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The picture below is of the shamba. The papaya will be ripe while we are away. This is a pity, because they are good food, make good jam, and are very delicious with a little sprinkle of the coarse brown sugar and a big squeeze of lemon or lime.
We have about fifteen papaya trees in the shamba, which is the garden or allotment, and most of them are producing quantities of paw-paw such that we wouldn't be able to eat it all. The building in the background is one of the dormitories. The school is a boarding school, with a very few students who live locally. There are about 650 students, not quite half are girls.
The school is linked to and more or less controlled by the Diocesan Church of Tanganyika, and although it is denominational, it takes students from all backgrounds. It has a good reputation.
Just up the road is the Mvumi Mission Hospital, also part of the Diocesan Church of Tanganyika, and a training centre for nurses and doctors. It is the local clinic as well.
The biggest diseases are malaria and HIV. Other infections such as typhoid, cholera and trachoma can all be dealt with, although cholera can sometimes develop too quickly for medical intervention to save the patient.
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