Tag: “State Park”

100 places found.

  1. Joshua Tree National Park

    Coyotes howled as I waited for the sun to set.

  2. Palmer Park

    Palmer Park is a city park located in the center of Colorado Springs. It is surprisingly large with dozens of trails used for hiking, biking and horseback riding.

  3. Heartland Café

    The Heartland is a warm and homey bohemian oasis in the Rogers Park neighborhood, and makes for a great hangout. Especially popular with the weekend breakfast crowd, it's still lively most nights due to frequent live performances of music and spoken word.

  4. Dolores Park

    Dolores Park is named for the nearby Mission Dolores and is a common hangout for San Franciscans on a sunny day. The park is basically an expansive grass field on a hill with tennis and basketball courts on one side, a clubhouse and sidewalk through the middle, and great views from its highest point.

  5. Phipps conservatory and botanical gardens

    Fantastic Botanical gardens in Pittsburgh. The collection of plants is beyond description.

  6. Flintstones Bedrock City

    The lesser known of the two American Flintstones campgrounds, (the other is in South Dakota.) it features a theme park with a train ride through a "volcano" and lifesize versions of the flintstones houses and characters as well as a gift shop, diner and campground.

  7. Central Park Reservoir

    I come here few times a year when I feel down. The perfect moment is during sunset and you are given these beautiful colors, view of midtown and the reflection from the water.

  8. Yellowstone National Park

    Yellowstone is America's first national park. The park covers 3,472 square miles in the states of Wyoming, Montana, and Idaho.

  9. Red Square

    Red Square in Moscow has been a center of power for centuries and is worth visiting again and again, at different times of year, with different light and different weather.

  10. Chicago Millennium Park

    Millennium Park is located in the heart of downtown Chicago. It is bordered by Michigan Avenue to the west, Columbus Drive to the east, Randolph Street to the North and Monroe Street to the South.

    From the 1850s until 1997, the land that is now occupied by Millennium Park was controlled by the Illinois Central Railroad.