When we travel, we like to learn at least a bit of the language of the country. Even just being able to say 'hello', 'thank you', 'I would like....' and 'That's delicious' get you a long way in interactions with local people. Sanju at Quest Volunteers can offer lessons in Nepali (Nepalese) and even Nuwari (the local Kathmandu language) - so, if you're hanging around Kathmandu for a day or two, give Sanju or Salve a call..... the fees go to the Quest Volunteers charity that supports local schools, orphanages, Buddhist monasteries and environmental projects. (Phone; +977 - 1-4380142)
Sunday, 2 December 2012
Friday, 30 November 2012
Voluntary Work: Volunteering in Chovar, near Kathmandu, Nepal
We have heard from our friend Sanju at Quest Volunteers that they desperately need people to continue the restoration and refurbishment of the school building that Rob started when we were in Chovar. Quest has the usual placements at orphanages, monasteries and schools teaching English - but also runs environmental awareness and community volunteering projects, something a little different.....and a bit more active. Even if you have just 2 weeks to offer - you will get Nepalese language lessons, live with a Nepali family and make a real contribution to the community. While you are waiting to climb Mt. Everest, paraglide in Pokhara, whitewater raft down the Seti or Trisuli River or bathe with elephants in Chitwan, why not offer just a bit of time helping to give this school a new lease of life? The kids would be so happy if they could again use their computer room and science lab - ruined by rain coming through the roof. Rob has repaired the holes in the roof and a group of friends have begun replastering the walls - they need someone who can use a hammer to replace floorboards, someone handy with a paintbrush - and/or anyone willing to learn.
They are also planning a fundraising trek to Everest Base Camp in May 2013 - sounds like a lot of fun....
Contact Salve or Sanju at Quest (shakyasapta@yahoo.com or questvolunteer@wlink.com.np or questvolunteer.adv@gmail.com.
They are also planning a fundraising trek to Everest Base Camp in May 2013 - sounds like a lot of fun....
Contact Salve or Sanju at Quest (shakyasapta@yahoo.com or questvolunteer@wlink.com.np or questvolunteer.adv@gmail.com.
Monday, 26 November 2012
Day 115 - Home: Colombo, Sri Lanka to Kent, UK
Day 115 - His.
Some things are truly amazing. One of the things that never ceases to amaze me is how you can wake up in one country and go to bed in another 5,000-ish miles away. That will be today. After 114 days of travelling around Asia via boat, truck, bus, train, plane and elephant we are due home today.
We got up relatively late - after all, the airport is only 15 minutes away and had a slow breakfast. This wasn't necessarily planned - really just a product of Sri Lankan service. In order to get dinner on time you have to order 45 minutes to an hour before. If you don't want dinner before 10 O'clock then by all means wander into a restaurant at 7 and order a la carte. It seems the same mentality runs to breakfast and it makes you wonder if they have to plant the tree, wait for it to grow and fruit before you get your orange juice. Truly - it takes ages. Still by 10 we were in our taxi and heading off.
Our plane ride was a gruelling 12 hour session cramped between a fat man and a screaming child as we did our leg exercises to prevent DVT (as described in our in flight magazine) and waited until we got to England. Thankfully Sri Lankan Air is one of the better airlines we have used so we arrived gritty, tired and unprepared for the cold instead of gritty, tired and miserable. Long distance travel is both a curse and wonder of the modern age.
Steve, our friend - who is, himself, a wonder of the modern age - was bobbing about waiting to pick us up and whisk us to the safe bosom of our home. Steve is a slightly amazing character. For the drive home he had brought food and drinks and chatted happily as we drove back - and when we got back we found he had had the house cleaned, bought food and milk and bread for us. He poured Patti a glass of wine and me a beer. What we all really need are friends like Steve. We had imagined arriving home, dumping off our stuff and grabbing some shut eye before the mammoth task of getting back into the daily grind - but thanks to Steve the house was actually cleaner than it had been when we left! God bless him.
Still we are back home now and we had been in the door for 30 minutes when I caught Patti on the computer.
'What are you doing?' I asked. 'It's time for bed.'
'Just looking at Antarctica,' she replied.
'Antarctica?'
'Yes.'
'Why?'
'For our next trip, of course.'
So watch this space!
Friday, 23 November 2012
Day 114 Colombo, Sri Lanka
Day 114 – His.
Well, our last day. We got up at 6:30 – oddly enough as we
didn’t have that much to do. The main thing is transferring to our new hotel –
which is 15 minutes to the airport. But for some strange reason we were both
just awake. We went for breakfast and met with the rest of our group to say our
goodbyes. It was hugs all round and lots of we must keep in touch. It was all
very sweet and a little glum. We than packed and went to wait for the taxi we
had asked for at half ten. We waited, and we waited and we waited - by half
eleven it turned up. We only had to say good bye three more times which is a
little less than I thought it might be, so it wasn’t too bad.
