Ski Jump in Summer
— — the tower waiting on November.
on the toe of Italy, across the strait from Sicily
Reggio Calabria Seafront
— where Italy stops to watch Sicily.
across the Grand Canal, in old Venice
Rialto Bridge
— one white arch, and the whole canal beneath it.
on the cliffs of the Cinque Terre
Riomaggiore
— houses painted to be found from the sea.
high in Abruzzo's Gran Sasso, above the Navelli plain
Rocca Calascio
— stone the evening light won't let go of.
just west of the Colosseum, in old Rome
Roman Forum
— the floor of an empire, open to the sky.
on Piazza Castello, in the old centre of Turin
Royal Palace of Turin
— the gilded rooms a kingdom left behind.
above the Susa Valley, west of Turin
Sacra di San Michele
— — a thousand years of stone, above the valley fog.
above the Aniene, east of Rome
Sacro Speco Subiaco
— a monastery the cliff agreed to hold.
above the Val d'Elsa, between Florence and Siena
San Gimignano
— the towers that outlived their century.
on its own island across the basin from Piazza San Marco
San Giorgio Maggiore
— the morning catches the white before St. Mark's.
in the Gargano of northern Puglia
San Giovanni Rotondo
— a still hill town the world keeps coming to.
on the hill above the Arno in Florence
San Miniato al Monte
— the chant rising as Florence goes dark.
east of the Duomo, near the Arno
Santa Croce Basilica
— where Galileo lies beside Michelangelo.
at the mouth of the Grand Canal, across from San Marco
Santa Maria della Salute
— a vow the city kept in white stone.
on the Esquiline Hill, above Roma Termini
Santa Maria Maggiore
— a Roman August that remembers snow.
in the south of Italy, an hour from the Adriatic
Sassi di Matera
— a hillside that turns to lamplight.
in southern Tuscany, in the Maremma hills below the village
Saturnia Hot Springs
— — warm water on white stone, all winter.
on Sicily's northwest coast, where the Zingaro begins
Scopello
— — two stones the bay still keeps.
in Padua, half an hour west of Venice
Scrovegni Chapel
— a chapel where the sky is the ceiling.
high in the Dolomites, above Val Gardena
Seceda Ridge
— — the meadow that ends at a wall of stone.
in central Milan, between the Duomo and Parco Sempione
Sforza Castle
— — the red brick the dukes left standing.
in Italy
Siena Duomo
on a thin peninsula in southern Lake Garda
Sirmione Lake Garda
— a town the lake holds on three sides.
inside the Vatican walls, behind St. Peter's
Sistine Chapel
— — the inch between two fingers.
across the Bay of Naples from Vesuvius
Sorrento
— a town of lemons above a bay that holds Vesuvius.
through the old centre of Naples
Spaccanapoli
— laundry, stone, and the long shade.
in Rome, above Piazza di Spagna
Spanish Steps
— — the morning the azaleas come back.
on the Caelian Hill in Rome
St John Lateran Basilica
— — the first of all the churches, still Rome's cathedral.
at the lagoon's edge in Venice
St Mark's Square
— the square the tide turns to mirror.
in Vatican City, across the Tiber from old Rome
St Peter's Basilica
— — travertine holding the last of the light.
across the Tiber from old Rome, inside Vatican City
St Peter's Square
— the stone arms held open for four centuries.
in Venice, at the head of Piazza San Marco
St. Mark's Basilica
— the gold the lagoon-light keeps finding.
in the Ortler Alps of northern Italy, near the Swiss border
Stelvio Pass
— — forty-eight turns into the thinning air.
in the Ortler Alps of northern Italy, near the Swiss border
Stelvio Pass Winter
— — the road the snow takes back.
in the Aeolians, north of Sicily
Stromboli
— the fire that keeps its own time.
in the Marmilla hills of southern Sardinia
Su Nuraxi Nuraghe
— — stone that stood when the world was still bronze.
in the Abruzzo, between the Maiella and Morrone
Sulmona
— — the morning the veil falls.
on Monte Tauro, above the Ionian Sea
Taormina Greek Theatre
— — the stage opens onto a volcano.
in old Rimini, two streets north of the Arch of Augustus
Tempio Malatestiano
— where a Renaissance held its breath.
in the Val di Fiemme, on the valley floor below Tesero
Tesero Cross-Country Meadow
— — the green the snow waits to find.
in the Val di Fiemme, under the Latemar
Tesero Cross-Country Trails
— — the long blue between two breaths.
north of Venice, across the lagoon
Torcello
— the gold the city left behind.
in the old Imperial Forums of Rome
Trajan's Column
— — a story carved in marble, still climbing.
on the slope of the Quirinal, above the Imperial Forums
Trajan's Market
— the brick the afternoon settles into.
high above Misurina, in the eastern Dolomites
Tre Cime di Lavaredo
— three towers cut from the same sky.
in central Rome, a short walk east of the Pantheon
Trevi Fountain
— the corner where the city opens into water.
in the Veneto, half an hour north of Venice
Treviso Canals
— — green water still turning the medieval wheels.
on Calabria's Tyrrhenian coast
Tropea
— a church on a rock, a town on a cliff.
south of Livorno, the long line to Bolgheri
Tuscan Cypress Avenue
— — five kilometres of cypresses, perfectly straight.
in the old centre of Bologna, where the porticoes start
Two Towers of Bologna
— the lean the city kept upright.
in Florence, between the Palazzo Vecchio and the Arno
Uffizi Gallery
— — the offices Florence kept for its paintings.
south of Siena, in southern Tuscany
Val d'Orcia
— — the light the Sienese painters worked from.
north of Trento, in the Dolomites
Val di Fiemme
— — a long white track through the violin forest.
north of Trento, in the Dolomites
Val di Fiemme Summer
— — a summer in the forest the violins came from.
above Madonna di Campiglio
Vallesinella Falls
— a cathedral of moss and falling water.
in the Brenta Dolomites, below Madonna di Campiglio
Vallesinella Waterfalls
— the meltwater the rock kept all winter.
on a ridge above Agrigento, in southern Sicily
Valley of the Temples
— — stone the wind has been polishing for 2,500 years.
behind St. Peter's, on Vatican Hill
Vatican Gardens
— half the city, kept for walking.
in the east of Venice, past the Riva degli Schiavoni
Venetian Arsenal
— a brick city Venice keeps to herself.
in Cannaregio, north of the Grand Canal
Venetian Jewish Ghetto
— the small square the world borrowed a word from.
on the Ligurian coast, between Monterosso and Corniglia
Vernazza
— the colour the sea has been trying to fade.
in old Verona, west of Venice
Verona Arena
— pink stone the night fills with song.
above the Spanish Steps, on the Pincian Hill
Villa Borghese Gardens
— — the hour the domes go gold.
above Ravello, on the Amalfi Coast
Villa Cimbrone
— marble busts, and the sea behind them.
above Tivoli, an hour east of Rome
Villa d'Este Tivoli
— the sound of water arranged like a garden.
on a wooded peninsula of Lake Como
Villa del Balbianello
— a loggia alone above the water.
at the edge of Pompeii, under Vesuvius
Villa of the Mysteries
— the red the ash kept whole.
high in the Tuscan hills above the Cecina valley
Volterra
— the way light walks through stone.
in Tuscany, just inland from Pisa
Walls of Lucca
— the wall the war never came to.
on the south side of Venice, facing Giudecca
Zattere
— — the side of Venice that keeps the afternoon.
France
195 placeson the Alabaster Coast of Normandy
Aiguille d'Etretat
— the chalk the Channel left standing.
high above Chamonix, in the Mont Blanc massif
Aiguille du Midi Cable Car
— — twenty minutes from the meadow to the snow.
above the Tarn, an hour northeast of Toulouse
Albi Sainte-Cecile Cathedral
— — a fortress built around a sky.
between the Vosges and the Rhine
Alsace Vineyard in October
— — rows of gold the rain hasn't reached.
in Picardy, north of Paris
Amiens Cathedral Nave
— a forest of stone, lit from above.
at the north end of Lake Annecy, in the French Alps
Annecy Old Town
— the colour the river carries from the lake.
on the Côte d'Azur, between Cannes and Nice
Antibes Ramparts
— — the wall the sea keeps polishing.
at the head of the Champs-Élysées
Arc de Triomphe
— a flame that hasn't gone out since 1923.
in Arles, where the Rhône splits for the Camargue
Arles Roman Amphitheatre
— an oval the town never stopped using.
on a hill north of Aix-en-Provence
Atelier Cezanne
— the light he built a room to hold.
deep beneath the Causse Méjean, in the south of France
Aven Armand
— the cathedral the water grew in the dark.
in the Marne valley, east of Paris
Avenue de Champagne Epernay
— — a quiet mile, the chalk running cold beneath it.
between the Arc de Triomphe and the Bois de Boulogne
Avenue Foch
— the wide quiet under the chestnuts.
just inland from the Normandy beaches
Bayeux Commonwealth War Cemetery
— rows of white, kept by Normandy grass.
an hour north of Paris, in Picardy
Beauvais Cathedral Choir
— — light climbing past where stone should stop.
off the south coast of Brittany
Belle-Ile-en-Mer Aiguilles
— — the white the Atlantic leaves between the towers.
in the Loire Valley, between Orléans and Tours
Blois Renaissance Staircase
— — a spiral the king signed in salamanders.
on the western edge of Paris
Bois de Boulogne Lake
— the long afternoon between two islands.
on the north slope of the Luberon, in central Provence
Bonnieux Perched Village
— — stone the colour of late afternoon.
below Beaune, where the limestone slope tips east
Burgundy Cote de Beaune
— — the gold the September sun leaves in the rows.
south of Dijon, on the Côte d'Or
Burgundy Vineyard Winter Dawn
— — the pink the dawn leaves on the rows.
on the Left Bank of Paris, in Saint-Germain-des-Prés
Cafe de Flore
— the room the twentieth century thought out loud in.
on a small island in the Gulf of Morbihan, off the Brittany coast
Cairn of Gavrinis
— — what someone carved before the sea came up.
south of Marseille, in the Calanques
Calanque de Sormiou
— the village the road forgets in summer.
in the Rhône delta, south of Arles
Camargue Salt Marsh
— the rose the salt pans hold in August.
in northeastern Paris, between Bastille and La Villette
Canal Saint-Martin
— iron arches over water that takes its time.
in Brittany, across the bay from Mont-Saint-Michel
Cancale Oyster Beds
— — the field the tide gives back twice a day.
the long curve of the bay in Cannes
Cannes Croisette
— two weeks of cinema, fifty of palms.
the southern point of the Crozon peninsula, in Brittany
Cap de la Chèvre
— the heather lying down before the Atlantic.
on the Bassin d'Arcachon, across the water from the Dune du Pilat
Cap Ferret Oyster Shack
— a dozen oysters and the tide coming in.
in the Languedoc, above the Aude
Carcassonne Cite
— ramparts holding the last of the light.
above the bay of Quiberon, on the south coast of Brittany
Carnac Stone Alignments
— rows the heath has been holding since before writing.
east of Marseille, at the foot of Cap Canaille
Cassis Port
— the hour the cliff turns the colour of brick.
in the Marais, east of Les Halles
Centre Pompidou
— — the building that wears its bones on the outside.
in the southern Massif Central, north of Montpellier
Cevennes National Park
— the dark Europe still keeps.
in the chalk hills between Reims and Épernay
Champagne Vineyard October
— — the gold the harvest leaves behind.
in Paris, between the Tuileries and the arch
Champs-Elysees
— — the avenue the city walks before dark.
an hour southwest of Paris, on the Beauce
Chartres Cathedral West Facade
— — two towers, three centuries apart.
in the Loire Valley, east of Tours
Chateau d'Amboise
— — white stone above the slow Loire.
on an island in the Indre, southwest of Tours
Chateau d'Azay-le-Rideau
— the house the Indre paints back.
in the Loire valley, above the Indre
Chateau d'Usse
— — the white castle a fairy tale grew around.
above the Dordogne, in the Périgord Noir
Chateau de Beynac
— the cliff that decided to be a castle.
in the Loire Valley, south of Angers
Chateau de Brissac
— — pale stone, dark slate, above the vines of Anjou.
above the Dordogne in the Périgord Noir
Chateau de Castelnaud
— the gold the stone keeps after the sun is gone.
in the Loire Valley, east of Blois
Chateau de Chambord
— a forest with a skyline above it.
north of Paris, where the forest opens onto water
Chateau de Chantilly
— the kind of stillness that doubles a building.
on the Cher, in the Loire Valley
Chateau de Chenonceau
— the gallery the river runs beneath.
in the Loire Valley, southeast of Blois
Chateau de Cheverny
— — a white that the rain keeps polishing.
in the Loire valley, above the Vienne
Chateau de Chinon
— the long white wall above a slow river.
on the right bank of the Loire, west of Tours
Chateau de Langeais
— — a town gate on one side, a garden on the other.
on the Loire, where the Vienne joins it
Chateau de Montsoreau
— — white stone set into the river.
above the Loire, in the wine country of Anjou
Chateau de Saumur
— the castle the Limbourgs painted in September.
in Amboise, on the Loire
Chateau du Clos Luce
— — the last room the Mona Lisa knew.
high in the French Pyrenees, against the Spanish border
Cirque de Gavarnie
— — the colosseum the glaciers left behind.
high in the French Pyrenees, above Gavarnie
Cirque de Troumouse
— the meadow the mountains lean over.
on the Garonne, north of central Bordeaux
Cite du Vin
— — the curve a glass remembers.
in Alsace, where the Lauch slows through Colmar
Colmar Little Venice
— houses leaning over water that holds them twice.
in southern France, on the road to Santiago
Conques Sainte-Foy Pilgrim Abbey
— — the light walked toward for a thousand years.
high above the Cérou valley, in the Tarn
Cordes-sur-Ciel
— a ridge the morning fog rises to meet.
