I saw that which you see here via a Microsoft New photo gallery of the 15 Best American Cities For Nature Lovers.
I do not know if the link will work in all browsers.
Most of the towns on the list were the usual nature suspects, Denver, San Francisco, Salt Lake City, Santa Fe and Seattle.
Some of the towns on this list just seemed odd, nature lover-wise. Indianapolis, Columbus, Cleveland, Boston and Atlanta.
How are both of America's Portlands not on this list, particularly the Portland in Oregon?
And, no nature loving towns in Texas? Shocking. Not even Fort Worth, with its nature loving inner tube floating in the polluted Trinity River?
This nature loving article's description of Seattle seemed totally accurate to me...
This nature loving article's description of Seattle seemed totally accurate to me...
In Seattle you’ll already feel like you’re in nature, even in the midst of skyscrapers. But despite the natural surroundings, including forests, water and mountains, there’s still a distinctly urban feel to the city with its innovative tech scene, a walkable waterfront full of shops and restaurants, and plenty of attractions. One highlight is the Seattle Center, where you’ll find the distinctive Space Needle and Museum of Pop Culture.
I wonder if Fort Worth's Trinity River Vision ever becomes something one can see, if upbeat verbiage might result about that sad sack of a town's imaginary waterfront, verbiage of the sort used to describe Seattle.
But, other than all that, what actually struck my eye about this Nature Loving Cities article was the photo of the Seattle skyline.
A time of two I have opined that I am not a fan of the distorted, zoomed photos of Seattle, showing Mount Rainier looking way closer and bigger than it actually is, sort of misrepresenting the view tourists might see if a cloud-free sky allowed such, as in, a view of Mount Rainier in the distance.
This photo, the one you see above, that photo actually looks like what Mount Rainier actually looks like, from Seattle.
Still totally impressive, and the likes of nothing I see on the horizon at my current Texas location...
They've never heard of Tandy Hills. Not as visually pretty as a mountain, but much more convenient. As for the Trinity River noise, nothing natural about that.
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