The drive over to the hotel took an hour and a half – so on
the whole I am quite glad we decided to do this today as if we had left it
until tomorrow I know I would have been stressing. The Hotel we are staying in
is the same as the one we stayed in when we first arrived and it hasn’t changed
much.
The big challenges for today are to go for swim, have a
final curry and repack our bags. About the only essential one is the bag
repacking as several people have told us that England has a temperature of 10
degrees in the day and five at night. Normally I wouldn’t worry about such
things – but, after living at 35 degrees in the day and 30 in the evening i am
finding I start shivering at around 20 so I had to dig out some long trousers,
fleece and my down jacket in preparation for arriving home.
It is going to be so weird being cold!
Day 114 – Hers.
The taxi ride between the hotels did seem to take forever –
but I preferred to think of it as one last sightseeing tour. We saw the stupas, temples, mosques and
churches we had seen yesterday and Galle Face where we had dinner last
night. We drove around the harbour – and
the building site for its expansion. We
drove through the northern suburbs we saw on our first full day here – now
appreciating considerably more the mix of cultures and how the locals live
their lives. In some ways it will be a
shame when the highway is completed, bypassing all the sights – but I’m sure it
will be much quicker and less stressful for those with a plane to catch.
The hotel had the big fluffy towels and huge range of toiletries
that I remembered – as well as the inordinately large staff anticipating any
perceived need or desire. The suite is
large enough for both of us to completely empty our packs – a bit of a
necessity, really. As Rob said, we had to dig out the cold weather gear; I also
had to cushion a number of purchases that I don’t want crushed or broken on the
way home – I really should have thought a bit more about that when buying
things.....
We went for a short walk and then I went for a swim (Rob had
packed his swimsuit at the bottom, so watched a silly film instead. “Well, it’s been four months since I’ve seen
a film,” he said, making me think his packing order was deliberate....), a long
shower (I didn’t want to waste all those toiletries.) and we went out to the
lounge for a drink and dinner – our last Sri Lankan rice with curry (I’ll try
to make it at home, but I’m really not convinced I’ll find all the ingredients.)
– and a strange dessert called ‘Watalappan’ that defies description really, but had coconut and ginger in it
definitely....
There was a large evening party at the hotel - so we retired
to our room to watch another film and (hopefully) get a last good night’s sleep
before our long flight home.
Thursday, 22 November 2012
Day 113 Ahangama to Colombo, Sri Lanka
Day 113 – Hers.
A walk on the beach and breakfast overlooking the crashing
waves began the day. We loaded up the
Gecko bus for the last time and set off for Colombo. We dropped off one member of the group in
another coastal village where he was to meet his girlfriend for another four
days of sun and sea. His girlfriend has
been volunteering with Habitation for Humanity, building houses for poor
families – similar to the project Rob worked on in Guatemala on our last big
trip.
We took the highway to Colombo – it was well-paved and
quick, only about an hour to the outskirts of the city. The Sri Lankans we have met are proud of
their government – there is free health care and education for everyone – and
money that was being spent on the civil war is now being used to build the
country’s infrastructure. According to
Deva, the people of Colombo have ambitions to turn their city into a success
modelled on Singapore. They are already expanding
the harbour and building a second international airport – and skyscrapers are
being built right, left and centre. We
saw the brand new performing arts centre, the national library, a good
selection of beautiful temples, churches and mosques, several large hotels and
shopping malls, and a wide variety of sport facilities as we drove around the
city.
Colombo is green, attractive – and very clean. Many of the government offices – including
the new parliament building – are located in a large parkland suburb outside
the commercial capital, surrounded by a lake and a wildlife sanctuary. The colonial-style buildings in the centre
and the Cinnamon Gardens areas give the city something of a southern European
or South American feel. There are still
some obviously older and poorer neighbourhoods – but even these are, for the
most part, well maintained. The traffic
is far worse here than anywhere else in the country – but nothing like we have
experienced in most Asian cities we have visited.
We stopped at ‘Food City’ (a very Western-style supermarket)
to use their loo and buy snacks – and then at our favourite ‘P&S’ for a
takeaway lunch of samosas and pasties. Our hotel is located several kilometres
south of the centre of the city – so we munched on our purchases as we drove,
arriving at around 2:00 and bidding a very fond farewell to our terrific driver
and his very able assistant. The hotel
is nice, if a bit out of the way. It has
a restaurant, swimming pool and good wifi connection – even so, most of the
group just collapsed into their beds for the afternoon..... a few have tummy
problems, a few are flying out ridiculously early tomorrow – and a few just felt
like chilling in the air conditioning!
Day 113 – His.
