Arm of the sea, Mother Nature's bosom, shoulder of the road, teeth of the storm, eye of the hurricane, spit (?) of land, a mountain in the Adirondack 46's called "Nippletop, " and many other mts. with names suggestive of their silhouettes...figurative speech in most cases. Originally, "neck of the woods" meant a narrow woodland and then got expanded.
The language always evolves and generally gets less specific, more debased or whatever you want to call it. "Neck ...." now means "my neighborhood" or "near me." As I said, the original meaning stretched...Al Roker uses it for his morning weather reports when he switches from the national to the local stations. He said it was a tribute to his grandfather, who used the phrase. Source was Wikipedia, I think. My memory is a sieve these days :-d
My favorite anthropomorphized geographical term is a town by the name of "French Lick," Ohio, I believe. If I lived there, I would have to giggle everytime I filled out a return address.
@ gailcalled down the road from Intercourse, PA is a town called Bird-in-Bush, PA I have been to both. And I love the Grand Tetons in WY they are beautiful.