the long chalk slope south of Épernay
Cote des Blancs
— — the morning light the chalk holds onto.
in Aix-en-Provence, half an hour north of Marseille
Cours Mirabeau
— the long shade between four fountains.
on the Norman coast, two hours from Paris
Deauville Beach Umbrellas
— the colour the channel doesn't have.
high above the Dordogne, in the Périgord Noir
Domme Bastide
— — the long curve of the river below.
on the Atlantic, west of Bordeaux
Dune du Pilat
— where the sand is taller than the pines.
in Alsace, south of Colmar
Eguisheim Concentric Village
— — streets that curl back to where they began.
on the Champ de Mars, on the left bank of the Seine
Eiffel Tower
— iron the evening turns to gold.
above the Champ-de-Mars, on the Left Bank
Eiffel Tower
— the lattice the sky shows through.
above the Champ de Mars, on the Seine's left bank
Eiffel Tower
— the lattice the evening hangs from.
on the Alabaster Coast of Normandy
Etretat Pebble Beach
— the door the cliff opens for the sea.
on the Alabaster Coast, the eastern arch above Étretat
Etretat Porte d'Amont
— — the chapel above, the arch below, the sea through it.
above the Côte d'Azur, between Nice and Monaco
Eze Perched Village
— — the colour the Mediterranean leaves on stone.
in Brittany, west of Rennes
Foret de Broceliande
— the wood the stories kept coming back to.
in Paris, just north of the Palais Garnier
Galeries Lafayette Glass Dome
— a sky built in coloured glass.
at the eastern face of the palace, southwest of Paris
Gilded Gate of Versailles
— the gold the morning finds first.
at the foot of the Alpilles, just south of Saint-Rémy
Glanum Roman Ruins
— what the centuries did not bury.
in the Luberon, above the lavender abbey
Gordes Hilltop Village
— — honey stone, stacked into the cliff.
in the Causses of Quercy, above the Dordogne valley
Gouffre de Padirac
— — the circle of green sky, seen from far below.
on the south coast of Brittany
Grand Menhir Brise
— — granite split four ways, lying still.
in the king's palace, west of Paris
Hall of Mirrors Versailles
— — the afternoon sun, returned seventeen times by glass.
at the north edge of the Versailles gardens, past the Petit Trianon
Hameau de la Reine
— — a village painted to look already old.
above the Alsace plain, in the Vosges
Haut-Koenigsbourg Castle
— — pink sandstone, holding the long horizon.
on a chalk hillside above the Marne, north of Épernay
Hautvillers Abbey
— — vines below, the small church above.
in Beaune, the wine capital of Burgundy
Hospices de Beaune
— — a roof patterned like a page from a book of hours.
on the Left Bank, east of the Eiffel Tower
Hotel des Invalides
— the gold the dusk leaves on Paris.
in the Seine, between the Left and Right Banks of Paris
Île de la Cité
— — the island the bells came back to.
on a low island off La Rochelle
Ile de Re Salt Marshes
— — the geometry the sea leaves behind.
where the land runs out, west of Brittany
Ile de Sein Lighthouse
— — the last lit stone before the open Atlantic.
in the middle of the Seine, just east of Notre-Dame
Ile Saint-Louis Quayside
— — the light the Seine takes home each evening.
between the Louvre and the Place de la Concorde
Jardin des Tuileries
— the long view, kept since Le Nôtre.
in upper Alsace, where the vineyards climb the Vosges
Kaysersberg Ramparts
— the river the rampart still watches.
on the Dordogne, between Beynac and Domme
La Roque-Gageac
— the village the cliff keeps warm.
in the French Alps, an hour south of Geneva
Lake Annecy
— the green a lake turns when it's been left alone.
in the Dordogne, southwestern France
Lascaux Cave Painting
— the dark that held its colour for seventeen thousand years.
on the Norman coast, where the Bresle meets the Channel
Le Treport Chalk Cliffs
— the chalk the Channel hasn't finished.
high in the Alpilles, between Avignon and Arles
Les Baux-de-Provence
— the village the limestone built and the wind kept.
along the Loire west of Orléans
Loire Valley Vineyard
— — the cool light the river leaves on the vines.
in the French Pyrenees, on a bend of the Gave de Pau
Lourdes Sanctuary Basilica
— — a rock, a spring, and the world walks to it.
in Provence, at the foot of the Luberon
Lourmarin Village
— — the gold the limestone holds until evening.
on the east face of the Louvre, facing Saint-Germain-l'Auxerrois
Louvre Colonnade
— — the row the morning light belongs to.
in the courtyard of the Louvre, on the right bank of the Seine
Louvre Pyramid
— — a triangle of glass in a square of stone.
at the center of Place de la Concorde, between the Tuileries and the Champs-Élysées
Luxor Obelisk
— older than the city it stands in.
in the centre of Nîmes, half an hour west of Avignon
Maison Carree
— the temple the centuries left alone.
on the rue des Marchands, in old-town Colmar
Maison Pfister
— a corner that turned Colmar toward the Renaissance.
behind a carriage door in the Paris Marais
Marais Courtyard
— — the green a carriage door keeps quiet.
at the foot of the Pyrenees, in Lourdes
Massabielle Grotto
— a wall a million hands have touched.
in the Luxembourg Garden, on the Left Bank
Medici Fountain
— — the long green hour, held by plane trees.
in the Haute-Savoie, below Mont Blanc
Megeve Alpine Village
— the bell over a square the snow holds.
high in the Luberon, on a long limestone spur
Menerbes Ridge Village
— — the village the ridge slowly became.
on the French Riviera, the last town before Italy
Menton Pastel Facades
— — the colour Liguria left behind.
above Chamonix, in the Mont Blanc massif
Mer de Glace
— — winter, on its way down.
in the Maritime Alps, north of Nice
Mercantour Dark Sky Reserve
— the dark the coast forgot.
in a Norman village west of Paris, where the Epte meets the Seine
Monet's Pink House Giverny
— the pink the painter kept for himself.
in Normandy, an hour northwest of Paris
Monet's Water Lily Pond
— still water under a green wooden bridge.
above Chamonix, where France meets Italy
Mont Blanc
— — the white the summer cannot melt.
on a tidal island off the Normandy coast, near the Brittany border
Mont-Saint-Michel
— the abbey that becomes an island twice a day.
on a tidal island where Normandy meets Brittany
Mont-Saint-Michel Abbey Cloister
— a courtyard suspended between the sea and the sky.
where Normandy meets Brittany
Mont-Saint-Michel Bay
— the hour the water gives back the island.
high above the Left Bank rooftops
Montparnasse Tower View
— the city flat as a folded map.
on the Left Bank, fifty-nine floors up
Montparnasse Tower View of Paris
— — the half-hour the limestone turns gold.
at the mouth of Marseille's old port
MuCEM Marseille
— a cube wearing the shadow of its own lace.
above Omaha Beach, on the bluff at Colleville-sur-Mer
Normandy American Cemetery
— — the white the bluff has held since June.
high above Marseille's old port
Notre-Dame de la Garde
— the gold that watches for the boats coming home.
on the Île de la Cité, in the Seine
Notre-Dame de Paris
— stone built to carry the colour.
on the parvis, on the Île de la Cité
Notre-Dame de Paris West Facade
— — the wall the city measures from.
in the Rhône valley, north of Avignon
Orange Roman Theatre
— — the wall the centuries forgot to bring down.
in old Avignon, above the Rhône
Palais des Papes
— — a fortress with a court inside.
in Paris, at the head of Avenue de l'Opéra
Palais Garnier Facade
— the gold of Apollo, just before the curtain.
on the Place de l'Opéra, in central Paris
Palais Garnier Grand Staircase
— a staircase built to be a room.
on the hill above the Sorbonne, in the Latin Quarter
Pantheon Sainte-Genevieve
— where the country keeps its great names.
in the Dordogne, southwest France
Perigord Walnut Orchard
— the sound of walnuts hitting the grass.
on the grounds of Versailles, west of Paris
Petit Trianon
— a door the queen closed behind her.
in old Strasbourg, where the Ill divides into four
Petite France Strasbourg
— the wood leaning toward its own reflection.
on the western tip of Île de Ré, west of La Rochelle
Phare des Baleines
— — a light named for the whales that came ashore.
on the far end of Ouessant, the last island before the open Atlantic
Phare du Creac'h
— — the lamp at the western edge of Europe.
above the Col du Tourmalet, in the French Pyrenees
Pic du Midi de Bigorre
— — the night sky from above the weather.
high in the French Pyrenees, above the Col du Tourmalet
Pic du Midi Observatory
— — the stars the valleys can no longer see.
facing the Garonne, in Bordeaux
Place de la Bourse
— — a façade the water learns by heart.
in the Marais quarter of Paris
Place des Vosges
— — red brick the afternoon settles into.
in Montmartre, a few steps from Sacré-Cœur
Place du Tertre
— the easels going up while the city is still quiet.
at the western edge of Brittany, above the Raz de Sein
Pointe du Raz
— — the granite the Atlantic has been working on.
at the western tip of Brittany, above the Iroise Sea
Pointe Saint-Mathieu Lighthouse
— — the same light, in a different stone.
across the Seine, between the Invalides and the Champs-Élysées
Pont Alexandre III
— gold against the river, just before dark.
in Provence, on the Rhône
Pont d'Avignon
— — four arches into the Rhône, then nothing.
in Annecy, where the canal opens onto the lake
Pont des Amours
— an iron arch, and the lake just beginning.
where the Hérault leaves its gorges below Saint-Guilhem-le-Désert
Pont du Diable
— — a thousand years of pilgrim feet and the same green water.
above the Gardon, in the south of France
Pont du Gard
— — two thousand years above the river.
in central Paris, at the tip of the Île de la Cité
Pont Neuf
— the bridge from which Paris first saw its river.
in the south of France, below the walled Cité
Pont Vieux Carcassonne
— — the slow crossing, the walls held in late gold.
in Albi, the red city on the Tarn
Pont Vieux d'Albi
— the red the cathedral lays on the water.
in Nice, on the Côte d'Azur
Promenade des Anglais
— a blue chair, facing the long Mediterranean.
in the Alpilles, between the Rhône and the Durance
Provencal Olive Grove
— the silver the wind keeps turning over.
across the orchards of the Valensole plateau, in upper Provence
Provence Almond Bloom
— pink on bare wood, before the lavender ever wakes.
on the Valensole Plateau, north of Aix
Provence Sunflower Field
— a thousand heads, all facing east.
on the Valensole plateau, above the Verdon
Provence Sunflower Field
— — the week the heads turn east and hold.
the wild Atlantic edge of southern Brittany
Quiberon Cote Sauvage
— the cliffs the Atlantic is still working.
in the chalk country east of Paris
Reims Cathedral Coronation Facade
— a wall of saints, in the late light.
on the Alsace Wine Route, north of Colmar
Riquewihr Alsatian Timber Houses
— the village that kept all of its colours.
in the Quercy, above the Alzou canyon
Rocamadour Cliff Sanctuary
— a village that climbed into the rock and stayed.
in southern France, half an hour west of Avignon
Roman Arena of Nimes
— — a ring the centuries still keep warm.
in Rouen, on the right bank of the Seine
Rouen Cathedral West Facade
— — the face the light keeps repainting.
on a ridge in the Luberon, east of Avignon
Roussillon Ochre Village
— — the sunset already in the cliff.
in old Rouen, between the cathedral and the old market square
Rue du Gros-Horloge Rouen
— — a clock with one hand, gold above the street.
in old Dinan, the cobbled way down to the Rance
Rue du Jerzual
— — a lane the centuries have leaned into.
on Montmartre, the highest point in Paris
Sacre-Coeur Basilica
— the white the rain keeps whitening.
above a village in the foothills of the Pyrenees
Saint-Bertrand-de-Comminges Cathedral
— the hill that holds five centuries of light.
in the inner suburbs just north of Paris
Saint-Denis Basilica
— where the kings of France sleep in coloured light.
on the right bank of the Dordogne, east of Bordeaux
Saint-Emilion Vineyard
— the colour the vines turn the week before harvest.
on Brittany's Channel coast, at the mouth of the Rance
Saint-Malo Intra-Muros
— the wall the tide comes for, twice a day.
on the north coast of Brittany, at the mouth of the Rance
Saint-Malo Ramparts
— a circle of stone above the tide.
in the Alpilles, south of Avignon
Saint-Remy-de-Provence
— the wheat field beneath van Gogh's window.
on the Côte d'Azur, between Marseille and Cannes
Saint-Tropez Harbour
— the light that pulled the painters south.
in old Honfleur, on the south bank of the Seine
Sainte-Catherine Church
— — a church built like a ship turned over.
on the Île de la Cité, in central Paris
Sainte-Chapelle Upper Chapel
— the room where the walls become light.
in the Périgord Noir of southwest France
Sarlat-la-Caneda
— — a town the colour of late afternoon.
in Provence, on the eastern flank of Mont Ventoux
Sault Lavender Plateau
— — purple, all the way to the mountain.
in a hollow north of Gordes, in Provence
Senanque Abbey Lavender
— — the wall the lavender visits every July.
in the Latin Quarter, on the left bank of the Seine
Sorbonne Square
— — the small square the Sorbonne keeps for itself.
in old Strasbourg, on the Grande Île
Strasbourg Cathedral Notre-Dame
— the pink stone keeps after the sun is down.
at the entrance to La Rochelle's old harbour, on the Atlantic coast of France
Tour Saint-Nicolas
— — stone that leaned, and held the harbour.
across the Seine from the Eiffel Tower
Trocadero Fountains
— — the view the city built for itself.
on the Normandy coast, across the river from Deauville
Trouville-sur-Mer Boardwalk
— the light Boudin chased.
on the Norman coast, the western end of the D-Day shore
Utah Beach
— the shore the world keeps walking back to.
in Normandy, on the long flat coast
Utah Beach
— a quiet shore that still holds its morning.
at the head of the Tarentaise, near the Italian border
Val d'Isere
— — where the Isère begins.
on the plateau between the Verdon Gorge and the Durance
Valensole Lavender Field
— the week the fields hum.
an hour southeast of Paris
Vaux-le-Vicomte Parterre
— green ink laid down before Versailles.
behind the palace, twenty kilometres west of Paris
Versailles Parterre
— — the king's geometry, in boxwood and water.
on the long hill above Vézelay, in northern Burgundy
Vezelay Basilica
— the room the noon light walks in June.
above the Tarn valley in southern France
Viaduc de Millau
— — the morning the road floated.
across the Seine estuary from Le Havre
Vieux Bassin of Honfleur
— — houses that lean toward their own reflection.
on the Côte d'Azur, between Castle Hill and the sea
Vieux Nice Old Town
— — ochre walls, and the sea just past them.
where Marseille meets the Mediterranean
Vieux-Port of Marseille
— the harbour the city was built around.
on the spine of Cap Ferrat, between Nice and Monaco
Villa Ephrussi Gardens
— a garden built like a ship's deck.
in the Loire Valley, west of Tours
Villandry Renaissance Gardens
— — the colour the kitchen garden makes in late June.
between Nice and Cap Ferrat, on the Côte d'Azur
Villefranche-sur-Mer Harbour
— the deepwater blue the village climbs above.
