Today we took a walk around the house and our garden. The house is down a little road with a motorcycle repair shop and a noodle restaurant. In Lao cities, the neighborhoods are like little villages. They even have village chiefs! Each village also has a neighborhood Wat (temple)
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| Here is the gate in front of the house. If you look closely, you can see the red roof. |
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| This is Ton (tone) the gardener. He comes about once every three weeks to help mow the lawn, clean up fallen leaves, take care of the plants, and do other gardening stuff. |
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| I was sad to leave our plum tree in America, but our Lao Garden has even more fruit trees! |
| Little fruits. These are supposed to be really sour. |
| A fallen kaffir lime. |
| Custard apples! These have a bizarre texture, but taste amazing. Usually the fruits are covered in ants because the cracks leak sweet stuff. |
| These guavas are not ready for eating yet. My dad said some types of guava turn pink on the inside when they're ripe. |
| A lime. You can tell that its not a kaffir lime because those are lumpy and covered in bumps. Also, kaffir leaves have weird segments.When lime-picking it is very important to watch out for thorns! |
| The neighbor's coconut tree. Ours doesn't have any fruit. |
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| An interesting flower my dad found before my mom, sister, and I arrived. Sadly, it wilted before I could see it. |
| Another strange flower. I don't know what it is. |
| Seed pods on the ground. |
| A (currently mango-less) mango tree. |
| Aloe Vera. Apparently it's good for sunburns. |
| I think a dog may have stepped in the wet cement.... |





