 | This is a shot of Downtown El Paso with El Paso High School in the foreground. El Paso High is the oldest secondary school in the city, having opened in 1916. |
 | Here's a view of the Franklin Mountains and Rim Road from Tom Lea Park. |
 | Facing south on the Rio Grande. At this point on the river, it serves as the state line between Texas and New Mexico. Further south, it becomes the International Boundary between the U.S and Mexico. |
 | Mount Cristo Rey at Sunset. The mountain is just across the stateline from El Paso in Sunland Park, New Mexico. |
 | The top of Mount Cristo Rey. There is a road leading from the base of the mountain to the sculpture of a cross at the crest. |
 | The U.S./Mexico border at night. The trail of lights follows the Rio Grande as it winds its way through El Paso. |
 | This is a time-lapse photo of the I-10/US 54 Interchange. |
 | The oldest church in Texas-La Misíon de Corpus Christi de Ysleta. |
 | This huge statue stands outside the El Paso International Airport. Known as the "Equestrian", it depicts the first European explorers to arrive in the El Paso area. |
 | This shot of Franklin Mountains State Park was taken from Loop 375 (Trans-Mountain Drive). |
 | First of two pictures of the Franklin Mountains shot from the Wilderness Park Museum in Northeast El Paso. |
 | Black and white shot of Franklin Mountains/ Wilderness Park Museum. |
 | Late afternoon at Franklin Mountains State Park. |
 | Another one of the mountain peaks in the state park. In the upper elevations, patches of snow can sometimes stick around for weeks. |
 | A roadrunner doing what roadrunners do best. No coyote in hot pursuit, though. |
 | A winter shower dusting the mountain with snow. Winter sometimes delivers several snow showers, and sometimes none at all. |
 | Here's a shot of Downtown El Paso after the previous day's snow shower. Rarely does the white stuff stick around for more than a day or two. |