Now we are back from the mountains it is sweaty and hot. So,
chilling in the air conditioning is a good way of putting it. We were going to
use the hotel swimming pool but it is closed until December the 1st
– so that didn’t happen. What did happen was we grabbed a local bus (a bit of a
disco theme here with flashing coloured lights around images of the Buddha at
the front and partytime Baile music all the way) into town and walked along the Galle Face – an area of
Colombo just below the port and right by the sea. It is one of the high rent
areas and has the Hilton at the top of it. Along the promenade is a whole
clutch of little huts that set themselves up as restaurants by throwing a few
plastic chairs around and barbequing as much chicken as they can sell. The meal
was tasty, hot and filling and absurdly cheap. Our guide, bless him, paid for
our bus tickets and helped us order – he is a real sweetheart. After dinner we
strolled along the sea front into town and saw the lighthouse and stupa by
night – they were all lit up and quite charming. Then we caught the bus back to
the hotel. Of course people are unwilling to let the holiday end – this mostly
because they are such a great group of people – so we wandered off to a local
market to buy ice cream. Tomorrow is our last day here and I will be most sad
to leave.
Wednesday, 21 November 2012
Day 112 Ahangama and Galle, Sri Lanka
Day 112 – Hers.
Our hotel is fantastically clean, quiet and comfortable and
we were allowed a lie-in this morning – breakfast wasn’t until 8:30 – so I had
a brilliant night’s sleep and didn’t want to get up even then..... By the time we emerged, several members of
our group had already had a swim, a walk, a run....this is truly a lovely,
relaxing way to end our travels.
We boarded the bus at 9:00 and were taken to a sea turtle
conservation project. The centre is
located on one of the main stretches of beach frequented by turtles for laying
their eggs. They ‘rescue’ any eggs laid
during the night before the locals can dig them up – or pay a higher price than
the food market – and then rebury them inside the compound. After two months, when the eggs have hatched
and another 5 days for their shells to harden on the underside, the turtles are
released on the beach to crawl down to the sea and swim away. The project has been going for 21 years – and
as it takes a sea turtle 30 years to reach maturity, they have another nine
years to wait before the first returnees.
It is quite an important project globally – there are seven types of sea
turtles in the world and Sri Lanka has five of them.
The centre also provides an A&E hospital for injured
turtles, reintroducing them to the wild once they have recovered. One large turtle currently in residence has
an amputated front fin (“Ooooh – a paralympic turtle,” said the vivacious
English medical practice manager, with the quote of the day....) but will still
be released when he has put on enough weight to be able to dive.
We then drove on to Galle, a World Heritage fort site and
clearly a major holiday destination of the not far distant future. The number of construction and restoration
projects underway in this amazingly well-preserved colonial fort city was quite
astounding. The shopping is already
better than any of the places we have visited; there are also already quite a
few lovely cafes and restaurants – and the vibe is very like Antigua in
Guatemala – a great place for a holiday – or investment.... We spent half an
hour in one cafe talking to a local about the opportunities for foreign
investors. There are no restrictions on
foreigners buying property – and no residency requirements, very unusual in
such a desirable place. We saw the
international cricket ground – where New Zealand would be playing Sri Lanka
today if they hadn’t lost the test match in 3 days....(The Aussie cricket fans
were sorry to have missed it but not surprised at the result) and the colourful
markets and large commercial area in the city outside the fort walls. Rob suddenly announced that he would be
quite happy living here – quite an admission given the heat and humidity......
After 3 ½ hours of cafes, shopping and strolling along the walls
of the fort, we returned to the hotel along the coastal road – noticing again
the remnants of buildings destroyed in the tsunami. Deva told us of several
people he knew who were killed.
Apparently, it was a Full Moon Day (a holiday) in Sri Lanka – and
hundreds of thousands of people had headed for the beach for picnics and
outings. The train that was washed away
(with worldwide media coverage) was on a bit of track just down the road from
here – 1,200 people were on that train and only one boy survived. In addition to the 40-50,000 fatalities, over
2 million people in Sri Lanka lost their homes.
Deva told us that even though the civil war was still going on, the
whole country pitched in to provide food and emergency aid to all of the
affected areas – perhaps that was even the beginning of the reconciliation.....
We have noticed as we have travelled around that there are
distinct ethnic/religious groups in different areas. The Hindu Tamils live mainly in the northeast
– which is still largely undeveloped for tourists as there are many landmines
to be cleared – or in villages strewn amongst the tea plantations (though many
of these are actually Indian Tamils who have immigrated). The south coast has a large Muslim population
and the southeast and east coast have many Christians – a legacy of the
Portuguese and Dutch colonial settlements.
The Sinhalese majority, though, is largely Buddhist – and pure white
stupas dot the countryside even here.
We arrived back at the hotel at around 2:00 and swam, napped,
read – generally chilled – for the rest of the afternoon. Truly a wonderful end to a wonderful trip –
okay, not quite the end....we still have Colombo to go....
