Thursday, December 31, 2020

Uluru, Northern Territory, Australia

Last day of 2020: Alleluia! The year will linger on in memory as an inselberg, a distinctive mountain of memories that will diminish in size only as the years to come push it farther onto the horizon. Inselbergs are symbolic of the isolation we have all felt this past year: We lived our lives in the image of Uluru (formerly known as Ayers Rock). [1988]

Wednesday, December 30, 2020

Tijuana, Baja California, Mexico

Fewer haircuts than ever in 2020: Pre-Covid cuts in Tijuana, Mexico, and Sumpter, South Carolina. Home-bound cuts (two underage barbers) in Chesapeake, Virginia. Covid-Era cuts in Helena, Montana; Cape May, New Jersey; and Fort Mill, South Carolina. Eighteen states to go until Geographically Yours has been shod in each of the 50 states! [2020]

Tuesday, December 29, 2020

Marrakech, Morocco

♫ These Are a Few of My Favorite Things ♫ ~ Haircuts: Ordinary travelers can't pass up an inviting bar. Geographically Yours can't pass up an inviting barbershop. My instructions to the man on the right: Make me look Moroccan! And he did, thus entering my collection of barbers around the world. Check out tomorrow's post for portraits of my 2020 stylists. [2010]

Monday, December 28, 2020

Victoria, Gozo, Malta

♫ These Are a Few of My Favorite Things ♫ ~ Clocks: Time ticketh away: The end of the year will soon be upon us. Clocks on the landscape make time so ever-present (ever-threatening, too). They are provided, presumably as a service, by governments, churches, and businesses. Why? [2009]

Sunday, December 27, 2020

Istanbul, Turkey

♫ These Are a Few of My Favorite Things ♫ ~ Flags: Viva vexillology. That's the study of flags. Of all the things that Geographically Yours photographs, flags are the hardest: There is either too much wind or not enough! Better to string them up overhead like this national standard in Istanbul. Flags turn the landscape into a game board: "What flag is that?" [2020]

Saturday, December 26, 2020

Kaohsiung, Taiwan

♫ These Are a Few of My Favorite Things ♫ ~ Pole Banners: They lift your spirits by lifting your gaze. They animate your gait with their flutter. They exercise your optical nerves with diversity of hue. They deplete your wallet with lures to spend money. They attach you to places with scripts and images. Enjoy them: Their messages are always positive. [2011]

Friday, December 25, 2020

Road Town, Tortola, British Virgin Islands


♫ These Are a Few of My Favorite Things ♫ ~ Maps on the Landscape: Democratize geography. Liberate maps from their biblio-prisons and put them out there on the landscape where everyone can see them. This year, your present is an ornament on Road Town's Christmas tree. It honors a sister archipelago, St. Kitts and Nevis. [2014]

Thursday, December 24, 2020

El Rosario, Michoacán, Mexico

♫ These Are a Few of My Favorite Things ♫ ~ Welcome Signs: Welcome signs may glow with local character, exude national ambition, or, in this case, compliment the international community for establishing a biosphere reserve. Remember, you never get a second chance to make a first impression. See also: Geographically Yours Welcome. [2008]

Wednesday, December 23, 2020

Steinbach, Manitoba, Canada

♫ These Are a Few of My Favorite Things ♫ ~ Signs: We are such a literate culture that we litter our landscape with language. There are words everywhere, and sometimes full sentences. Keep your eyes open for commercial, political, and iconic cultural signs. And, if you're a geographer, you will love place-name signs and should not miss tomorrow's post. [2012]

Tuesday, December 22, 2020

Amsterdam, Netherlands

♫ These Are a Few of My Favorite Things ♫ ~ Cemeteries: Cemetery space may be the last space we can call our own. Why not use it tell our story? That is the trend in memorialization, and it is well illustrated by Zorgvlied Cemetery, where an iconic Amsterdam symbol (XXX) serves as a "headstone." See also: Geographically Yours Cemeteries. [2015]

