Perched on the southern shores of Lake Wakatipu, Queenstown is New Zealand's self-styled Adventure Capital.
Originally built in 1898, this San Francisco landmark at the foot of Market Street was one of the busiest transit terminals in the world prior to the construction of the Bay and Golden Gate Bridges during the 1930s. Ferry traffic declined dramatically thereafter, and from the 1950s until the mid-1990s, the Ferry Building was hidden behind an ugly elevated freeway.
The oldest surviving lighthouse in Newfoundland and Labrador is located at the most easterly point of land in North America. It has been restored to its 1839 appearance and shows how a lightkeeper and his family might have lived in the mid-19th century.
While Bixby Bridge is one of the most photographed bridges in California, it is likely that neighboring Big Creek Bridge takes top honors. Traveling north five miles beyond Lucia on Route 1, you'll see the bridge in the distance and a paved and often busy parking lot where people are out of their cars looking and taking photos.
The Clock: St Ann’s Fort Signal Tower
The Garrison Historic Area
St. Michael, Barbados
Probably the most ethereal, remote, superlunary, highest, surreal, lonesome camping spot anywhere in any National Park. A BBQ, table, refuge and loo in the middle of nothing.
Taking the ferry on San Francisco bay, can save time, reduce stress, save money and be a great scenic trip all at the same time.
Somewhere beneath the St. Ann’s Fort is a vaulted area housing some of the oldest cannons in the world.