Day 112 – His.
Day 111 - Ella to Ahangama, Sri Lanka
Day 111 – His.
Mostly, Today was destined to be a travel day. We had to
drop down from the mountains right to the coast and six hours was the estimated
travel time and it took about that. Then bear in mind we didn’t sit on the bus
for that long. I think I have said before Gecko is quite good at handling these
long travel days. What they do is split them up into little bits and give us
interesting things to do after an hour or so of sitting on the bus. We started
off by going to see the gap of Ella. The gap of Ella is the valley and the view
from the top down to the plains is pretty awe inspiring. We clambered back
aboard the bus and set off. Five minutes later we turned around and went back.
We had left one of our group behind. Not deliberately I might add. After we had picked him up we set off again
and headed down a winding road to the falls of Rawana. Yet another magnificent
water fall. The problem with water falls and Sri Lanka is that the place is
just littered with glorious waterfalls. We stopped awed and ahhed and photographed
and were assailed by trinket sellers who were flogging bits of rock. The bits
of rock they collected in the mountain and included a huge piece of amethyst
quartz - a thing I had never seen – so I
bought a lump for 50p. Their other offerings I had already picked up off the
trail when we did the hike through the mountains the day before yesterday.
The next two hours were basically a winding climb down the
mountain and dash along a highway to lunch as we regaled with stories of
wedding customs, funeral rites and birth customs by our guide. So what was
destined to be a dull experience was actually pretty interesting.
Lunch was at the Sri Lankan version of Greggs the bakers.
There is a style of eating here called short eats. At first I thought this was
a joke but it is for real. You ask for short eats and they bring out a plate of
various pasties, rolls, sandwiches and local Sri Lankan delicacies. You eat as
much as you want and only pay for what you have eaten. So we sat by the beach
on little trestle tables and drank coffee and ate pasties and baked in the hot
sun. The temperature difference is astounding. In the mountains we had been
fairly chilly but here – everyone was begging for Ice cream.
The section of the coastline is the one that was hit by a
tsunami a few years ago in which 40,000 people lost their lives and the
remnants of the destruction were all around us as we drove on to our hotel.
Smashed houses and cars upside down were in evidence everywhere. There was a
memorial put up for the 1,700 people who were killed in a train that was washed
away.
We finally arrived at three and the hotel is actually on the
beach. It is brand new and pristine and what everybody would think a hotel by
the beach should be. The sea is warm, the beach slopes gradually, the waves are
high enough to have fun in but not high enough to scare you, palm trees line the
edges, there is a pool, a bar, a huge public area with no walls and a roof. If
you were to think of your perfect hotel the chances are it would look like this
place.
We dumped our stuff in our room and the boys went off to
play cricket on the beach with the hotel staff and the girls went into town.
Patti and I changed into our bathing gear and went for a walk along the beach
to see the stilt fishermen. The stilt fishermen are this bunch of crazy guys
who have sunk poles into the sea bed about 50-100m from the beach. They swim
out and as far as I can see spend the rest of the day sitting on top of their
poles fishing. My guess is they are not the greatest of conversationalists.
Still, it was fascinating to see. We then strolled back and went for a swim in
the sea. People like to swim in the sea but on the whole I don’t. In my
experience, most of the time, it is cold, the water is dirty and your feet get
hurt on the rocks. But here the water is as warm as a bath, crystal clear and
the soft sand extends for ages. We spent a while being rolled backwards and
forwards by the waves until moving ourselves up to the beach hotel for a few
lengths in the pool, then back for a shower. All in all a great place to end up
in for the last couple of days.
Dinner was again a very jolly affair. I had been craving pizza ever since one
member of the group had one for lunch the other day – and the restaurant at our
hotel offered a vegetarian pizza with mushrooms, aubergine and chilis....just
my sort of thing. It seems that most of
us have tired of the Sri Lankan rice with curry dishes – I saw spaghetti,
garlic prawns, fried fish, chips, salads....pretty much everything except rice
with curry on our table.
The restaurant also had a strolling guitarist who played a
selection of old favourites from John Denver, Westlife, Ricky Martin, the
Beatles – oh, and the la la la la la song we sang on the bus earlier in the week. We all sang along and Dewa gave him a
generous tip from our quickly dwindling tip kitty.
We ate, chatted, laughed and sang – even when the
thunderstorm briefly cut out all the lights – until 9:30 and time for bed.....
quite late by Sri Lankan standards.
Monday, 19 November 2012
Day 110 Belihul Oya, Haputale, Ella (Sri Lanka)
Day 110 – Hers.
