
First-time visitors to Lake Champlain share a sense of wonder: nestled between two mountain ranges, this glimmering giant rewards the eye from most any angle.
A glimpse of New England life awaits along this drive, which wends through the White River Valley to farms and villages farther north.
“The woods are lovely, dark, and deep,” wrote Robert Frost, moved by the icy beauty of the White Mountains. But while these sugarcone peaks live up to their name only in winter, they are worth a visit at any time of year.
Sand dunes and seashores, sunsets and windmills, colorful lighthouses and gray-shingled cottages—such are the delights to be savored on a tour of Cape Cod.
Pennsylvanians long ago dubbed this part of their state The Endless Mountain, and from countless points along this richly rewarding drive, the Alleghenies really do seem to roll on forever.
Sprinkled with farms, fishing villages, plantations, and marinas, Maryland's Eastern Shore is a landscape perfectly wedded to the waters of the Chesapeake Bay.
Like the delicate needlework of a handmade quilt, the rustic lanes of eastern Ohio stitch the colors of the countryside into a richly textured whole.
If West Virginia is, as its residents rhapsodize, “almost heaven,” then the hills and hollows of the Potomac Highlands are surely on the outskirts of Eden.
Along the coast of Georgia, no sharp boundary separates land and sea: amid countless creeks, estuaries, and lazy rivers, dry land dissolves into tidewater in a graceful mélange of marsh, sea, sand, and sky.
Not quite the Deep South, yet a far cry from the resort meccas of the Florida Peninsula, the state's panhandle moves to the modest rhythm of a soft gulf breeze.