This post is officially dedicated to my Dad....a few pictures of the crazy things we see, often times not understanding at all why the way it is, is, well, the way it is.
I'm not sure if this truck died, got stuck, or just wouldn't technically go in reverse, but it was blocking the road, and all of these men were trying to push it back out of the way so that all those buses/trucks behind it, and all the cars in front of it, including our bus, could get through.
Along the way to a town Logan and I visited, we experienced some massive road construction. It is like they said, "Let's just tear out the whole road all at once, but still let cars go through." It took us 7 hours to get to a place that maybe should have taken 3.5 hours. Anyways, here is a truck on the side of a mountain. Literally, the side of the cliff was almost perpendicular to the ground, and this truck was doing something, but I don't know what.
I absolutely love electrical work here! In this smaller village, I think every house was wired to this box.
I absolutely love electrical work here! In this smaller village, I think every house was wired to this box.
Here are three pictures of random ways to install things around the house. The first one w/ the curtains is one Logan did....took some zip ties, a piece of some kind of electrical cord, and some nails, and hung some curtains to separate our kitchen from where I dry laundry.
Next, we've got probably one of the most dangerous (in my mind) ways of obtaining hot water. This was our bathroom in YX, where we spent about 6 weeks studying. Here, you can see there is a hot water heater installed in the bathroom, which was great, but the outlet for power for the heater was across on the other side of the room, where the water from the shower head could directly hit it. I am sure that although this ranks high on the dangerous scale, no one has actually ever been hurt/killed by bad design/mixing water and electricity in the bathroom...
And last, but not least, a picture of how you install any drain pipe here. This is our kitchen sink...it was actually broken, but a few weeks ago Logan replaced it w/ a much better one. Regardless, the way you install a drain pipe is to buy pipe, attach it to the drain in the sink, and then stick the pipe into the hole in the floor. Kind of gross/ridiculous/such a temporary fix in my mind, but that's how it is done. Which, although ridiculous, made it much easier for us to install our own bathtub! So I guess there are perks....
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