I couldn’t stand tossing and turning to the thunder of the
river rapids anymore, so got up at 6 and sat on the balcony watching the
wildlife and the locals going about their early morning chores. I managed to see a yellow bulbit – one of the
birds we were looking for yesterday – winging its way down stream and several
of the brightly coloured dragonflies that we have become so used to. We breakfasted at 8:00 and then went on a
short nature walk – just an hour and a half through the village and paddy
fields – to work out any remaining stiffness from yesterday’s marathon. We saw trees of breadfruit and jackfruit,
that little plant –mimosa?- that closes its leaves when you touch it and a huge
ironwood tree, as well as villagers working in the terraced paddy fields, all
greeting us as we walked by. We had been
warned that the walk could be muddy – but the only one who actually fell into
the mud was, of course, our accident prone Aussie friend....
An hour to shower and pack and an hour on the bus to
Haputale where we bought delicious samosas from a street vendor and boarded the
goods train – yes, goods train (with two old passenger carriages at the end) –
for Ella. Deva told us that in the nine
years he has been leading this tour, the train has never been on time – but
today it was.......though in order to make up for this unprecedented
occurrence, it waited 20 minutes in the station before it left. We bumped along on wooden benches, surrounded
by Sri Lankan families on outings and a few other tourists, through beautiful
mountain scenery. (Several of the
crazier members of the group – Rob included – hung out of the open doors for
part of the journey....but I’ll let him tell you about that.) I sat next to a young Taiwanese woman who
told me that the countryside was very similar to that of Taiwan. We compared travel experiences of China,
Cambodia and Sri Lanka – and then made faces at the little Sri Lankan baby
sitting with his father opposite us, making him laugh – and chatted with another
Sri Lankan family, telling them that they must be proud of their beautiful and
friendly country.
Day 110 – His.
Ella is a tiny tourist stop famous for its views of the
surrounding mountains and spectacular waterfalls – neither of which we saw as
it was just too foggy. The chill night will certainly help us sleep – so,
silver linings and clouds!
Pretty much all we did here was arrive at our hotel, play
cricket and go out for dinner. The group we are with though is composed of
excellent characters – so even such simple things turn out to be fun – How true
it is that these kind of holidays are made of three things – the place, the
local guide and the group one is with. We have only spent a few days with these
guys but I think we are going to miss them – so unlike the drunks of the last
part of the last trip.
Day 109 - Horton Plains National Park, World's End, Baker's Falls, Belihul Oya (Sri Lanka)
Day 109 – His
So, we got up at 5 and were in the bus by half past. Not
many people were talking. We had been provided with a cup of coffee and a
packed breakfast and a packed lunch. Neither of which our young Texan friend
wanted so we ended up with 6 packed meals. Quite a lot to put in a day bag and
lug around with you all day – but it turned out handy as we had breakfast,
lunch and dinner out of the whole lot- though we did end up having to eat more
boiled eggs and oranges than are good for you.
We had two walks planned – the first was clearly on
everyone’s itinerary and included the little world’s end, the world’s end and
the baker falls. The path around was 9 km and it was filled with tourists of
all shapes, description and nationalities.
The world’s ends turned out to be cliffs and pretty
impressive they were too. One was a couple of hundred meters high and the other
was 600 meters high – ish. The view was magnificent and the surrounding
countryside beautiful.
The next walk was 16km through the local tea plantations
from the mountain tops down into the valley where our next hotel was waiting.
Again a beautiful walk with the ground strewn with rose quartz and crystals our
guide kept pointing out to us. I picked up a few as we struggled along the
precipitous path that descended so quickly our knees were aching by the end of
it. It took four hours to complete and by the end of it our young Texan friend
was whining at every step. She had been making little moaning sounds about two
hours into the walk and by three hours she was in agony. It was pretty hard but
no harder than the Himalayan walks we had done previously. Though like
everybody I was pretty pleased to see the tuk tuks and the bus that were waiting to take us to
the next hotel.
(Many of the others were even more pleased with the
celebratory arrack cocktails provided on the bus!)
Our guide had been apologising about the state of the hotel
for most of the day so we weren’t expecting much. But as we drew up the place
looked most promising and they served us complimentary tea on the veranda. It
wasn’t until we got to the room we realised quite how grotty it was. It is
built by the side of a river – which sounds picturesque, and indeed is, but it
also means it is damp, mouldy and mosquito infested. The bed smells of mould,
the rooms are basic to the extreme and the nicotine stained mosquito net
doesn’t bode well for a good night’s sleep. The river rapids literally thunder
outside the room and Patti has to shout if she is more than three paces away –
ah well we are only here for a night.