Monday, December 21, 2020

Bucharest, Romania


♫ These Are a Few of My Favorite Things ♫ ~ Zoos: Flamingos, peacocks, penguins, and pelicans are centers of attention at almost every zoo. These Dalmatian Pelicans, vulnerable as a species, are among the largest birds alive. Put them on your must-see list for your next zoo visit. Geographically Yours has been to 48 zoos around the world. [2014]

Sunday, December 20, 2020

San Diego, California, USA

♫ These Are a Few of My Favorite Things ♫ ~ Lighthouses: Tourism waves ebb and flow, but lighthouses are always popular. Why are they so psychologically appealing? Why are they so sought after by photographers? Why are they reproduced so much in popular culture? A visit to the Point Loma lighthouse might provide some of the answers. [2020]

Saturday, December 19, 2020

Twin Falls, Idaho, USA

♫ These Are a Few of My Favorite Things ♫ ~ Water Features: Water, whether it takes the form of streams, lakes, seas, or waterfalls, is always photogenic. Shoshone Falls ranks as the Niagara of the West and is one of many along the Snake River. See the rainbow? [2020]

Friday, December 18, 2020

Stone Mountain, Georgia, USA

♫ These Are a Few of My Favorite Things ♫ ~ Mills: Powered by running water, grist mills sustained generations of settlers on the Georgia piedmont. As a reminder, an old wooden mill was relocated to Atlanta's Stone Mountain Park in 1965. Water wheelswindmills and tidal mills (wish I could find one to photograph) all teach us the virtues of sustainability. [2020]

Thursday, December 17, 2020

New Salem, Massachusetts, USA

♫ These Are a Few of My Favorite Things ♫ ~ Historical Preservation: The rising waters of the Quabbin Reservoir put four towns under water. The Town of Prescott's church was rescued and repurposed. It is now the headquarters of the Swift River Valley Historical Society, which preserves memories of what existed before the great flood. [2009]

Wednesday, December 16, 2020

Medora, Indiana, USA

♫ These Are a Few of My Favorite Things ♫ ~ Ruins: Each year, the landscape is encrusted with new layers of cultural creativity. Each year, old layers decay or are removed. Why are some elements of our shared patrimony saved and others sacrificed to the elements or to progress? What should be done with the remains of this shale-brick plant? [2017]

Tuesday, December 15, 2020

Thurmont, Maryland, USA

♫ These Are a Few of My Favorite Things ♫ ~ Covered Bridges: As soon as he started to drive, Geographically Yours started collecting covered bridges. Unlike the purists, though, he never cared whether they were authentic or decidedly unauthentic. Thurmont's authentic but rehabilitated Utica Mills bridge is now open to a new generation of traffic. [2019]

Monday, December 14, 2020

Charleston, South Carolina, USA

♫ These Are a Few of My Favorite Things ♫ ~ Mailboxes: Stopping roadside to take pictures of mailboxes means a lot of U-turns and illegal parking. Although the creative ones are few and far between, Geographically Yours did an entire month of mailbox pictures in February of 2018. This one matches its home, the Huger Street Fire Station. [2012]

Sunday, December 13, 2020

Clarinda, Iowa, USA

♫ These Are a Few of My Favorite Things ♫ ~ Courthouses: There are over 3000 counties in the U.S., and each one has a county courthouse. County seats like Clarinda generally use their courthouses to brag about their past, their ideals, and their quality of life. They do this with eye-catching architecture and a plethora of memorials. [2019]

Saturday, December 12, 2020

Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, USA

♫ These Are a Few of My Favorite Things ♫ ~ Capitols: Born only a few blocks from the capitol dome in Pennsylvania's capital city, Geographically Yours fell in love with both capitals and capitols. His ambition, right here on Geographically Yours, is to feature a picture of each state capitol on statehood day. (Yes, GY is both a person, me, and a blogsite.) [2018]

Friday, December 11, 2020

Bridgeton, New Jersey, USA

♫ These Are a Few of My Favorite Things ♫ ~ Murals: An otherwise blank slate has been turned into a cross between an historical marker and a wall painting. It is a reminder of Bridgeton's industrial past. Mural art can commemorate the past, mimic the present, or anticipate the future. And, sometimes, murals are just fun. [2016]