California United States
193 placesin the high desert below Mount Whitney
Alabama Hills Mobius Arch
— — a window the wind cut for the mountain.
in San Francisco Bay, just off the Embarcadero
Alcatraz Island
— — a mile and a quarter of cold water, and the city right there.
out in the eastern Mojave, on old Route 66
Amboy Crater
— — the shape a fire left in the desert.
off the eastern tip of Anacapa Island, eleven miles out from Oxnard
Anacapa Arch Rock
— — a window the sea cut for itself.
in Mendocino County, along the Navarro River
Anderson Valley
— — the fog the Pacific sends up the river.
above Grand Central Market, in downtown Los Angeles
Angels Flight
— two orange cars passing halfway up the hill.
on the California coast, between Half Moon Bay and Santa Cruz
Año Nuevo
— — the winter the beach belongs to the seals.
in the Mojave foothills north of Los Angeles
Antelope Valley Poppies
— — the colour the desert keeps for two weeks each spring.
in the desert east of San Diego
Anza-Borrego Superbloom
— — the spring the desert pays the rain back.
in Death Valley, between Furnace Creek and Badwater Basin
Artists Palette
— the colours the desert keeps for the late light.
in the Sierra Nevada foothills, between Sacramento and Lake Tahoe
Auburn Old Town
— — brick and iron the Gold Rush built, still open.
in California's far-north redwood country, along the old US-101
Avenue of the Giants
— the cathedral the road runs through.
in Death Valley, the lowest ground in North America
Badwater Basin
— — the white the last sea left behind.
on a mesa above downtown San Diego
Balboa Park
— the long arcade, the lily pond, the bells.
at the top of the California coast, near the Oregon line
Battery Point Lighthouse
— — a light the tide lets you reach.
across the bay, between San Francisco and Yerba Buena Island
Bay Bridge Night
— — the bay edged in light that never repeats.
south of Carmel-by-the-Sea, where the mountains meet the sea
Big Sur Highway 1
— — the road that runs where the cliff lets it.
on the Big Sur coast, thirteen miles south of Carmel
Bixby Creek Bridge
— — a single white arch above the surf.
on the Sonoma Coast, north of the Golden Gate
Bodega Bay
— the harbor the fog never quite leaves.
high in the Bodie Hills, above Mono Lake
Bodie Ghost Town
— — silver wood the desert is still polishing.
in Yosemite Valley, on the south wall just past Tunnel View
Bridalveil Fall
— — the water the wind takes sideways.
in the high country of Lassen Volcanic National Park
Bumpass Hell
— — the floor of a mountain that hasn't cooled yet.
in northern California, on the edge of the Cascades
Burney Falls
— — a wall the water comes through, not over.
on Russian Hill, looking north to Alcatraz
Cable Car Hyde Street
— — the corner where the city tips into the bay.
in the Mojave, northeast of Barstow
Calico Ghost Town
— — the colour the silver left behind.
an hour northwest of Sacramento, along Highway 16
Capay Valley Sunflowers
— the week the valley turns to face the sun.
on Monterey Bay, southeast of Santa Cruz
Capitola Village
— — pastel houses where the creek slips into the bay.
south of Monterey, where Ocean Avenue ends at the sand
Carmel Beach Sunset
— — the colour the cypresses hold last.
just south of Carmel-by-the-Sea, near the mouth of the river
Carmel Mission
— the sandstone the evening light finds first.
on the Monterey Peninsula, just south of Pebble Beach
Carmel-by-the-Sea Cottages
— houses smaller than the stories about them.
south of Napa, where the valleys meet the bay
Carneros Mustard Bloom
— — what fills the rows before the vines wake.
in southeastern San Luis Obispo County, between the Temblor and Caliente ranges
Carrizo Plain Superbloom
— the spring the rain remembered.
in Napa Valley, just south of Calistoga
Castello di Amorosa
— a castle built one stone at a time.
south of Mount Shasta, above the Sacramento River
Castle Crags
— granite the rest of the mountain left behind.
in Yosemite Valley, across from El Capitan
Cathedral Rocks
— — three towers where the late light lands.
down the middle of California, between the Sierras and the Coast Ranges
Central Valley Almond Bloom
— — the few weeks the valley turns pink.
in Joshua Tree, where two deserts meet.
Cholla Cactus Garden
— — light caught in a field of spines.
high on Telegraph Hill, in San Francisco
Coit Tower
— a pale column the fog finds first.
in the Sierra foothills, north of Sonora
Columbia Historic Park
— the gold rush, after the noise.
south of Mammoth Lakes, in the eastern Sierra
Convict Lake
— still water that holds the mountain twice.
in the Eastern Sierra, north of Bishop
Crowley Lake Columns
— what cold rain left in hot ash.
on the Newport Coast, between Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach
Crystal Cove
— the long light before the cottages turn on.
above Lake George, in the eastern Sierra
Crystal Crag
— a vein of light in the granite.
high above Death Valley, on the Black Mountains rim
Dante's View Twilight
— the half-hour the basin holds the blue.
in the Sierra Nevada, near Mammoth Lakes
Devils Postpile
— the columns the glacier polished from above.
just below Donner Pass, west of Truckee
Donner Lake
— — the summer lake at the foot of the hardest winter.
in the LA basin, the San Gabriels rising behind
Downtown LA Skyline
— — the half-hour the glass turns to copper.
in Yosemite Valley, above the meadow
El Capitan Dawn
— the first light on three thousand feet of granite.
on the Malibu coast, west of Point Dume
El Matador Beach Malibu
— — the hour the light gets caught in the rock.
east of Tioga Pass, high above Mono Lake
Ellery Lake
— a held blue at the edge of the pass.
on the southwest shore of Lake Tahoe
Emerald Bay Lake Tahoe
— — the green the blue makes room for.
on the redwood coast, just back from Gold Bluffs Beach
Fern Canyon
— — the corridor the ferns took back.
on California's Lost Coast, fifteen miles south of Eureka
Ferndale Main Street
— — a painted block the fog won't age.
at the rim of the Borrego Badlands, east of San Diego
Fonts Point
— the half-hour the badlands turn to gold.
south of Carmel, where Highway 1 turns into Big Sur
Garrapata Coast
— the coast the fog keeps remembering.
in downtown San Diego, two blocks from the bay
Gaslamp Quarter
— — the brick that kept its century.
in the Giant Forest, high in the southern Sierra
General Sherman Tree
— two thousand winters in one trunk.
in the southern Sierra, above Three Rivers
Giant Forest Snow
— — the red bark the snow won't cover.
on the south rim of Yosemite Valley
Glacier Point Panorama Sunset
— the pink the granite keeps after the sun is gone.
on the Mendocino coast, north of Fort Bragg
Glass Beach Fort Bragg
— — polished glass where the dump used to be.
on the redwood coast, north of Orick
Gold Bluffs Beach
— the morning the elk come down to the sea.
at the mouth of San Francisco Bay
Golden Gate Bridge
— — the orange the fog never quite takes.
on the headlands, eye-level with the towers
Golden Gate Bridge from Marin
— the orange the fog can't take.
above Los Angeles, on the south slope of Mount Hollywood
Griffith Observatory
— the dome that holds two skies.
on the south rim of Yosemite Valley
Half Dome Glacier Point
— the face the day leaves last.
above the Pacific Coast Highway, halfway to Big Sur
Hearst Castle
— — the two white towers a fortune kept above the sea.
in the San Gorgonio Pass, east of Los Angeles
Highland Springs Lavender
— twenty acres of purple, hand-cut in June.
in central Los Angeles, beneath the sign on Mount Lee
Hollywood Boulevard
— — the names pressed into the sidewalk.
on Mount Lee, looking south over Los Angeles
Hollywood Sign
— — a hand-painted billboard the city forgot to take down.
high in the Sierra, south of Lake Tahoe
Hope Valley Autumn
— — the week the aspens take the valley.
across the bay from San Diego, on the Coronado strand
Hotel del Coronado
— — the white hotel the sea forgot to take.
on Big Sur, between Bixby Bridge and Point Sur
Hurricane Point
— a wind that has a name.
south of Palm Springs, at the foot of the San Jacintos
Indian Canyons Palm Springs
— the green the desert keeps to itself.
in the high Mojave, where two deserts meet
Joshua Tree Forest
— a forest with the spaces left in.
in the Mojave, east of Los Angeles
Joshua Tree Forest Burning Sky
— the sky burns down to silhouettes.
in the eastern Mojave, off Kelbaker Road
Kelso Dunes
— — a low hum when the slope gives way.
on the crest of the Little San Bernardino Mountains, above the Coachella Valley
Keys View Joshua Tree
— — the long look, all of it at once.
near the Oregon line in California's high northeast
Klamath Basin Waterfowl
— — the morning the marsh takes flight.
where the redwoods meet the Pacific
Klamath River Mouth
— the river finally giving itself to the sea.
on the southern California coast, north of San Diego
La Jolla Cove
— the green the kelp gives the water.
high in the Eastern Sierra, above Bishop
Lake Sabrina
— — the week the canyon goes gold.
north of Redding, at the top of the Sacramento Valley
Lake Shasta
— the lake the four rivers became.
in California's volcanic north, where the Cascades end
Lassen Peak
— a slow fire, sleeping under snow.
on the high desert of northeast California, near the Oregon line
Lava Beds
— — the dark you can walk into.
in the Eastern Sierra, above Rock Creek
Little Lakes Valley
— a row of small lakes the glacier set down.
in California's Central Valley, between Sacramento and the Delta
Lodi Old Vine Zinfandel
— a vine that has earned its century.
on the eastern face of Russian Hill, between Hyde and Leavenworth
Lombard Street
— a hill that bent the street.
on the western edge of the Monterey Peninsula
Lone Cypress
— — the tree the wind taught how to lean.
north of Mendocino, where Highway 1 turns inland
Lost Coast
— the coast the highway let go.
in the Sierra Nevada foothills, on the road into Yosemite
Mariposa California
— foothill yellow, with a courthouse still keeping time.
in southern Yosemite, off the Wawona road
Mariposa Grove Giant Sequoias Tile
— — red bark, two thousand years deep.
a half mile off Pillar Point, south of San Francisco
Mavericks Half Moon Bay
— the cold blue wall the winter Pacific builds.
on the Big Sur coast, thirty-seven miles south of Carmel
McWay Falls
— — a thread of water into a turquoise cove.
north of San Francisco, where Highway 1 meets the sea
Mendocino Headlands
— a meadow that ends in sea arches.
in Death Valley, just past Stovepipe Wells
Mesquite Flat Dunes
— — what the wind leaves by morning.
west of Mammoth Mountain, in the Ansel Adams Wilderness
Minarets Mammoth
— — the ridge the sun saves for last.
in Tenaya Canyon, at the foot of Half Dome
Mirror Lake
— half the mountain, again, on the water.
in the Mission, where the city began
Mission Dolores
— the oldest quiet in San Francisco.
above the Santa Ynez Valley, four miles northeast of Lompoc
Mission La Purísima
— the long colonnade the late sun walks through.
in the Valley of the Oaks, southwest of King City
Mission San Antonio de Padua
— the bells the oaks still keep.
in the San Gabriel Valley, east of downtown Los Angeles
Mission San Gabriel Arcangel
— bells in their wall, again.
east of Monterey Bay, on the old El Camino Real
Mission San Juan Bautista
— — the long arcade the afternoon never quite leaves.
on the old Camino Real between Los Angeles and San Diego
Mission San Juan Capistrano
— the arches the earthquake left for the light.
on California's Central Coast, between San Francisco and Los Angeles
Mission San Luis Obispo
— — the first red roof in the chain.
in Oceanside, four miles in from the Pacific
Mission San Luis Rey Tile
— — the white wall the late sun keeps warming.
on the old Camino Real, north of Paso Robles
Mission San Miguel Arcángel
— the paint that stayed two hundred years.
above the city, in the foothills
Mission Santa Barbara
— the late light on both towers at once.
in the valley south of San Francisco Bay
Mission Santa Clara de Asís
— what stayed when everything else burned.
north of Santa Barbara, in the Santa Ynez Valley
Mission Santa Ines
— — the wall the morning warms first.
in the Providence Mountains, deep in the Mojave
Mitchell Caverns
— — the eyes of the mountain, half open.
in California's Gold Country, on Highway 49
Mokelumne Hill
— the stone the fire couldn't take.
east of Yosemite, on the dry side of the Sierra
Mono Lake Tufa
— — the towers the lake left behind.
south of Morro Bay, where the road runs out
Montaña de Oro
— the gold the hills are named for.