Our group has been together for over a week now – and it is very interesting to see how each person’s character has emerged. The Aussie guy we have mentioned is very playful – full of energy and always up for a laugh. On our walk he would bound up and down extra hills, like a mountain goat. Rob, the Texan girl and I were sent by another group’s tour guide down a particularly adventurous side path to the foot of Baker’s Falls (I knew that wasn’t the way Deva had meant for us to go.....) – the young Aussie bounded down after us to tell us where the rest of the group was – and then put his head into the stream and shook himself out like some native animal. The Aussie’s partner is a lovely girl who is 5 ½ months pregnant and still manages to keep up with him most of the time. She wisely did not attempt the second part of the walk – most of us found it very strenuous – she was able to stretch out across 4 seats of the bus and nap for 3 hours..... The English medical practice manager is another of the cheerleaders of the group – keeping us laughing with her witty observations and passing sweets around the bus – even to the driver whilst reminding him to keep his eyes on the road. Another of our group, a 50 year old Aussie woman, has become known as the most accident prone. She took several tumbles on the walk – the last one injuring her ankle – so that the ‘baby’ of the group (a 23 year old Aussie medical student) got to practice her first aid skills strapping it up. The ‘English rose’ KPMG auditor we’ve mentioned before, two thirtyish guys – one Australian who loves cricket and is meeting his girlfriend in Galle and one Irish computer programmer – and a lovely Irish/English woman from Norwich complete the group. It’s a really nice balance – very jolly – and such a blessing after the curate’s egg of a group we travelled with in India.
Saturday, 17 November 2012
Day 108 Kandy to Nuwara Eliya, Sri Lanka
Day 108 – Hers.
Another terrific breakfast at the Devon Hotel in Kandy and
an 8:30 departure for the hill country and tea plantations – known as ‘Little
England’ apparently. Up in the hills, on
the outskirts of Kandy are a good number of hotels ‘with a view’ and many shops
selling silks, batik, gems and tourist tat.
We stopped to photograph the spectacular view....I would have liked to
explore the shops as well, but on we went. I don’t know if we’ve mentioned it – but Rob’s
great grandfather was born in Kandy. His
great-great grandfather was posted here with the British army. From the hilltop, it was easy to pick out
Kandy prison – what had been the barracks for the British soldiers and possibly
Rob’s ancestral home?
As we climbed along a well-paved but very winding road, the
scenery changed from sub-tropical to evergreen forests and terraces of tea,
with the odd waterfall thrown in. As the
climate became more temperate, the vegetation began to look more familiar – we even
saw a strawberry farm with a little jam factory by the roadside.
The mood on the bus was jolly – some ‘Fanny’ sweets caused a
considerable amount of hilarity and Deva led us in a Sri Lankan song (called ‘La
la la la la la la’ as well as I could figure) comparing the beautiful landscape
to a beautiful woman.
We stopped at one tea plantation to photograph the women
picking the tea – only two young leaves and a bud, we were told, and each field
harvested every week. A tea bush can
produce good tea for 45-60 years. Tea
was introduced into Sri Lanka by the British in 1834 – it is still the country’s
third most important source of income.
We stopped at a second plantation for longer. The Mackwoods tea company has been in
operation since 1841. It produces fine specialty
teas (a very special ‘gold’ tea was produced for the Queen’s jubilee) and huge
amounts (literally tons and tons) of the ordinary commercial stuff that is
blended to make the tea that we buy at the supermarket. We sampled one of the specialty teas, served
from an enormous pot – with a delicious piece of chocolate cake – and then
toured the factory, of course finishing in the shop. It was actually very interesting – the company
is amazingly eco-friendly. They produce
all of their own power from small hydroelectric plants within the plantation
area – and they have a reforestation project for areas not used for
cultivation. It was quite interesting to
note that the demographics of the other tour groups at the tea plantation were
noticeably different from those we have come across earlier – older and much
more ‘British’......
From the tea plantation, it was only a short drive to Nuwara
Eliya and its planted roundabouts, 18-hole golf course and mock-Tudor
hotels.....ah, that’s why they call it ‘Little England’. We stopped for lunch at yet another of the ‘local’
restaurants and then had a walking tour of the market (nothing English about those
fruits and spices....) and the town.
We drove a few kilometres out of the town centre and around
a lake to our guesthouse for tonight.
The Aussie guys joined in a local game of cricket – we just chilled
(literally) in the refreshingly cool mountain air.
Day 108 – His
The guesthouse is a little basic – but no worse than some
places we have stayed in and certainly better than some. After mentioning to
our tour guide that we were a bit sick of having twin beds (we are married
after all) he managed to get us a room with a double bed and because of that
the room is huge. Some of the other guys on the tour are complaining that their
rooms are little more than box rooms. Still, ours is huge and has two – yes two
balconies. We are being spoilt.
It wasn’t long before we were due at a kitchen of another
hotel to be given a cookery class in traditional Sri Lankan cuisine. The chef
showed us how to make four dishes the details of which escape me – luckily
Patti was taking notes so I paid more attention to the coconut grater than
anything else. An interesting machine consisting of a lot of rotating blades- I
wonder how it would perform if it were attached to a motor – scarily I imagine.
