<p>Kenai Lake, Kenai Peninsula, Alaska 1997 Michael Melford Outdoor activities, such as horseback riding, are popular pastimes on the Kenai Peninsula. The Kenai is Alaska's most heavily trafficked playground. Some 190 miles (306 kilometers) long and up to 170 miles (273 kilometers) wide, it is about the size of Vermont and New Hampshire combined but with only 44,000 year-round residents. (Text adapted from and photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Taking on the Kenai," May/June 1998, National Geographic Traveler magazine) </p><p><br/><img src="http://bbs.myit365.com/skins/default/filetype/jpg.gif" border="0" alt=""/>此主题相关图片如下:<br/><a id="ImgSpan" href="http://bbs.myit365.com/UploadFile/2006-4/200641710132474949.jpg" target="_blank"><img alt="按此在新窗口浏览图片" src="http://bbs.myit365.com/UploadFile/2006-4/200641710132474949.jpg" border="0" style="WIDTH: 768px;"/></a></p><p>Missouri Breaks, Montana 1996 William Albert Allard Dark clouds loom over grainfields near the Missouri Breaks. In the big, empty Breaks, "It's nothing to drive 250 miles (402 kilometers) to a game or a dance," says a local resident. "That's how you find things out here." (Text adapted from and photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Missouri Breaks," May 1999, National Geographic magazine) <br/><br/><img src="http://bbs.myit365.com/skins/default/filetype/jpg.gif" border="0" alt=""/>此主题相关图片如下:<br/><a id="ImgSpan" href="http://bbs.myit365.com/UploadFile/2006-4/200641710132416751.jpg" target="_blank"><img alt="按此在新窗口浏览图片" src="http://bbs.myit365.com/UploadFile/2006-4/200641710132416751.jpg" border="0" style="WIDTH: 768px;"/></a></p> |