on California's central coast, between Santa Cruz and Monterey
Monterey Bay Sea Otters
— — a small body asleep, anchored in the kelp.
above the Kaweah Canyon in Sequoia, on the western slope of the southern Sierra
Moro Rock Dusk
— the last light the Sierras hold.
in northern California, in the upper Sacramento canyon
Mossbrae Falls
— — water arriving sideways through the moss.
at the south end of the Cascade Range, in far northern California
Mount Shasta
— — a mountain you watch arrive for an hour.
in the eastern Sierra, above the Owens Valley
Mount Whitney Lone Pine
— — the wall the morning finds first.
in California's gold country, east of Stockton
Murphys California
— — the stone the gold rush left standing.
above the vineyards north of San Francisco Bay
Napa Valley Hot-Air Balloon
— — the half-hour before the valley wakes.
an hour north of San Francisco Bay, between two coast ranges
Napa Valley Vineyards
— — the hour the fog lifts off the rows.
at the western edge of Santa Cruz, where West Cliff Drive ends
Natural Bridges Santa Cruz
— the last of three arches the sea left standing.
in the Sierra Nevada foothills, northeast of Sacramento
Nevada City California
— the town the gold rush left whole.
above the mouth of San Diego harbour
Old Point Loma Lighthouse
— the light no fog could reach.
on the Tioga Road, above Tenaya Lake
Olmsted Point Granite
— the rock that remembers the ice.
on the Monterey Peninsula, between Monterey and Pebble Beach
Pacific Grove
— a coast the fog keeps quiet most mornings.
in Pacific Grove, on the Monterey Peninsula
Pacific Grove Monarchs
— a hundred thousand wings, folded into the pines.
on Steiner Street, across from Alamo Square
Painted Ladies
— the row the postcards know by heart.
in the Marina District, west of Crissy Field
Palace of Fine Arts
— a Roman ruin built for one fair, then kept.
in the Coachella Valley, against the San Jacinto Mountains
Palm Springs Desert Modernism
— a low line against a high mountain.
in the oak hills of California's Central Coast, north of San Luis Obispo
Paso Robles
— — the oaks the town is named for.
on California's Monterey Peninsula, between Carmel-by-the-Sea and Pacific Grove
Pebble Beach
— — the wind keeps the cypress that shape.
on the Big Sur coast, twenty-seven miles south of Carmel
Pfeiffer Beach Keyhole Arch
— — the keyhole the winter sun finds.
on California's Central Coast, six miles north of San Simeon
Piedras Blancas Light
— — the same light, every night since 1875.
on California's San Mateo coast, five miles south of Pescadero
Pigeon Point Light
— — named for the ship that wrecked here.
above the High Peaks of central California
Pinnacles Condors
— — the bird that came back from twenty-two.
in central California, in the southern Gabilan Range
Pinnacles Rock Spires
— — the volcano the fault carried north.
in the Sierra foothills, on Highway 50 east of Sacramento
Placerville
— — the town that outlived the rush.
on the Mendocino coast, where the San Andreas comes ashore
Point Arena Lighthouse
— — the tower the 1906 quake brought down.
at the north shoulder of the Golden Gate
Point Bonita Lighthouse
— — the only lighthouse you reach by suspension bridge.
on the Mendocino headland, between Mendocino and Fort Bragg
Point Cabrillo Light
— — the small white house keeping watch since 1909.
on the Malibu coast, where the cove drops below the bluff
Point Dume Malibu
— — a volcanic point above the open Pacific.
south of Carmel-by-the-Sea, where the cypress meet the granite
Point Lobos
— — the cypress that grows only here.
on the Marin County coast, where the peninsula reaches west into the Pacific
Point Reyes Headland
— — the windward edge of the continent.
at the western tip of the Point Reyes peninsula, in Marin County
Point Reyes Lighthouse
— — the lamp at the bottom of 308 stairs.
on the bluffs of Tomales Point, north of San Francisco
Point Reyes Tule Elk
— the bugle that carries across the fog.
on a volcanic rock off Highway 1, south of Carmel
Point Sur Light Station
— the light kept on a rock above the swell.
on the Palos Verdes cliffs, south of Los Angeles
Point Vicente Lighthouse
— the lamp the whales pass twice a year.
on a dry lake bed deep in Death Valley
Racetrack Playa
— the rocks that move when no one is watching.
high in the Sierra Nevada, in Kings Canyon
Rae Lakes
— the lakes the granite holds in its hand.
in Jamestown, in the Sierra foothills
Railtown 1897
— — the steam the camera kept coming back for.
north of Barstow, in the Mojave
Rainbow Basin
— — the colour the layers keep.
off Highway 14, where the Mojave climbs into the El Pasos
Red Rock Canyon State Park
— — what the wind left of the cliff.
in the summer fog belt of the Northern California coast
Redwood Fog Grove
— — the morning the tree drinks the cloud.
across the river at the western end of Capitol Mall
Sacramento Tower Bridge
— — a gold lift against a slack river.
in the Colorado Desert, below sea level
Salton Sea
— the water that came by mistake and stayed.
at the edge of Slab City, east of the Salton Sea
Salvation Mountain
— a mountain one man made out of paint.
at the foot of Market Street, on the Embarcadero
San Francisco Ferry Building
— — the clock tower the bay built its mornings around.
across the bay, from the Marin Headlands
San Francisco Skyline
— — the city the fog finishes.
on the eastern foothills of California's San Joaquin Valley, between Visalia and Porterville
San Joaquin Citrus Groves
— the week the whole valley smells like orange blossom.
on a strip of beach six miles north of San Simeon, below the Piedras Blancas lighthouse
San Simeon Elephant Seals
— the bulls come ashore in December.
on the Nevada shore of Lake Tahoe, four miles south of Incline Village
Sand Harbor Lake Tahoe
— — granite and water that lets the bottom show through.
on the northwest shore of Santa Cruz Island, off Ventura
Santa Cruz Island Painted Cave
— — a long blue room the ocean keeps to itself.
where Colorado Avenue runs out into the Pacific
Santa Monica Pier
— — a wooden pier with a Ferris wheel on its shoulder.
along Park Boulevard, deep in Joshua Tree
Skull Rock Joshua Tree
— the granite the rainwater taught to look back.
in California's northwest corner, just below the Oregon line
Smith River
— water the colour of clean glass.
in the Santa Ynez Valley, about an hour north of Santa Barbara
Solvang Windmills
— sails turning slow in the Santa Ynez wind.
north of San Francisco Bay, where the California wine country begins
Sonoma Vineyard Hills
— rows of vine on a slow gold afternoon.
over the Sierra Nevada crest, on California State Route 108
Sonora Pass California
— the road that climbs until the air goes thin.
at the foot of State Street in Santa Barbara, California
Stearns Wharf
— — where State Street ends and the channel begins.
deep in Jedediah Smith Redwoods, on California's far north coast
Stout Grove
— — where the cathedral is older than the country.
on the Humboldt coast, a few miles north of Trinidad
Sue-meg State Park
— — the park that took its old name back.
at Lands End on the western edge of San Francisco
Sutro Baths
— — concrete pools the sea finally took back.
in Coloma, on the South Fork of the American River
Sutter's Mill
— — the morning that rerouted the country.
deep in Redwood National Park, off Bald Hills Road
Tall Trees Grove Fog
— — the fog the redwoods drink before the sun finds them.
along Tioga Road, high in the Yosemite backcountry
Tenaya Lake
— — the cold blue the glacier left.
on the sandstone bluffs above La Jolla
Torrey Pines
— — a pine that grows here and one island over.
on the bluff above Trinidad Harbor, on California's north coast
Trinidad Memorial Lighthouse
— — a small light for those the sea kept.
in the Klamath Mountains, west of the Sacramento Valley
Trinity Alps
— — a range that keeps its own quiet.
in the northern Mojave Desert, on the floor of Searles Dry Lake east of Ridgecrest
Trona Pinnacles
— — the lake floor that stayed when the water left.
in Sequoia National Park, on the Crescent Meadow Road in the Giant Forest
Tunnel Log Sequoia
— — the tree the road kept driving through.
at the east portal of the Wawona Tunnel on State Route 41, above Yosemite Valley
Tunnel View Yosemite
— — the valley the road opens onto.
in Yosemite's high country, along the upper Tuolumne River below Tioga Pass
Tuolumne Meadows Summer
— — the meadow the snow leaves for July.
in the Eastern Sierra below the Sawtooth Ridge, southwest of Bridgeport
Twin Lakes Bridgeport
— — the lake the record brown came out of.
on the western edge of Los Angeles, where the boardwalk meets the sand
Venice Beach
— — the boardwalk where the city walks barefoot.
in Yosemite Valley, the granite stairway up the Merced River
Vernal Fall Mist Trail
— — the trail that walks you straight through a waterfall.
above Emerald Bay on the west shore of Lake Tahoe
Vikingsholm
— — the house with a meadow on its roof.
in the Sierra foothills, deep in Amador County's gold country
Volcano California
— — a Gold Rush town the highway forgot.
in South Los Angeles, on a small triangular lot east of the 110
Watts Towers
— — a tower made of broken plates and patience.
in San Jose, in the Santa Clara Valley south of San Francisco
Winchester Mystery House
— — a house that kept being built.
on the north wall of Yosemite Valley, in the Sierra Nevada
Yosemite Falls Spring
— — what the snowpack does on the way down.
on the eastern wall of Death Valley, just southeast of Furnace Creek
Zabriskie Point Sunrise
— — the first ten minutes of the desert day.
on the floor of Kings Canyon, at the upper end of Highway 180
Zumwalt Meadow Kings Canyon
— — a meadow the road just barely reaches.
Colorado United States
180 placeson the Front Range, just north of Colorado Springs
Air Force Academy Cadet Chapel Front Range Ceramic Art Tile
— seventeen spires, lit from within.
above Estes Park, in Rocky Mountain National Park
Alberta Falls Rocky Mountain National Park Ceramic Art Tile
— — a short white drop through the pink granite.
high in the San Juans, above Silverton
Animas Forks ghost town San Juans Ceramic Art Tile
— — a bay window above the last trees.
in the San Juans, between Silverton and the high desert
Animas River through Durango San Juans Ceramic Art Tile
— the week the aspens turn the canyon gold.
just below Loveland Pass, on the Continental Divide
Arapahoe Basin closing day Front Range Ceramic Art Tile
— — sunburn at the Beach, snow still on the boots.
ten miles south of Aspen, up the Castle Creek valley
Ashcroft ghost town Elk Range Ceramic Art Tile
— — the town the silver left behind.
in the Elk Range, above the town of Aspen
Aspen Mountain at twilight Elk Range Ceramic Art Tile
— the last red the range lets go.
above Creede, in the San Juans
Bachelor Loop Creede San Juans Ceramic Art Tile
— — the road silver carved and the aspens kept.
below the Continental Divide, west of Estes Park
Bear Lake reflection of Hallett Peak Rocky Mountain National Park Ceramic Art Tile
— — the mountain twice, before the wind.
in Colorado's Eagle Valley, at the foot of Beaver Creek Mountain
Beaver Creek main plaza Eagle Valley Ceramic Art Tile
— — the warm square the snow leaves alone.
on the Arkansas River, east of La Junta
Bents Old Fort Ceramic Art Tile
— adobe in the long gold grass.
in the Colorado Front Range, west of Denver
Bighorn sheep Mount Evans Front Range Ceramic Art Tile
— — a ram, a ledge, the whole sky.
west of Gunnison, along U.S. Highway 50
Blue Mesa Reservoir sunset Ceramic Art Tile
— — the last hour the water holds the sky.
in Boulder, at the foot of the Flatirons
Boulder Pearl Street Front Range Ceramic Art Tile
— — the mountain at the end of the street.
in the Colorado Rockies, the Tenmile Range behind town
Breckenridge Main Street winter Tenmile Range Ceramic Art Tile
— a gold-rush street under the high white range.
above Telluride, at the head of the box canyon
Bridal Veil Falls Telluride San Juans Ceramic Art Tile
— a long white veil at the canyon's end.
in Colorado Springs, at the foot of Cheyenne Mountain
Broadmoor Colorado Springs Front Range Ceramic Art Tile
— pink stucco against a mountain, since 1918.
downtown Denver, where 17th meets Broadway.