All I can tell you is that they had a
lot of coconut and spices in them. The dishes he showed us how to cook were
then served up to us as a buffet along with half a dozen other dishes that, in
good form, he had prepared earlier. We finished dinner around nine and then
went to bed – we have to be up at 5 in the morning as we are due to go hiking
along the Sri Lankan mountain range for most of tomorrow. Did I mention this
was supposed to be a holiday?
Friday, 16 November 2012
Day 107 - Kandy, Sri Lanka
Day 107 – His
We seem to be having something of a Buddhist holiday. So far
we have been to Buddha’s birthplace, the site of his first sermon and now we
have been to the great Buddhist temple in Sri Lanka. Here they keep one of the
only relics of Buddha – his tooth. It was stolen from his funeral pyre by a Sri
Lankan king and is a big deal round here as it is said that no true king of Sri
Lanka can be king without having Buddha’s tooth. Apparently, all through Sri
Lankan history several powers have vied in order to get and keep this thing –
including the Indians, the Portuguese and the English. Mostly, to no avail as
it is still here in a golden casket in Kandy. And this morning we went to see
it. It is one of the holiest of holies as far as the Sri Lankan people are
concerned and they take it very seriously. So, it was temple clothes and
respectful manners as we trooped around the temple and gathered together for
the drumming ceremony that hailed the opening of the inner shrine when we could
view the casket. You can only view the tooth once every six years and when that
time comes around – quite literally millions of people descend on Kandy – and
it is a small town. Every year they cart a replica around the town on the back
of an elephant in a procession consisting of 150 other elephants – it must be
quite a sight. In the temple grounds there is a museum to an elephant that
carried the tooth for something like 60 years. The poor beast died in 1988 and
they stuffed it and built a little mausoleum to it where you can see it – which
we did just prior to the opening of the inner shrine.
The Inner shrine is a small gold covered room where the
faithful are able to walk past the casket and catch a glimpse - actually it was
all pretty cool as we did this the drummers pounded out a rhythm in the
courtyard below and as everyone was so respectful and holy it had quite an
effect. After the seeing the tooth we went on to see the library and another
shrine to the Buddha before collecting our shoes.
We have so far done three majorly touristy things – the
first was a trip to a wood carving factory, the second was to a spice garden
and the third was to a gem museum. The gem museum was today, right after the
shrine of the holy tooth. I have to say this about the Sri Lankans – they give
good value for money. Of course, the reason these places host so many tourists
is that it is a chance to get you into the shop and stress you into buying
something. In Sri Lanka, however, the ones we have been to have been
interesting and informative and the gem museum was no exception. They had a
model mine, a video explaining the gem mining process and a good display of cut
and uncut gems, precious metals and minerals from around the world – as good as
any natural history museum exhibit. Of course, the Sri Lankans are held back a
little from their tourist exploitation by a culture of politeness that stops
them from hassling you too much and it is quite easy to just walk through the
main shop area where they want to get you to buy something. Having said that
quite a few people did buy something and more often than not at £200 a pop.
After the museum we drove a short way to the botanical
gardens and spent an hour or so walking round the orchid houses and fan
displays of different grasses and bamboos. Botanical gardens are not really my
thing and though I admire them and the work involved I am happier admiring them
from afar. Still it was a pleasant walk and I am sure I would have learned
something if I had listened. Unfortunately, I didn’t and spent most of the time
wondering where I could get a decent coffee. As luck would have it the place
for decent coffee turned out to be our next stop. After the gardens we were on
‘free time’ so Patti and I headed off for the centre of Kandy and a charming
place called the White House. Sri Lanka has a surprising cake culture and very
very very good bakeries litter the streets of which the White House is one of
the best according to trip advisor. The cakes and snacks looked very appealing
and the coffee arrived in a huge pot along with sweetened thickened milk, after
which I was most happy.
Day 107 – Hers.
After our coffee (and a samosa thingy and a delicious piece
of almond and chocolate tarte), we set off to explore Kandy a bit. Kandy is a quite laid back, attractive
city. The palace, the Queen’s Hotel (the
British officers’ quarters in colonial times) and the commercial district lie
alongside a beautiful reservoir, framed by hills dotted with large colonial
style homes, hotels and guest houses. It
is a very safe city – and it closes up early: shops at 5:30, restaurants at
8:00 and even wedding parties (there were two in our hotel today) no later than
10pm. Restaurants do not serve alcohol –
and market traders are just as happy to point you where you actually want to go
as to entice you into their shops. We
wandered around the market and bought a couple of little things, then strolled
along the banks of the reservoir and climbed the hill to our hotel, returning
just in time to shower and get ready for our ‘cultural evening’.
The show we went to see was clearly put on only for
tourists, but still very interesting.
Accompanied by a conch shell trumpet and five different traditional
drums, we saw a good selection of Kandyan and low country dances – some
involving elaborate costumes with masks or suits made of bells, a couple with
plate spinning and gymnastics and some representing the movements of animals,
particularly the cobra and the peacock.