Thursday, December 10, 2020

Rome, Georgia, USA

♫ These Are a Few of My Favorite Things ♫ ~ Public Sculpture: Who founded the 'eternal city'? Romulus 'n Remus, abandoned twins suckled by a she-wolf! Now you know where the name Rome came from. Wonder how it came to Georgia? Like all good public art, the sculpture here invites you into a web of connections and, perhaps, controversies. [2013]

Wednesday, December 9, 2020

Burlington, Vermont, USA

♫ These Are a Few of My Favorite Things ♫ ~ Main Streets: Regardless of their specific names, main streets embody the essence of place. Topophiliacs ("place lovers") flock to their shores. Although they may not realize it, the folks here are exemplary topophiliacs. Elsewhere in downtown, more irresistible trottoirs await. [2009] 

Tuesday, December 8, 2020

Washington, DC, USA

♫ These Are a Few of My Favorite Things ♫ ~ Farmers' Markets: One way to keep farmers in your area afloat is to patronize your nearby farmers' markets: delicious, nutritious, so not malicious. And, they give you some insights into your local geography of agriculture. What makes the valley where these apples were grown such good orchard country? [2018] 

Monday, December 7, 2020

Boston, Massachusetts, USA

♫ These Are a Few of My Favorite Things ♫ ~ Coffee Shops: Where does so much of the work of Geographically Yours get done? In coffee shops around the world (actually that was B.C., Before Covid). Criticize Starbucks if you want, but it is the reason we have seen a resurgence of cafĂ© culture over the past 50 years. [2008] 

Sunday, December 6, 2020

Crossroads, New Mexico, USA

♫ These Are a Few of My Favorite Things ♫ ~ Post Offices: A place is not a place until it has a name, and the one place you could count on to prominently display that name was the post office. The old U.S. Post Office Department was the GIS of its day. In fact, it used to have a topographer to keep track of all the places where mail had to be delivered. [2018]

Saturday, December 5, 2020

Lerna, Illinois, USA

♫ These Are a Few of My Favorite Things ♫ ~ Barns: Just as the family farm is passing out of existence, so is the traditional barn. Some, like this double-pen barn on the reconstituted Lincoln farm, will be deliberately preserved; most will not. Geographers love to figure out why building materials, designs, and sizes of barns vary from place to place. [2017]

Friday, December 4, 2020

Bensalem, Pennsylvania, USA

♫ These Are a Few of My Favorite Things ♫ ~ Water Towers: Water towers (and water tanks) work hand-in-hand with the spirit of place. They can make residents feel proud and visitors feel welcome, and also lift your spirits by lifting your gaze above the horizon. In residence here: the patriotic muse, the history muse, and the toponymic muse. [2018]

Thursday, December 3, 2020

Hebron, Kentucky, USA

♫ These Are a Few of My Favorite Things ♫ ~ Ferries: From Kentucky to Ohio: There are few crossings where you can still make the trip by ferry boat. When you find one, treat it like a shooting star, and take a ride. Geographers like traveling the 'blue highways,' but ferries are even better. They get you off the blue highways and even deeper into the past. [2017]

Wednesday, December 2, 2020

Bliss, Idaho, USA

♫ These Are a Few of My Favorite Things ♫ ~ People: Dad's a trucker, but when there's nothing to haul he shares the road with his boy. Blissful, isn't it? Meeting people anywhere and everywhere is one of the joys of traveling as a geographer. Sometimes they pose, and sometimes they don't. [2020]

Tuesday, December 1, 2020

Charlotte, North Carolina, USA

♫ These Are a Few of My Favorite Things ♫ ~ World Globes: Cool Globes, right? That's the name of the exhibit along Tryon Street in Charlotte for the rest of the year. Each one has a story to tell about sustainability. Finding a world globe anywhere on the landscape is a real treat for geophiles! Expect to see more cool globes on Geographically Yours in 2021. [2020]