Brown Palace Denver Denver Metro Ceramic Art Tile
— eight stories of light, under one glass sky.
between Buena Vista and Salida, on the Arkansas
Browns Canyon on the Arkansas Ceramic Art Tile
— — pink granite, and the river still working it.
in the Sawatch Range, west of Buena Vista
Buena Vista Collegiate Peaks Ceramic Art Tile
— — a horizon you can read by name.
above Ouray, in the San Juans
Camp Bird Mine Ouray San Juans Ceramic Art Tile
— — a high basin you have to earn.
deep in Colorado's Elk Range, west of Aspen
Capitol Peak knife-edge Elk Range Ceramic Art Tile
— — a thread of stone above the drop.
high in the Elk Range, south of Aspen
Castle Peak Elk Range Ceramic Art Tile
— the fortress the snow won't leave.
in Williams Canyon, above Manitou Springs
Cave of the Winds Front Range Ceramic Art Tile
— a room the water built in the dark.
in the bowl beneath the east face of Longs Peak
Chasm Lake Rocky Mountain National Park Ceramic Art Tile
— — the blue the cliff holds in shadow.
on the South Rim of Black Canyon, above the Gunnison
Chasm View Pulpit Rock Black Canyon NP Ceramic Art Tile
— — a chasm the sun barely reaches.
south of Colorado Springs, on the Front Range
Cheyenne Mountain Front Range Ceramic Art Tile
— the granite where the city ends.
at the foot of Pikes Peak, west of Colorado Springs
Cliff House Manitou Front Range Ceramic Art Tile
— — still lit after a hundred and fifty winters.
in western Colorado, where I-70 follows the river
Colorado River Glenwood Canyon Ceramic Art Tile
— — the river that wrote the canyon, still writing.
where the Front Range meets the high plains
Colorado Springs and Pikes Peak Front Range Ceramic Art Tile
— the pink granite the evening turns purple.
in downtown Denver, where the plains meet the Front Range
Colorado State Capitol dome Denver Metro Ceramic Art Tile
— Colorado gold on Colorado granite.
in downtown Denver, where the plains meet the Rockies
Colorado State Capitol facade Denver Metro Ceramic Art Tile
— — the gold the mountains lent the city.
down from the South San Juans into the San Luis Valley
Conejos River San Juans Ceramic Art Tile
— the long green between the spires.
in downtown Denver, the Rockies past the outfield
Coors Field with skyline Denver Metro Ceramic Art Tile
— — the long ball, the long view.
in Summit County, between Frisco and Breckenridge
Copper Mountain Tenmile Range Ceramic Art Tile
— — the eight minutes the ridge keeps the light.
in the Sawatch Range, west of Buena Vista
Cottonwood Hot Springs Sawatch Range Ceramic Art Tile
— the heat the mountain keeps.
high in the Sawatch, above Buena Vista
Cottonwood Pass paved summit Sawatch Range Ceramic Art Tile
— — the road climbs until the trees give up.
in the Elk Mountains of southwest Colorado, at the head of the Slate River
Crested Butte Elk Avenue Elk Range Ceramic Art Tile
— — the road that ends in the Elk Range.
high in the Sangres, above the San Luis Valley
Crestone Needle and Crestone Peak Sangre de Cristos Ceramic Art Tile
— — the red the dusk leaves on the stone.
high on the west flank of Pikes Peak
Cripple Creek courthouse Front Range Ceramic Art Tile
— — granite the rush left behind.
on the southwest flank of Pikes Peak
Cripple Creek headframes Front Range Ceramic Art Tile
— — what the gold rush left to the wind.
on the back of Pikes Peak
Cripple Creek historic district Front Range Ceramic Art Tile
— — what the boom left in brick, at nine thousand feet.
in the Elk Mountains, south of Aspen
Crystal Lake near Crystal Mill Elk Range Ceramic Art Tile
— — what the mountain keeps after everyone's gone.
in the Elk Mountains, east of Marble
Crystal Mill at Marble Elk Range Ceramic Art Tile
— — the room the river left standing.
above Moraine Park, in the Colorado Rockies
Cub Lake among lily pads Rocky Mountain National Park Ceramic Art Tile
— — water held still long enough to bloom.
high in the San Juans, near the New Mexico line
Cumbres & Toltec at Cumbres Pass San Juans Ceramic Art Tile
— steam at ten thousand feet.
in northwest Denver, three miles west of downtown
Denver skyline from Sloans Lake Denver Metro Ceramic Art Tile
— — the city doubled at dawn.
in Lower Downtown, a mile above the sea
Denver Union Station Denver Metro Ceramic Art Tile
— the lobby Denver shares with its trains.
in Lower Downtown Denver, at the foot of 17th Street
Denver Union Station great hall Denver Metro Ceramic Art Tile
— — the warmth a great room keeps after dark.
high on the Rampart Range, southwest of Denver
Devils Head Lookout Front Range Ceramic Art Tile
— — a room above the trees, still watching for smoke.
under Hallett Peak, west of Estes Park
Dream Lake Rocky Mountain National Park Ceramic Art Tile
— — a blue the cold keeps for itself.
at the south end of the San Juans, where the narrow-gauge still runs
Durango Main Avenue San Juans Ceramic Art Tile
— the avenue the steam train wakes up.
in the San Juans, above the Animas
Durango-Silverton at High Bridge San Juans Ceramic Art Tile
— — a column of smoke the canyon keeps.
in the valley below the Gore Range
Eagle River at Vail Eagle Valley Ceramic Art Tile
— the green the snow turns into.
in Dinosaur National Monument, where the Yampa joins the Green
Echo Park confluence Ceramic Art Tile
— — two rivers and the rock between them.
in the Front Range south of Boulder
Eldorado Canyon climbing walls Front Range Ceramic Art Tile
— red rock the climbers learn by heart.
at the eastern gate of Rocky Mountain National Park
Elk bugling at Estes Front Range Ceramic Art Tile
— a single high note across the cold meadow.
in Rocky Mountain National Park, where the Bear Lake trail ends
Emerald Lake below Hallett Rocky Mountain National Park Ceramic Art Tile
— the green the cirque keeps.
at the eastern gate of Rocky Mountain National Park
Estes Park downtown twilight Front Range Ceramic Art Tile
— — the lights coming on under Longs Peak.
in the meadows west of Pikes Peak
Florissant petrified stumps Front Range Ceramic Art Tile
— — what the volcano kept of the redwoods.
on the tundra above the Big Thompson
Forest Canyon overlook Rocky Mountain National Park Ceramic Art Tile
— — the wilderness no trail goes into.
at the foot of the Colorado Front Range
Fort Collins Old Town Front Range Ceramic Art Tile
— — the brick downtown Disney's Main Street leaned on.
where the plains meet the Front Range, west of Colorado Springs
Garden of the Gods Balanced Rock Front Range Ceramic Art Tile
— — a stone that has been about to fall for centuries.
high on the Front Range, west of Denver
Georgetown Loop steam train Front Range Ceramic Art Tile
— — a line that has to cross itself to climb.
in Glenwood Springs, at the western mouth of Glenwood Canyon
Glenwood Hot Springs great pool Ceramic Art Tile
— — a long pool of held heat.
in the Colorado Rockies, where the Colorado meets the Roaring Fork
Glenwood Springs hot pool Ceramic Art Tile
— — where the snow falls on warm water.
on the western edge of Rocky Mountain National Park
Grand Lake at twilight Rocky Mountain National Park Ceramic Art Tile
— — the colour the divide gives the water last.
on the mesa above Grand Junction
Grand Mesa Scenic Byway Ceramic Art Tile
— — three hundred lakes on a roof of basalt.
on the Continental Divide, an hour west of Denver
Grays and Torreys Peaks Front Range Ceramic Art Tile
— the ridge that holds them both.
below the rim of Black Canyon, in western Colorado
Gunnison River inner gorge Black Canyon NP Ceramic Art Tile
— the river the sun barely finds.
in Glenwood Canyon, east of Glenwood Springs
Hanging Lake travertine pool Ceramic Art Tile
— — a pool the cliff still holds.
below Steamboat Springs, in northwest Colorado
Hoarfrost Yampa Valley Ceramic Art Tile
— — the morning the river left lace on every branch.
above Estes Park, in Rocky Mountain National Park
Horseshoe Park elk meadow Rocky Mountain National Park Ceramic Art Tile
— — first light, the herd back in the bend.
in downtown Boulder, a mile east of the Flatirons
Hotel Boulderado Front Range Ceramic Art Tile
— a sky of coloured glass, indoors.
in Glenwood Springs, above the hot-springs pool
Hotel Colorado Glenwood Ceramic Art Tile
— — peach sandstone holding a Rocky Mountain evening.
on the rim of Keeley Canyon, in the Colorado Four Corners
Hovenweep Holly Group Four Corners Ceramic Art Tile
— — stone the solstice still finds.
high in the San Juans, above Silverton
Ice Lake Basin turquoise San Juans Ceramic Art Tile
— the blue the snow becomes.
in the Front Range, west of Denver
Idaho Springs mining town Front Range Ceramic Art Tile
— a town gold built and left to weather.
high in the Sawatch, above Aspen
Independence Ghost Town Sawatch Range Ceramic Art Tile
— the silence after the silver left.
east of Aspen, on the Continental Divide
Independence Pass from Aspen Sawatch Range Ceramic Art Tile
— — the road the snow keeps for itself.
in the West Elks, west of Crested Butte
Kebler Pass aspens Elk Range Ceramic Art Tile
— the week one grove turns to gold.
high in the Colorado Rockies, above Dillon Reservoir
Keystone at twilight Tenmile Range Ceramic Art Tile
— the colour the day held back.
in Garden of the Gods, below Pikes Peak
Kissing Camels Garden of the Gods Front Range Ceramic Art Tile
— two heads of red stone, leaning in at the top.
west of the Continental Divide, below the Indian Peaks
Lake Granby Indian Peaks Front Range Ceramic Art Tile
— — the morning the divide doubles on the water.
on Denver's oldest block, between 14th and 15th
Larimer Square at twilight Denver Metro Ceramic Art Tile
— the half-hour the bulbs and the sky trade places.
high in central Colorado, between the Sawatch and the Mosquito ranges
Leadville C&S at French Gulch Sawatch Range Ceramic Art Tile
— snow on the Sawatch, smoke on the line.
high in the Colorado Rockies, at the foot of the Sawatch Range
Leadville Harrison Avenue Sawatch Range Ceramic Art Tile
— — the highest main street, the Sawatch out behind it.
above Telluride, high in the San Juans
Liberty Bell Mine Telluride San Juans Ceramic Art Tile
— the wood that outlasted the gold.
the high plains east of the Front Range
Lightning over the plains Ceramic Art Tile
— the white instant before the thunder catches up.
high in Rocky Mountain National Park, west of Estes Park
Loch Vale Rocky Mountain National Park Ceramic Art Tile
— — still water under the cathedral wall.
in the Indian Peaks, an hour west of Boulder
Long Lake below Pawnee Pass Indian Peaks Ceramic Art Tile
— — the morning the pass came down to the water.
above Chasm Lake, in Rocky Mountain National Park
Longs Peak Diamond face Rocky Mountain National Park Ceramic Art Tile
— — the wall the morning finds first.
in Rocky Mountain National Park, west of Estes Park
Longs Peak from Bear Lake Front Range Ceramic Art Tile
— — the dark face the dawn finds first.
high on the Continental Divide, west of Denver
Loveland Pass and ski area Front Range Ceramic Art Tile
— — the road that crosses where the rivers part.
northwest of Mesa Verde, on the Great Sage Plain
Lowry Pueblo great kiva Four Corners Ceramic Art Tile
— a great kiva, sunk into the plain, painted in layers.
at the eastern foot of Pikes Peak
Manitou Springs at base of Pikes Front Range Ceramic Art Tile
— — soda water from the rock, peak in the window.
on Trail Ridge Road, above Estes Park
Many Parks Curve Rocky Mountain National Park Ceramic Art Tile
— — a curve in the road, four valleys wide.
ten miles southwest of Aspen, in the Elk Range
Maroon Bells aspen peak gold Elk Range Ceramic Art Tile
— two red peaks above a week of gold.
above Maroon Lake, in the Elk Range west of Aspen
Maroon Bells autumn aspens Elk Range Ceramic Art Tile
— the week the aspens turn gold against the maroon.
in the Elk Mountains, west of Aspen
Maroon Bells reflection Elk Range Ceramic Art Tile
— the iron red the lake holds before the wind.
at the foot of the Maroon Bells, west of Aspen
Maroon Lake reflection Elk Range Ceramic Art Tile
— the morning the Bells stand twice.
above Leadville, across from the Sawatch Range
Matchless Mine Leadville Sawatch Range Ceramic Art Tile
— — a promise kept thirty-six winters.
in the San Juans, between Silverton and Ouray
Million Dollar Highway San Juans Ceramic Art Tile
— above the timber, between the red mountains.
in Glacier Gorge, beneath Longs Peak
Mills Lake at dusk Rocky Mountain National Park Ceramic Art Tile
— — the colour Longs Peak keeps after the sun is gone.
on the west side of Rocky Mountain National Park, at the head of the Colorado River
Moose in Grand Lake willows Rocky Mountain National Park Ceramic Art Tile
— — the willows moved before the moose did.
in Rocky Mountain National Park, above Estes Park
Moraine Park elk rut Rocky Mountain National Park Ceramic Art Tile
— the September the meadow turns to sound.
in the Front Range, west of Denver
Mount Bierstadt at sunrise Front Range Ceramic Art Tile
— the minute the granite turns gold.
in the Sawatch Range, west of Leadville
Mount Elbert highest peak Sawatch Range Ceramic Art Tile
— — the broad shoulder above everything else.
in the Front Range, southwest of Denver
Mount Evans Road Front Range Ceramic Art Tile
— the road that ends above the weather.
high in the Front Range, west of Denver
Mount Evans Summit Lake Front Range Ceramic Art Tile
— the last water before the summit.
in southern Colorado, east of the San Luis Valley
Mount Herard above the dunes Sangre de Cristos Ceramic Art Tile
— the snow above the sand.
west of Leadville, in the Sawatch
Mount Massive long ridge Sawatch Range Ceramic Art Tile
— a ridge that takes all afternoon to walk.
in the Sawatch Range, west of Vail
Mount of the Holy Cross snow cross Sawatch Range Ceramic Art Tile
— — the cross the snow holds into July.
in Colorado's Sawatch Range, above the Arkansas Valley
Mount Princeton Collegiate Peaks Sawatch Range Ceramic Art Tile
— chalk where the snow should be.
above the Dallas Divide, in Colorado's San Juans
Mount Sneffels autumn San Juans Ceramic Art Tile
— — the week the aspens turn the valley gold.
high in the San Juans, southwest of Telluride
Mount Wilson and Wilson Peak San Juans Ceramic Art Tile
— the peaks the light leaves last.
in Colorado's Collegiate Peaks, west of Buena Vista
Mount Yale Collegiate Peaks Sawatch Range Ceramic Art Tile
— — the morning before the storms come up.
in the Front Range, an hour west of Denver
Mountain goats on Bierstadt Front Range Ceramic Art Tile
— the herd that finds you above the willows.
in Rocky Mountain National Park, west of Estes Park
Old Fall River Road Rocky Mountain National Park Ceramic Art Tile
— — the slow climb above the timber.
above Cunningham Gulch, in the San Juans
Old Hundred Mine Silverton San Juans Ceramic Art Tile
— — still up there, after everyone left.
