
A fancy bridge.
Build-up to Thanksgiving.

This is the stairwell in Boston's public library.

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]]>Apparently it was Bette Midler who once said that when it's three o'clock in New York, it's still 1938 in London. I was in New York for just over two weeks, and started to see what she meant. The first pictures are Manhattan, the last one Brooklyn, where I was staying.
A fun thing to do, and free, is take the Staten Island ferry there and back.
It's a corny photo, but the sight of Manhattan at night is fantastic.

This is the Chrylser Building. It has quite an interesting history.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chrysler_Building

Skyscrapers, with a bit of afternoon sun, somewhere in midtown Manhattan.

Yet another building! This is the Woolworth building, in downtown. As you can see, it's not that different from the Woolworths on Colchester High Street.

Some taxis.

Another freebie - walking along Brooklyn bridge.

Finally, some roller derby. This was taken at the end-of-season championship-decider match between the Bronx Gridlock and the Queens of Pain. It's very grungy and chaotic, and oddly glamorous, in a ripped-tights-and-bad-lipstick kind of way .

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]]>The front and back of the Capitol building.
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Afternoon sun on the Supreme Court.
There are monuments to absolutely everything in Washington. This was the memorial to F. D. Roosevelt with his dog, Fala. It was controversial because it supposedly tried to hide his wheelchair.

Here's the White House.
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Some cowboy boots. I bought the red and white pair in the middle.

A picture of a water hydrant.

Late afternoon on the Mississippi.

You can't really capture the razzmatazz of a basketball game (this was the Grizzlies vs the Spurs) with a photo, but try to imagine here a pop band, cheerleaders, fireworks, and somersaulting men in bear suits, and you're practically there.

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]]>Below are some of the colours along the Buffalo National River, which cuts through the Ozark mountains in the north of Arkansas.
Hot Springs (Bill Clinton's home town) is where Americans would come to in their thousands during the early 1900s for fancy surroundings and cutting edge spa technology.
In the south of the state there were miles and miles and miles of cotton fields.
The civil rights movement in the south is really well documented everywhere you go. In Little Rock there is an excellent museum on the nine black students who were barred from a high school in 1957, and the riots that followed.
For a closer look at what happened, click here.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Little_Rock_Nine
Finally, some mountain humour.
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There are wonderful Gone With The Wind (I know, wrong state) plantation houses everywhere in this part of the south, this one the only octagonal one, apparently.

Late afternoon along the Mississippi river.

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]]>The houses of the French Quarter (above), and ones like this one below in the nearby Garden District, pretty much escaped Katrina.

Within a few miles of the city it starts to get swampy.
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It is well known for the art that is everywhere you look.
Sign at a downtown florist - Americans seem to have more fun selling things than we do in the UK.

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I also headed off to Canyon de Chelly, towards the New Mexico border, where native Americans used to live in the houses at the base of this cliff.

Some blue sky and a piece of the same canyon.

Arizona remains copyright of the author Darell, a member of the travel community Travellerspoint.
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]]>Here's a bit of Paris, Nevada.

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I didn't stay long enough in LA for it to grow on me too much, but star-spotting on the Walk of Fame was enjoyable.

Here are some great cars we saw on the drive fom Los Angeles to San Francisco.
Alcatraz, from the inside.

I spent just over a week in San Francisco, and became slightly obsessed with the Golden Gate bridge.



Chinatown in San Francisco is impressive, and about the size of a small English town

We witnessed a prescribed fire in Yosemite.

This picture doesn't convey the size of these giant sequoias very well, nor their age - apparently they're the oldest living things on the planet.

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