As iconic as the Matterhorn, I’ve made many photos of L’Obiou over the years. Here are two from year’s crop, L’Obiou seen from Corps. You see the fresh snow from a fall as late as May that settled on the drifts from the harsh winter.
La Grande Tête de L’Obiou (2789 m.) is the highest point of the Dévoluy Massif in the Alpes-de-Haut-Provence; it’s not especially high by Alpine standards and the summit can be reached without technical climbing. The glamorous peak is prominent to travellers on the Route Napoléon. L’Obiou is described as a butte, the residual hard Jurassic and Cretaceous rock remaining following erosion.
Ovingdean is a part the South Downs National Park situated within the city of Brighton & Hove; the protected valley is largely isolated from the downs by suburbia with only thin corridors of grassland to the main park. Ovingdean is open to the English Channel but bounded by Brighton Racecourse and Whitehawk/Race Hill Nature Reserve to the west, an ancient chalk grassland supporting colonies of Adonis and Chalkhill Blue butterflies. The suburban sprawl is to the north and the east, including the wonderfully named Happy Valley.

Note the water fountain saved from the old village
Les Salles-sur-Verdon is not a celebrated architectural gem like Port Grimaud but it’s in a similar vein. It’s the village displaced by the rising water of the bitterly resisted reservoir, the lac de Sainte-Croix. I’m guessing the concept is derivative, architect François Spoerry’s Port Grimaud being about ten years earlier. Les Salles is an idealised Provençal village as Port Grimaud is an idealised Mediterranean fishing village.
One particularly spectacular dawn seen from the balcony of my apartement in Marseille. Provence dawns are often colourful due to the limestone dust in the air, the vehicle pollution in urban Marseille adds to the effect. This was 15 April 2024.
Dew pond at Ditchling Beacon (227 m.) on the South Downs Way in Sussex.