in the San Juans, at the head of the Uncompahgre
Ouray box-canyon town San Juans Ceramic Art Tile
— — a town the canyon agreed to keep.
in the southern San Juans, where the river runs warm
Pagosa Hot Springs Resort San Juans Ceramic Art Tile
— — the steam the river breathes in winter.
in the southern San Juans, along the river
Pagosa Springs hot pools San Juans Ceramic Art Tile
— — the warmth the mountain has been keeping.
on the plains east of Colorado Springs
Paint Mines Interpretive Park Ceramic Art Tile
— — the colour the prairie was hiding.
on the South Rim of the Black Canyon, half an hour east of Montrose
Painted Wall from Cedar Point Black Canyon NP Ceramic Art Tile
— the lightning the rock kept.
on the shortgrass plains of northeastern Colorado
Pawnee Buttes on the plains Ceramic Art Tile
— — what was left after the wind took everything else.
on the high plains of northeastern Colorado
Pawnee National Grassland Ceramic Art Tile
— two buttes and a horizon that doesn't stop.
along Colorado's Front Range, between Estes Park and Black Hawk
Peak to Peak Highway Front Range Ceramic Art Tile
— a road for the week the aspens turn.
in the Comanche Grassland of southeast Colorado, just shy of Oklahoma
Picture Canyon petroglyphs Ceramic Art Tile
— the wall the sunrise still finds, twice a year.
above Manitou Springs, at the top of the Front Range
Pikes Peak Cog Railway summit Front Range Ceramic Art Tile
— — the air the song was written in.
outside Colorado Springs, at the foot of the Front Range
Pikes Peak from Garden of the Gods Front Range Ceramic Art Tile
— a fourteener held in red sandstone.
above Colorado Springs, in the Front Range
Pikes Peak Highway Front Range Ceramic Art Tile
— the road the trees stop following.
above Colorado Springs, at the south end of the Front Range
Pikes Peak summit Front Range Ceramic Art Tile
— — the country opens east.
in the San Juans, north of Durango on the road to Silverton
Purgatory Resort San Juans Ceramic Art Tile
— the snow the San Juans hold from October to April.
in Colorado's Elk Range, south of Maroon Lake
Pyramid Peak Elk Range Ceramic Art Tile
— — a rust-red triangle the lake holds at dawn.
south of Breckenridge, at the head of the Tenmile Range
Quandary Peak in winter Tenmile Range Ceramic Art Tile
— the cold blue a peak keeps before dawn.
fifteen miles west of Denver, in the Front Range foothills
Red Rocks Amphitheatre sunrise Denver Metro Ceramic Art Tile
— — the rock catches the light before the city does.
high above Grand Junction, in western Colorado
Rim Rock Drive Colorado NM Ceramic Art Tile
— — a road the canyon let through.
south of Denver, where the prairie meets the Rockies
Roxborough State Park hogbacks Front Range Ceramic Art Tile
— the morning the ridge turns red.
above the Arkansas River, west of Cañon City
Royal Gorge bridge Ceramic Art Tile
— — a thousand feet of air below the planks.
in southern Colorado, west of Cañon City
Royal Gorge of the Arkansas Ceramic Art Tile
— — a thousand feet of granite, and a thread of water.
south of Pikes Peak, at the bottom of the gorge
Royal Gorge Route train Ceramic Art Tile
— — the river, the rock, and a strip of sky.
a loop through the San Juans of southwestern Colorado
San Juan Skyway loop San Juans Ceramic Art Tile
— — the week the high passes turn gold.
in the canyons west of Mesa Verde
Sand Canyon Pueblo Four Corners Ceramic Art Tile
— the village that left, the spring that stayed.
in the San Luis Valley, between the Sangre de Cristos and the San Juans
Sandhill cranes Monte Vista San Luis Valley Ceramic Art Tile
— — the morning the field lifts into the air.
in Aspen's West End, the Elk Range over the rooflines
Sherman Avenue Aspen Victorians Elk Range Ceramic Art Tile
— gingerbread porches with a fourteener behind them.
deep in the San Juans, north of Durango
Silverton main street San Juans Ceramic Art Tile
— — the colour that survives at the snowline.
above the last trees in Rocky Mountain National Park
Sky Pond Rocky Mountain National Park Ceramic Art Tile
— — the cathedral the glacier left behind.
above Aspen, the Elk Range across the valley
Smuggler Mine Aspen Elk Range Ceramic Art Tile
— — above the town silver built, the range goes on.
in Colorado Springs, where the plains meet the Front Range
Snow on Garden of the Gods Front Range Ceramic Art Tile
— a snow the red rock will not hold long.
high in Colorado's Elk Range, west of Aspen
Snowmass Mountain and Lake Elk Range Ceramic Art Tile
— a snow that the summer never finishes.
above the Dallas Divide, in Colorado's San Juans
Snowy Mount Sneffels alpenglow San Juans Ceramic Art Tile
— — the pink the snow keeps after the sun goes.
east of Glenwood Springs, high above the canyon
Spouting Rock Hanging Lake Ceramic Art Tile
— — water out of the rock, into the green.
in Rocky Mountain National Park, off the Bear Lake Road
Sprague Lake reflection Rocky Mountain National Park Ceramic Art Tile
— — the mountain twice, while the wind is still asleep.
high in Colorado's Sawatch Range, end of the Chalk Creek road
St Elmo ghost town Sawatch Range Ceramic Art Tile
— what the mountain kept when the trains stopped.
above Estes Park, at the eastern edge of the Rockies
Stanley Hotel Estes Park Front Range Ceramic Art Tile
— the white hotel that wrote its own ghost story.
in the Yampa Valley, northwest Colorado
Steamboat Springs at sunset Yampa Valley Ceramic Art Tile
— a valley the light takes its time leaving.
in downtown Durango, at the foot of the San Juans
Strater Hotel Durango San Juans Ceramic Art Tile
— the honky-tonk piano carrying up through room 222.
seven miles up a dirt road from Steamboat Springs
Strawberry Park Hot Springs Yampa Valley Ceramic Art Tile
— — steam in the snow, an hour past sundown.
on the South Rim of the Black Canyon, in western Colorado
Sunset View Tomichi Point Black Canyon NP Ceramic Art Tile
— the canyon takes the dark first.
in old Leadville, at the foot of Mount Massive
Tabor Opera House Leadville Sawatch Range Ceramic Art Tile
— — the room the silver built.
at the head of a box canyon in the San Juans
Telluride box canyon San Juans Ceramic Art Tile
— — a valley with no way through.
across the Sawatch Range, between Leadville and Aspen
Top of the Rockies Byway Sawatch Range Ceramic Art Tile
— — where the road climbs above the trees and stays.
in Rocky Mountain National Park, between Estes Park and Grand Lake
Trail Ridge byway sunset Rocky Mountain National Park Ceramic Art Tile
— — the hour the tundra keeps the colour.
across the top of Rocky Mountain National Park, in northern Colorado
Trail Ridge Road Rocky Mountain National Park Ceramic Art Tile
— — the country above the trees.
below the basalt rim of the Flat Tops, in northwest Colorado
Trappers Lake Flat Tops Ceramic Art Tile
— — the lake that taught us to leave a place alone.
high on Trail Ridge Road, in the Colorado Rockies
Tundra Communities trail Rocky Mountain National Park Ceramic Art Tile
— — the country above the trees.
in the Sawatch, west of Leadville
Twin Lakes below Mt Elbert Sawatch Range Ceramic Art Tile
— the highest peak in the Rockies, twice over.
on the high plains of southeast Colorado, between Springfield and Lamar
Two Buttes reservoir Ceramic Art Tile
— a basin of sky between the buttes.
in the Eagle Valley, at the foot of Vail Mountain
Vail Village covered bridge Eagle Valley Ceramic Art Tile
— a wooden roof, the creek below, the village beyond.
high in Colorado's Sawatch Range, at the foot of Mount Belford
Vicksburg ghost town Sawatch Range Ceramic Art Tile
— the cabins the silver left behind.
at the foot of Battle Mountain, on the back of Pikes Peak
Victor mining town Front Range Ceramic Art Tile
— — a brick town the gold left standing.
thirteen miles south of La Junta on the southeast Colorado plains
Vogel Canyon Ceramic Art Tile
— the green seam in the shortgrass.
at the western end of the South Rim, Black Canyon of the Gunnison
Warner Point western rim Black Canyon NP Ceramic Art Tile
— — the longest look into the dark.
east of the Front Range, on the high prairie
Wheat fields eastern plains Ceramic Art Tile
— amber, all the way to Kansas.
high in the Elk Range, west of the Divide
Wildflower super bloom Crested Butte Elk Range Ceramic Art Tile
— the few weeks the meadow forgets the snow.
west of Denver, on the Continental Divide
Winter Park Mary Jane bowls Front Range Ceramic Art Tile
— — the bowl the wind keeps filling.
on the Continental Divide, in the San Juans of southern Colorado
Wolf Creek powder San Juans Ceramic Art Tile
— — where the storms come down first.
below the Park Range, through downtown Steamboat
Yampa River through Steamboat Yampa Valley Ceramic Art Tile
— the river the dams never reached.
high above Ouray, in the San Juans
Yankee Boy Basin wildflowers San Juans Ceramic Art Tile
— — the two weeks the snowfields become columbine.
Hawaii United States
151 placeson the Hāmākua Coast, north of Hilo
Akaka Falls Big Island Ceramic Art Tile
— — the long fall into the green.
on the Hāmākua Coast, north of Hilo
Akaka State Park Trail Big Island Ceramic Art Tile
— — a thread of white through the tree-fern green.
on the south shore of Kauai, a few miles west of Poipu
Allerton Garden Kauai Ceramic Art Tile
— the green a valley keeps for itself.
above Pier 9 in Honolulu Harbor
Aloha Tower Oahu Ceramic Art Tile
— the word the harbour wears on all four sides.
on the leeward coast of Kauai, facing Niʻihau
Barking Sands Kauai Ceramic Art Tile
— — the sand that hums underfoot.
moored at Ford Island, across the harbour from the Arizona
Battleship Missouri Oahu Ceramic Art Tile
— the deck where the war ended.
south of Wailea, at the end of the Maui coast road
Big Beach Makena Maui Ceramic Art Tile
— the long sand at the end of the road.
on the Wailuku River, just above Hilo
Boiling Pots Big Island Ceramic Art Tile
— the river the lava taught to boil.
below the Ko'olau cliffs on Oahu's windward side
Byodo-In Temple Oahu Ceramic Art Tile
— — the long minute after the bell.
north of Kapalua, on the northwest shore of Maui
D T Fleming Beach Maui Ceramic Art Tile
— gold sand the pines have shadowed for a century.
above the east end of Waikiki
Diamond Head Summit Oahu Ceramic Art Tile
— the climb that ends in the whole Pacific.
in central Oahu, on the road to the North Shore
Dole Plantation Oahu Ceramic Art Tile
— — the sweet road between two mountain ranges.
on the high red plain at the north end of Lāna'i
Garden of the Gods Lanai Ceramic Art Tile
— — the colour the wind left behind.
at the southern tip of the Big Island, east of South Point
Green Sand Papakolea Big Island Ceramic Art Tile
— — the green the old volcano left behind.
high on Haleakalā, above the trade-wind clouds on Maui
Haleakala Silversword Maui Ceramic Art Tile
— — silver against the cinder, the years before the bloom.
on the summit of Maui, above the clouds
Haleakala Sunrise Maui Ceramic Art Tile
— the morning the dark gives the colour back.
on the southeast shore of Oahu, east of Waikiki
Halona Blowhole Oahu Ceramic Art Tile
— the place the sea breathes out.
on the windward coast of the Big Island
Hamakua Cane Road Big Island Ceramic Art Tile
— — the road the cane left behind.
two miles north of Lahaina, at the south end of Kaʻanapali
Hanakaoo Canoe Beach Maui Ceramic Art Tile
— where the canoes still come down at dawn.
on the Nā Pali Coast, two miles past the end of the road
Hanakapiai Beach Kauai Ceramic Art Tile
— — the beach the winter takes back.
in the Nā Pali, four miles in from Keʻe Beach
Hanakapiai Falls Kauai Ceramic Art Tile
— — water down a wall of ferns.
on the north shore of Kauai
Hanalei Bay Pier Kauai Ceramic Art Tile
— a wooden walk, the green wall behind.
on Kauai's north shore, behind Princeville
Hanalei Taro Fields Kauai Ceramic Art Tile
— — a valley flat enough to hold the sky.
in Hanapepe, on Kauai's west side
Hanapepe Swinging Bridge Kauai Ceramic Art Tile
— the bridge the hurricane took and the town put back.
on the southeast tip of Oahu, ten miles east of Waikiki
Hanauma Bay Oahu Ceramic Art Tile
— a crater the sea moved into.
on the Kohala Coast, in the lee of Mauna Kea
Hapuna Beach Big Island Ceramic Art Tile
— a half-mile the lava leaves alone.
on the reef shelf off the North Shore of Oahu
Hee Octopus Tidepool Oahu Ceramic Art Tile
— — the stone that thinks, then is gone.
on a peninsula in Hilo Bay, Big Island
Hilo Banyan Drive Big Island Ceramic Art Tile
— — a green colonnade, each column signed.
on the Hāmākua Coast, north of Hilo on the Big Island
Honokaa Hamakua Big Island Ceramic Art Tile
— a plantation town the trade wind keeps green.
deep in the West Maui Mountains
Honokohau Falls Maui Ceramic Art Tile
— — the long white the road can't reach.
on Maui's northwest shore, just past Kapalua
Honolua Bay Maui Ceramic Art Tile
— — the bay the rainforest opens onto.
on the Road to Hana, north-east Maui
Honomanu Bay Maui Ceramic Art Tile
— where the rainforest spills into the Pacific.
