Today I wanted to show you how mangoes grow right along the roads in Thailand.
Armed with my Sony FE 90mm F2.8 Macro G OSS, after spending way too much time reading the manual, I decided that spider eyes can wait. For now, I’m more interested in portraits of trees, textures, details — the quiet things you only notice when you slow down.
The plan was simple: a post about how mangoes grow and ripen in the tropical heat.
But then I found out… it wasn’t mango at all.
The tree I photographed is Cerbera odollam, often called “sea mango.” The fruits look harmless — round, green, almost inviting. But they are highly toxic. Inside is a powerful cardiac toxin called cerberin that affects the heart. Definitely not something you want to experiment with.
It’s funny how deceptive nature can be. A beautiful tree with thick evergreen foliage, neat shape, white fragrant flowers — perfect for shade along hot Thai streets. It tolerates heat, dust, salty air, exhaust fumes. No surprise it’s planted everywhere.
And yet, behind that calm tropical look hides something dangerous.
Right next to it stood another tree I confidently misidentified. I thought it was a palm used for palm oil.
Wrong again.
It turned out to be Areca catechu, the betel nut palm. What caught my eye were the fruits — growing in dense clusters, almost like oversized green grapes hanging high under the crown. Some had already turned orange, which means they were ripe.
The “betel nut” is actually a seed. Across Southeast Asia it’s traditionally chewed together with betel leaves — an old custom that stains teeth red and isn’t exactly friendly to health. Still, it’s deeply rooted in local culture.
You’ll see these palms everywhere in Thailand:
along roads
near temples
in private yards
I like moments like this — when I confidently think I know what I’m looking at, and Thailand gently proves me wrong.
Maybe misidentifying trees is forgivable for someone who didn’t grow up here. What matters more is that I stopped, looked closer, and learned something new.
Some of the photos turned out better than I expected when I reviewed them at home. And that’s enough for me.
Thailand keeps surprising me. Almost every day there’s something new hiding in plain sight — you just have to look a little closer.
I write my texts myself, correct mistakes and translate via ChatGPT (which is not a violation on Hive)!
All photos were taken by me personally - I am a beginner photographer, so I ask professionals not to judge strictly.
Thank you for sharing these moments with me! Until new stories and new holidays! ✌️.
Camera đź“·: Sony Alpha 7 IV full-frame
Lens đź”: Sony FE 70-200mm F: 2.8 GM OSS II
Lens đź”: Sony FE 90mm F2.8 Macro G OSS
Lens đź”: Sony FE 24–70mm f/2.8 GM II
Processed đź› : Lightroom
photo by openai