Well... I haven't any pictures of me, but I can share some pictures I took when I took a road trip to Regina and the Qu'appelle Valley... panoramic, yet! Horizontal resolution is very large, so you can zoom to pick up details.
Here's the east wing of the Saskatchewan Legislature. As you can see by the rugby players, security is real tight


Here's the front of the Legislature. It's autumn, so there aren't any amazing floral displays.

Here's a shot of Regina's downtown as seen from in front of the Legislature (most of the lake and sky have been cropped)
The tallest buildings are around twenty stories.

<edit>The water in the foreground is Wascana Lake. It's a man-made lake formed by excavating the lake bottom and damming up a natural creek. It has very low flow, almost to the point of stagnation, and is quite shallow. As a result, its pollution levels are pretty high, and it smells bad for a couple of weeks after spring thaw. Otherwise, it's quite pretty and people use it for canoeing, wind-sailing, dragon-boat racing, and olympic-style paddling competitions (and skating and skiing over the winter months).
Here's a tiny part of the Qu'appelle Valley, with lots of autumn colours. On the prairies, fall colours tend to be mostly yellow, gold, and orange. The Qu'appelle Valley is very, very long, with several divides and off-shoots.

<edit>I realized later that there's a question of scale here.
In that fourth photo, the road in the foreground is wide enough for two large trucks to easily pass one-another.
Those aren't bushes or shrubs, they're full-sized trees.
The smallest features on the horizon are about 20 to 30 kilometres away from the camera.
Here's the part of the Qu'appelle Valley near the Fairy Hill East Cemetery, where my dad, paternal grandfather, and paternal great-grandparents are buried.

<edit>In the last photo, the dots toward the right, near the base of the valley, are houses... some of them are two to three stories high. I don't know what the long green building is, but it appears to be significantly taller than the houses.
Yes, it's all very big, but the valley is not mountainous in height.
The plateau, though, is mindbogglingly vast.