on the Kaʻū coast of Hawaiʻi Island
Honu Nesting Beach Ceramic Art Tile
— — the warm afternoon the honu come up to sleep.
on the Big Island, where the lava meets the sea
Honu on Lava Reef Big Island Ceramic Art Tile
— — the warm black stone the honu come back for.
on Maui's north shore, just past Pa'ia
Hookipa Windsurfing Maui Ceramic Art Tile
— where the trades come ashore.
high on Maui's Haleakalā, above the cloud deck
Hosmer Grove Maui Ceramic Art Tile
— — a temperate forest the volcano kept.
in the channel between Maui and Lanaʻi
Humpback Whale Maui Ceramic Art Tile
— the song you can hear through the hull.
in the coral shallows off every Hawaiian island
Humuhumunukunukuapuaa Ceramic Art Tile
— — the reef's coat of arms.
in the West Maui Mountains, west of Wailuku
Iao Needle Maui Ceramic Art Tile
— the green the valley keeps for itself.
in the upland forests of the Big Island
Iiwi Ohia Lehua Big Island Ceramic Art Tile
— — two reds that need each other.
in downtown Honolulu, a few blocks back from the harbor
Iolani Palace Oahu Ceramic Art Tile
— — the palace that outlived the kingdom.
the north end of Kaanapali Beach, west Maui
Kaanapali Black Rock Maui Ceramic Art Tile
— the cliff the old chiefs leapt from at sundown.
on Kaʻanapali Beach, north of Lahaina
Kaanapali Whalers Village Maui Ceramic Art Tile
— the open-air evening between the shops and the sea.
the westernmost tip of Oʻahu
Kaena Point Oahu Ceramic Art Tile
— — where the road runs out, and the wind keeps going.
on the Kona Coast, south of Kailua-Kona
Kahaluu Bay Big Island Ceramic Art Tile
— the water the lava wall keeps still.
on the windward side of Oahu, across the Ko'olau from Honolulu
Kailua Beach Oahu Ceramic Art Tile
— the wind that keeps the turquoise moving.
on the windward coast of Lanai
Kaiolohia Lanai Ceramic Art Tile
— the wreck the reef won't release.
eleven miles past the highway on Kauaʻi's Nā Pali Coast
Kalalau Beach Kauai Ceramic Art Tile
— — the green the road never reaches.
at the end of the road in Kōkeʻe, on Kauaʻi
Kalalau Lookout Kauai Ceramic Art Tile
— — the morning before the clouds come up the cliffs.
southeast of Hilo, where the road ends
Kalapana Black Sand Big Island Ceramic Art Tile
— what the volcano leaves behind.
on the north shore of Molokai, below the cliffs
Kalaupapa Peninsula Molokai Ceramic Art Tile
— — what the cliffs have kept to themselves.
along the Wailua River, inland from Kauai's east shore
Kamokila Village Kauai Ceramic Art Tile
— — the village the river kept.
at the northwest tip of Maui, between two lava points
Kapalua Bay Maui Ceramic Art Tile
— the shape of two arms around the water.
in Waikīkī, at the foot of Diamond Head
Kapiolani Banyans Oahu Ceramic Art Tile
— the shade a tree builds out of itself.
four miles west of Hilo, on the eastern flank of Mauna Loa
Kaumana Caves Big Island Ceramic Art Tile
— a room the lava poured itself out of.
on the South Kona coast of Hawaii Island
Kealakekua Bay Big Island Ceramic Art Tile
— — the water the cliffs keep still.
on the windward coast of Maui, halfway to Hana
Keanae Peninsula Maui Ceramic Art Tile
— the green that grew on the lava.
at the end of the road on Kauaʻi's north shore
Kee Beach Kauai Ceramic Art Tile
— the last calm water before the cliffs.
on Maui's leeward south shore, west-facing
Kihei Sunset Palms Maui Ceramic Art Tile
— the minute the palms go ink against the gold.
on the leeward coast of Oahu, west of Honolulu
Ko Olina Lagoons Oahu Ceramic Art Tile
— the ocean, kept calm in four crescents.
above Hanauma Bay on Oahu's east shore
Koko Crater Stairs Oahu Ceramic Art Tile
— — a ladder up the side of a volcano.
on the leeward slopes of Hualālai and Mauna Loa, the long western shoulder of Hawaiʻi Island
Kona Coffee Belt Big Island Ceramic Art Tile
— the morning before the cloud comes in.
on the windward coast of Oahu, north of Kāneʻohe
Kualoa Ranch Oahu Ceramic Art Tile
— — the valley the wind keeps rinsing green.
on Oʻahu's North Shore, where the coast bends east toward Kahuku
Kuilima Turtle Bay Oahu Ceramic Art Tile
— — the bay the turtles taught us the name of.
high on the slope of Haleakalā, in upcountry Maui
Kula Lavender Maui Ceramic Art Tile
— purple at four thousand feet, above the trade winds.
across from Lahaina Harbor, on the western shore of Maui
Lahaina Banyan Tree Maui Ceramic Art Tile
— — the shade that came back after the fire.
on Maui's western shore, across the channel from Lanai
Lahaina Front Street Maui Ceramic Art Tile
— — where the banyan still stands.
on the North Shore of Oahu, between Haleiwa and Waimea
Laniakea Turtle Beach Oahu Ceramic Art Tile
— where the honu come ashore to rest.
on the windward side of Oʻahu, east of Honolulu
Lanikai Mokulua Oahu Ceramic Art Tile
— two islands across a sea the wind forgot.
above Lanikai, on Oahu's windward coast
Lanikai Pillbox Sunrise Oahu Ceramic Art Tile
— — the first light over the Mokulua Islands.
east of Pāhoa, in the Puna rainforest
Lava Trees Monument Big Island Ceramic Art Tile
— — a forest the lava kept the shape of.
past Wailea, behind the cinder cone
Little Beach Makena Maui Ceramic Art Tile
— the half-moon the road can't reach.
on Kauai's east shore, at the mouth of the Wailua River
Lydgate Park Kauai Ceramic Art Tile
— — a piece of ocean you can walk into.
four miles south of Kailua-Kona, on the Kona coast
Magic Sands Big Island Ceramic Art Tile
— a beach the ocean keeps borrowing.
on the south shore of Kauai, east of Po'ipū
Mahaulepu Trail Kauai Ceramic Art Tile
— — red dunes turned to stone above the surf.
on Oʻahu's western shore, about an hour west of Honolulu
Makaha Beach Oahu Ceramic Art Tile
— the wave the cliffs hear coming.
at the eastern tip of Oahu, looking across the channel toward Molokai
Makapuu Lighthouse Oahu Ceramic Art Tile
— — a white lantern at the edge of the wind.
upcountry Maui, on the western slope of Haleakalā
Makawao Paniolo Maui Ceramic Art Tile
— — a cowboy town older than Cheyenne.
at the north end of Lahaina, on Maui's west shore
Mala Pier Ruins Maui Ceramic Art Tile
— — what the storm left, the turtles kept.
on the Kona coast of the Big Island
Manini Beach Big Island Ceramic Art Tile
— — the morning the dolphins come in to rest.
at the back of Mānoa Valley above Honolulu
Manoa Falls Oahu Ceramic Art Tile
— a green you can hear before you see it.
off the Kona coast of the Big Island, after dark
Manta Ray Kona Big Island Ceramic Art Tile
— — a wing the size of a doorway, turning in the light.
in Waikapū, at the foot of the West Maui Mountains
Maui Tropical Plantation Ceramic Art Tile
— the green the mountain keeps watered.
on the Kohala Coast of Hawaiʻi Island
Mauna Kea Beach Hotel Big Island Ceramic Art Tile
— the white the lava lets through.
high on Mauna Kea, on the Big Island
Mauna Kea Silversword Big Island Ceramic Art Tile
— — the silver that waits decades to flower.
above the trade winds, on the Big Island
Mauna Kea Summit Big Island Ceramic Art Tile
— — the sky the telescopes came for.
off Kualoa, on Oahu's windward shore
Mokolii Chinamans Hat Oahu Ceramic Art Tile
— — the tail the goddess left behind.
on West Maui, north of Kapalua
Mokuleia Slaughterhouse Maui Ceramic Art Tile
— the blue the road keeps to itself.
off the south coast of Maui
Molokini Crater Maui Ceramic Art Tile
— half a volcano, the water clear to the floor.
on the south shore of Kauai
Monk Seal Poipu Kauai Ceramic Art Tile
— the morning the beach belonged to the seal.
high on the spine of Lanai
Munro Trail Lanaihale Ceramic Art Tile
— — where the pines turn cloud into water.
the northwest cliffs of Kauaʻi
Na Pali Aerial Kauai Ceramic Art Tile
— the green the road never finds.
on the windward coast of East Maui, along the Hāna Highway
Nahiku Rainforest Maui Ceramic Art Tile
— the green the rain keeps making.
on Maui's northwest shore, between Kapalua and Ka'anapali
Napili Bay Maui Ceramic Art Tile
— — where the honu come in to feed.
on the cinder slopes above the Maui clouds
Nene Haleakala Maui Ceramic Art Tile
— a goose that learned the lava.
past Hāna, on Maui's southeast coast
Oheo Seven Pools Maui Ceramic Art Tile
— — pool to pool, the long walk to the sea.
on Maui's leeward coast, between Lahaina and Mā'alaea
Olowalu Reef Maui Ceramic Art Tile
— the reef every other reef comes from.
north of Hilo on the Hāmākua Coast
Onomea Bioreserve Big Island Ceramic Art Tile
— — a rainforest that runs down to the sea.
above the Wailua, on the east shore of Kauai
Opaekaa Falls Kauai Ceramic Art Tile
— — water rolling, the way the shrimp once did.
on the east coast of Maui, in Waiʻanapanapa State Park
Pailoa Sea Arch Maui Ceramic Art Tile
— — black basalt the Pacific wore through.
above Honaunau Bay, on the Kona coast of the Big Island
Painted Church Big Island Ceramic Art Tile
— the cathedral painted into a small wooden room.
in the Koʻolau Range, above the windward coast of Oʻahu
Pali Lookout Oahu Ceramic Art Tile
— the wind that holds the rain in place.
on the Big Island, in the saddle between Mauna Kea and the Kohala Mountains
Parker Ranch Big Island Ceramic Art Tile
— — the green Hawaii keeps for itself.
on the North Shore of Oahu, between Sunset and Waimea
Pipeline Banzai Oahu Ceramic Art Tile
— — the glass second before the wave folds.
on Kauai's south shore, in Koloa
Poipu Beach Honu Kauai Ceramic Art Tile
— the old swimmer the warm sand keeps.
at the end of the road on Kauaʻi's west shore
Polihale Beach Kauai Ceramic Art Tile
— — where the road ends and the cliffs begin.
on the western slope of Haleakalā
Polipoli Redwood Maui Ceramic Art Tile
— California fog, six thousand feet up a volcano.
at the north end of the Big Island's Kohala coast
Pololu Black Sand Big Island Ceramic Art Tile
— — the black crescent where the road runs out.
where the road ends on the Big Island's windward coast
Pololu Overlook Big Island Ceramic Art Tile
— fold after fold of cliff, all the way to Waipiʻo.
in Lāʻie, on the windward coast of Oʻahu
Pounders Beach Oahu Ceramic Art Tile
— the sound the beach was named for.
below the Princeville cliffs, on Kauaʻi's north shore
Princeville Queens Bath Kauai Ceramic Art Tile
— — the pool the sea leaves on the lava.
on the road to Hāna, two-thirds of the way out
Puaa Kaa Falls Maui Ceramic Art Tile
— — water older than the road that found it.
in the upcountry pastures of Maui
Pueo Owl Maui Ceramic Art Tile
— the day owl that watches back.
on the Kaʻū coast of the Big Island
Punaluu Black Sand Big Island Ceramic Art Tile
— — black sand, and the turtles come ashore to warm.
above Honolulu, in an old crater
Punchbowl Cemetery Oahu Ceramic Art Tile
— the city's noise stops at the rim.
on Oahu's North Shore, just past Waimea Bay
Pupukea Tidepools Oahu Ceramic Art Tile
— the still water the lava leaves at low tide.
on the Kona coast, south of Kailua-Kona
Puuhonua o Honaunau Big Island Ceramic Art Tile
— — where the law could not follow.
at the edge of Hilo, on the Big Island
Rainbow Falls Big Island Ceramic Art Tile
— the rainbow the morning leaves in the mist.
below Kaʻuiki Head, just south of Hāna
Red Sand Beach Maui Ceramic Art Tile
— — a pocket of red the cliff keeps refilling.
across the Big Island, between Mauna Kea and Mauna Loa
Saddle Road Big Island Ceramic Art Tile
— — the road the rain forgets.
on Kauai's west side, a mile from Hanapepe town
Salt Pond Hanapepe Kauai Ceramic Art Tile
— — the summer the sea becomes salt.
on the southeast coast of Oʻahu, past Hanauma Bay
Sandy Beach Oahu Ceramic Art Tile
— — the wave that breaks on dry sand.
on the windward north shore of Lanai, across the channel from west Maui
Shipwreck Beach Lanai Ceramic Art Tile
— a coast that keeps what the channel hands ashore.
between Wailua and Kapaa, on the east shore of Kauai
Sleeping Giant Nounou Kauai Ceramic Art Tile
— — a giant who lay down after the feast, and stayed.
on the rim of Haleakalā, the volcano that makes most of Maui
Sliding Sands Trail Maui Ceramic Art Tile
— — a long red walk down into the quiet.
the southern tip of the Big Island, and of the country
South Point Ka Lae Big Island Ceramic Art Tile
— — the wind that bends the trees and never lets up.
on the South Kona coast of the Big Island
Spinner Dolphin Kealakekua Big Island Ceramic Art Tile
— the morning the dolphins come in to rest.
