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City Views.223

Urban Entrances.123

County Views.133

City & County of SF in the foreground; Marin County on the far side of the GG Bridge, and bits of at least Alameda & Contra Costa counties on the eastern side of the bay (top right).

Urban Canals.163

Urban Garden.193

I wandered through a lovely string of parks our first morning in Ghent, as Steve slept off some of his jet lag. He’d commented that the countryside looked mighty wet from the airplane as he approached Amsterdam; I explained that it had rained every day between about October and January, not always a lot but really (or nearly) every single day. By his arrival, the rain had reduced in frequency and volume, but as you’ll below, mud and standing water were everywhere. On the bright side, when I first approached this pond, I thought those were a real flock of naturalized parrots but in fact they’re colorful wooden parrots perched there to appeal to the children who’d be playing here on a clearer day no doubt.

Coasting.93

Tomales Bay, with Point Reyes Peninsula on the other side and its mouth to Bodega Bay to the right in the second photo below. For those who don’t know the region: the San Andreas Fault runs right down the middle of this bay, and the peninsula is measurably moving away from the shore from which I took the photo by inches each year. 🙂

Signs of the City.83

City Lights.53

Both from the same bike ride to the office in late January, a few minutes apart.

Islands.53

So yes, there’s actually an island in this photo, which you can see more clearly and easily from the other side of the lake, in the photo below :-). (Above, look for the taller pines that seem to grow from closer to or in the lake – yep, that’s the island.) The joy of my various series are that they help me see things in new ways – this is Spring Lake right near the apartment I lived in when I was in Santa Rosa, and despite many bike rides and afternoons reading on benches along its shores, I’m not sure I ever noticed the little island before!

From the Air.43

Bottom right corner here in Mt Tamalpais and Marin County; right middle you can see the Golden Gate Bridge and SF. I’m reasonably confident that in addition to the clouds, you can also see a few lines of snow-capped Sierra Nevada mountain ranges in the middle below the couds. I’m even more confident that there are snow-capped Sierras in the distance of the photo below, which also shows Clear Lake to the north and west of my old Sonoma County home, once the skies below our plane had cleared enough for me to take photos as we approached SF nearly two weeks ago.

Mountains.33

Then sun peaking through clouds over the alps during a February morning walk in Geneva.

Ah, Royalty.23

This is Gravensteen, seat of the Counts of Flanders for hundreds after years after this current incarnation was built by Philip of Alsace in 1180. I suppose technically counts aren’t royalty but at various points in its history, the counts in question were younger sons of French kings, it seems, so there. Despite the gray skies, Steve and I also found the views of Ghent from the parapet quite interesting. The paintings you’ll find in the gallery below are humorous renditions of some of the gruesome acts of punishment committed in this building over the centuries. For such a bloody place, the audio guide did a fine job of keeping it rather humorous and fun. Oh, and little known fact, John of Gaunt – who shows up both in English history as Duke of Lancaster and, I think, in some of Shakespeare’s history plays – was originally from Ghent, since the English apparently called Ghent Gaunt.