on Kauai's south shore, west of Poipu
Spouting Horn Poipu Kauai Ceramic Art Tile
— a moan, then a column of sea.
on Oahu's North Shore, just up the coast from Pipeline
Sunset Beach Oahu Ceramic Art Tile
— the colour the Pacific saves for last.
above Honolulu, on the forested ridge between Round Top and Mount Tantalus
Tantalus Lookout Oahu Ceramic Art Tile
— the hour the city turns into lanterns.
on the road to Hāna, East Maui
Three Bears Falls Maui Ceramic Art Tile
— — water coming down in three voices.
on Kauai's north shore, where Kuhio Highway runs out
Tunnels Beach Kauai Ceramic Art Tile
— — the summer the reef opens.
the first waterfall stop on the road to Hana
Twin Falls Hana Maui Ceramic Art Tile
— — the green the rainforest keeps.
on the upcountry slope of Haleakalā, above south Maui
Ulupalakua Winery Maui Ceramic Art Tile
— pasture and pineapple, on the volcano's dry side.
in Pearl Harbor, on the south coast of Oahu
USS Arizona Memorial Oahu Ceramic Art Tile
— — the white above the sunken ship.
on the high plateau of central O'ahu, between the Wai'anae and Ko'olau ranges
Wahiawa Botanical Oahu Ceramic Art Tile
— a green the island keeps in one ravine.
on Maui's east coast, near Hāna
Waianapanapa Black Sand Maui Ceramic Art Tile
— the colour the lava left behind.
at the east end of Waikiki Beach, on Oʻahu's south shore
Waikiki Diamond Head Oahu Ceramic Art Tile
— — the green crater above the long beach.
on the south shore of Maui
Wailea Beach Maui Ceramic Art Tile
— — the crescent the trades don't reach.
on the south-west shore of Maui, in the lee of Haleakalā
Wailea Coast Morning Maui Ceramic Art Tile
— the hour before the trades come up.
on the Hāna Highway, just past Hāna on the way to Kīpahulu
Wailua Falls Hana Maui Ceramic Art Tile
— — the curtain at mile forty-five.
on Kauai's east side, four miles inland from Lihue
Wailua Falls Kauai Ceramic Art Tile
— the rainbow that lives in the falling mist.
on the windward coast of Oʻahu, southeast of Honolulu
Waimanalo Makapuu Oahu Ceramic Art Tile
— the morning the sun walks straight out of the sea.
on the Big Island's Hāmākua coast, north of Waipiʻo
Waimanu Aerial Big Island Ceramic Art Tile
— a green amphitheater open to the sea.
on the North Shore of Oʻahu, an hour north of Honolulu
Waimea Bay Winter Oahu Ceramic Art Tile
— — the winter the ocean stands up.
on the north shore of O'ahu, behind Waimea Bay
Waimea Valley Falls Oahu Ceramic Art Tile
— the green the rain keeps deepening.
at the end of the Pipiwai Trail, past Hāna on east Maui
Waimoku Falls Pipiwai Maui Ceramic Art Tile
— — the cliff the bamboo opens onto.
on the north shore of Kauaʻi, between Hanalei and Hāʻena
Wainiha Bay Kauai Ceramic Art Tile
— — where the rain comes home to the sea.
on the Puna coast of the Big Island, east of Pahoa
Waiopae Tide Pools Big Island Ceramic Art Tile
— — the water before the lava came.
on the Hāmākua Coast of the Big Island
Waipio Overlook Big Island Ceramic Art Tile
— a thousand feet of green falling to the sea.
at the far western corner of O'ahu
Yokohama Bay Oahu Ceramic Art Tile
— the last beach before the road runs out.
Ireland
86 placesoff the west coast of County Mayo
Achill Island
— — green that runs all the way to the sea.
southwest of Limerick, on the Maigue
Adare Village
— — a row of thatched roofs along a slow river.
in Galway Bay, off Ireland's west coast
Aran Islands
— — stone walls all the way to the edge.
on a headland above the Celtic Sea, in County Waterford
Ardmore Round Tower
— the long quiet after the bells stopped.
on the Shannon, in the middle of Ireland
Athlone Castle
— a keep at the country's quiet centre.
in County Sligo, on Ireland's northwest coast
Benbulben
— — a flat-topped mountain combed by rain.
five miles northwest of Cork city
Blarney Castle
— the green that grew into the wall.
on the River Boyle, below the Curlew Mountains.
Boyle Abbey
— — what the light kept after the roof was gone.
on the Loop Head Peninsula, where Clare meets the Atlantic
Bridges of Ross
— — the arch the sea hasn't taken yet.
in a field east of Carlow town
Brownshill Dolmen
— set down once, and never lifted.
by the Shannon Estuary, west of Limerick
Bunratty Castle
— — a tower that learned to wait.
on an island in the River Suir, in southern Ireland
Cahir Castle
— — the grey the river keeps polishing.
on the Causeway Coast of County Antrim
Carrick-a-Rede
— — a rope above the chasm, above the sea.
west of Dublin, on the Liffey
Castletown House
— a Palladian face above the river.
at the mouth of Clew Bay, on Ireland's west coast
Clare Island
— a mountain that falls straight into the sea.
on the Atlantic coast of County Clare
Cliffs of Moher
— — a wall the Atlantic keeps editing.
on the east bank of the Shannon, in the Irish midlands
Clonmacnoise
— the silence the river kept.
on Great Island, in Cork Harbour
Cobh
— — the last Irish light, before the open sea.
in the south-east of Ireland, between Dungarvan and Clonmel
Comeragh Mountains
— — the dark water at the foot of the wall.
west of Galway, on the Atlantic edge
Connemara Bog
— — the brown and silver country, just after rain.
between the Mournes and Dundalk Bay
Cooley Peninsula
— — a country older than the border.
south of Waterford, the slow road west
Copper Coast
— a coastline the colour of an old penny.
on the Mountdillon bogs, in the Irish midlands
Corlea Trackway
— — oak the bog would not give back.
above Clew Bay, in County Mayo
Croagh Patrick
— — a hill a country climbs barefoot.
on the Kildare plain, southwest of Dublin
Curragh of Kildare
— — a country wide enough for the wind.
on the cliffs of north Mayo, above the Atlantic
Downpatrick Head
— what the storm of 1393 left behind.
on the cliffs of Inishmore, in Galway Bay
Dún Aonghasa
— half a circle of stone, then the Atlantic.
on the basalt cliffs of the Causeway Coast, west of Bushmills
Dunluce Castle
— — the castle the sea has been taking back.
on the Dingle Peninsula, west of Ventry
Famine Cottage Ruin
— — the door the wind walks through.
on the Atlantic edge of Donegal
Fanad Head Lighthouse
— the white tower the Atlantic keeps finding.
on the south coast of Cork, between Rosscarbery and Clonakilty
Galley Head Lighthouse
— — a light that turns to find the land.
in south Tipperary, between the Galtees and Slievenamuck
Glen of Aherlow
— — the long green held between two ridges.
in the Dartry hills, above Glencar Lough
Glencar Waterfall
— — the wandering water above the lake.
south of Dublin, in the Wicklow Mountains
Glendalough
— — the morning the mist sits on both lakes.
in the Derryveagh Mountains, northwest Donegal
Glenveagh Castle
— — a castle the glen kept after the people left.
in County Wicklow, south of Dublin
Great Sugar Loaf
— — a cone of quartzite the ice age sharpened.
across the Liffey in central Dublin
Ha'penny Bridge
— iron lace over a slow brown river.
in County Meath, north-west of Dublin
Hill of Tara
— the wind that knew the kings.
in Tipperary, south of Thurles
Holy Cross Abbey
— the silence the Suir kept for three hundred years.
at the southeast tip of Ireland
Hook Head Lighthouse
— eight centuries of the same patient light.
at the north arm of Dublin Bay
Howth Head
— gorse, gulls, and the long Irish Sea.
on a Connemara lane, west of Galway
Irish Thatched Cottage
— — the white wall the Atlantic couldn't move.
in the Nore valley, south of Thomastown
Jerpoint Abbey
— the company the cloister still keeps.
on a bend of the River Nore, southeast Ireland
Kilkenny Castle
— — eight centuries leaning into the bend of the Nore.
in Kilkenny, southwest of Dublin
Kilkenny Medieval Mile
— a thousand years down a single street.
in County Kerry, at the foot of the Reeks
Killarney
— — the morning the cloud lifts off the lake.
in County Kerry, at the foot of the Macgillycuddy's Reeks
Killarney Lakes
— — a dark mirror under the Reeks.
on King's Island, where the Shannon bends through Limerick
King John's Castle
— limestone the Shannon has watched for eight centuries.
on the south coast of Ireland, where the Bandon meets the sea
Kinsale
— the painted town the rain makes brighter.
above Sligo Bay, in the northwest of Ireland
Knocknarea
— the cairn the centuries keep adding to.
in Connemara, on the shore of Pollacapall Lough
Kylemore Abbey
— the granite the lake remembers.
on the cliffs at the mouth of the Shannon
Loop Head Lighthouse
— — a steady light at the end of the land.
in the drumlin country of County Monaghan
Lough Muckno
— — a green so old it forgets the year.
in the Wicklow Mountains, an hour south of Dublin
Lough Tay
— the colour of a pint poured slowly.
on the Iveragh Peninsula, west of Killarney
MacGillycuddy's Reeks
— — the ridge the cloud comes to rest on.
at the top of Ireland's Inishowen peninsula
Malin Head
— where Ireland runs out of land.
in County Louth, north of Drogheda
Monasterboice
— the gospel still legible in the sandstone.
above Dunlewey, in northwest Donegal
Mount Errigal
— — the cone the last light turns pink.
the high point of the Blackstairs, in Ireland's southeast
Mount Leinster
— the day the view runs all the way to Wales.
on the north Sligo coast, looking across Donegal Bay
Mullaghmore Head
— — the green headland the Atlantic comes to find.
in the Boyne Valley, an hour north of Dublin
Newgrange
— the room the sun visits once a year.
on the south Cork coast, below Kinsale
Old Head of Kinsale
— the land sharpens to a white light.
on the Leitrim shore of Lough Gill, east of Sligo
Parke's Castle
— stone the lake keeps coming back to.
on the bare limestone of the Burren, west of Galway
Poulnabrone Dolmen
— stone that has held the sky for six thousand years.
in the Wicklow Mountains, south of Dublin
Powerscourt Waterfall
— — a long white seam down dark rock.
around the Iveragh Peninsula, in the southwest of Ireland
Ring of Kerry
— — the green the rain keeps.
in the Irish midlands, below Lough Ree
River Shannon at Athlone
— — the slow green that runs through Ireland's middle.
above the Plain of Tipperary, in southern Ireland
Rock of Cashel
— the silhouette you see before you see the town.
east of Portlaoise, in the Irish midlands
Rock of Dunamase
— a Norman keep the rock outlasted.
off the south Wexford coast, out from Kilmore Quay
Saltee Islands
— — the cliff that takes flight in May.
on the north hill above the River Lee, in Cork
Shandon Bells
— — the bells the city plays itself.
in the north-west of Ireland, below Cuilcagh
Shannon Pot
— a small dark eye, and a river begins.
in the Atlantic, off the Kerry coast
Skellig Michael
— — the rock the monks kept, eight miles out.
at the western tip of the Dingle Peninsula
Slea Head
— — the last green before the sea.
above Donegal Bay, on the Atlantic edge
Slieve League
— — a wall the Atlantic hasn't finished.
at the mouth of the Corrib, on the edge of Galway
Spanish Arch Galway
— — the stone the river walks past on its way to the sea.
in County Roscommon, west of the Shannon
Strokestown Park
— a long avenue and a longer memory.
on Ireland's Atlantic coast, south of Galway Bay
The Burren
— — where the stone keeps a garden.
on the Hook Peninsula in County Wexford
Tintern Abbey
— — a vow made at sea, kept in grey stone.
in the oakwoods south of Killarney
Torc Waterfall
— — the river the oak wood lets through.
on the River Boyne, an hour northwest of Dublin
Trim Castle
— grey stone, green field, slow river.
on College Green in central Dublin
Trinity College Dublin
— the room the manuscripts grew into.
in Connemara, west of Galway
Twelve Bens
— the white stone, the morning after rain.
in County Wicklow, an hour south of Dublin
Vale of Avoca
— — two rivers learning the same name.
at the head of Clew Bay
Westport Quay
— the bay the town walks down to.
south of Dublin, the long granite uplands
Wicklow Mountains Pastoral
— — stone walls and the colour of wet heather.
United Kingdom
9 placeson Queen's Island, where the Lagan meets Belfast Lough
Belfast Shipyard Cranes
— — Samson and Goliath, still keeping watch.
on the north shore of Belfast Lough
Carrickfergus Castle
— — the hour the lough goes flat and the stone goes warm.
on a country road in County Antrim, near the Causeway Coast
Dark Hedges
— two rows of beech that grew into one room.
on the Causeway Coast, north of Bushmills
Giant's Causeway
— — the morning the tide steps back from the stones.
in Lower Lough Erne, north of Enniskillen
Lough Erne Devenish Island
— — a round tower the lake didn't take back.
in County Down, where they sweep to the sea
Mourne Mountains
— — the landscape C.S. Lewis kept seeing.
in the north of Ireland, west of the Bann
Sperrin Mountains
— — a low brown country, under a high grey sky.
on the Lecale coast, south of Killough
St John's Point Lighthouse
— — the colour Dundrum Bay steers by.
above the river Foyle, near Ireland's north coast
Walled City of Derry
— — a circle the centuries kept.
Northern Ireland
3 placesin the foothills of the Sperrin Mountains, County Tyrone
Beaghmore Stone Circles
— — what the peat had been keeping.
on a rocky hill above Dundrum village, looking south to the Mournes
Dundrum Castle
— — a ring of stone above the bay.
south of Newry, in the borderlands
Slieve Gullion
— the cairn the winter sun finds.