The entire ensemble gathered on stage just before the short interval to
sing the National Anthem. It was really
quite sweet. The two acts after the
interval were nothing short of spectacular.
First, two ‘artistes’ passed lit fire batons over their arms, torsos and
tongues. Then, after a prayer to the
goddess Pathini, they walked over a four metre long bed of hot coals three
times, throwing burning powder into the air as they walked. (At this point, I was very glad we were up in
the dress circle, not in front row seats – it looked a bit dangerous down
there...) Rob said that he would like to
have a go at fire walking....hmmm.
After the show, most of the group went to a restaurant that
had a good mix of Western, Chinese and Sri Lankan dishes. I had a very interesting dish called ‘kankun’
with rice. It was a bit like spinach,
cooked in a garlic and soy-based sauce.
Rob had sweet and sour pork with chips – a bit odd, I thought, but he
said he’s had more than enough rice to last him a lifetime. A few of the younger members of our group
then went to try to find a pub to have a drink. (Both of the Aussie guys had
bought white linen shirts they needed to show off – our ‘rock star’ had even
bought matching trousers....) The rest
of us walked back to the hotel – more or less in time to wave the last bride
and groom on their way.
Thursday, 15 November 2012
Day 106 - Dambulla and Kandy, Sri Lanka
Day 106 – Hers.
For some reason the alarm didn’t go off this morning – not a
crisis as the monkeys had already woken me up, but a bit of a worry for the
next few days.....We packed, breakfasted and climbed back aboard the bus –
again in our ‘temple clothes’ for another full day.
Our first stop was a wood carving factory – beautiful
furniture, statues of gods ,goddesses and, most notably, elephants plus masks,
household goods, etc., etc – pretty much anything you could carve from wood. We
were shown the different types of wood, the natural wood dyes and the carving
process. We then had twenty minutes to
explore the shop. As usual, I was sorely
tempted.....but Rob pointed out that he could carve me nearly anything I wanted
– and I wouldn’t have to carry it home – so once again I refrained from buying
anything.
We then drove an hour and a half to the Dambulla cave
temples – a quite spectacular series of 5 caves with well over 100 carved statues
of the Buddha, some dating back over 2000 years. The Japanese have built a giant Buddha, a golden
stupa and an elaborate gatehouse/museum at the bottom of the rocky
outcrop. Tourists and pilgrims pass
through this and then climb several hundred steps to the cave temples, avoiding
the trinket sellers along the way. In
general, the trinket sellers are easy to avoid in Sri Lanka – usually it is merely
a case of not making eye contact. At
most, a “No, thank you” seems to suffice.
Perhaps it is because they are such a polite people.
We again boarded the bus for another hour and a half to our
lunch stop – yet again, a pleasant ‘local’ restaurant with rice and curry. One of the girls, though, inadvertently ate a
very hot chilli – the restaurant owner quickly brought out granulated sugar
that seems to have worked to cool her mouth.... How interesting; not a remedy I
had heard before!
We chatted a bit to an old lottery ticket seller outside the
restaurant; he told us how much better life is in Sri Lanka since the end of thirty
years of war and terrorist attacks in 2009 – if for those who haven’t won the
lottery. He asked us where we were
visiting and made suggestions of other places we might like to see. It is always really nice to get a chance to
speak with local people – one of the real benefits of a ‘grassroots’ tour.
Day 106 – His
Our next stop was in a spice garden. I know this doesn’t
sound like fun and smacks of the usual pearl factory tourist trap and to a
certain extent it was. However, the guy who gave the talk was a bona fide
herbalist and not a little proud of the six years he had had to spend studying
his subject before he got his government license. It seems herbalists here are
treated with the same respect as doctors in the west. His knowledge of his
subject was encyclopaedic and he was a fascinating man to listen to. Perhaps
the most astonishing thing was a herbal depilatory cream that he applied to our
ever ready Australian. Well just his leg – and ten minutes later it was cleaner
than a razor could have made it. It was amazing. Far better than Veet and no
rash or harsh chemicals – unfortunately it was about twice the price of Veet.
It did put me in mind of a series of things I have been working on using green
chemistry. Green chemistry is an idea that all industrial chemical processes
can be done using plant extracts rather than the industrial methods currently
used. A nice idea and gaining ground. Anyhow, this seemed right down that alley
– so, I listened intently.
We then headed off to Kandy. Now it is a curious world full
of strange and wonderful things and it turns out that my great great
grandfather was posted to Kandy when he was in the British army and that my great
grandfather was born here – A tenuous link I know but still I am looking
forward to Kandy. The trip here was fun. We have a great group and there is a
lot of laughter on the bus and a couple of the guys have bought jelly sweets
that they insist on passing round – so I have to have a few – it would be rude
not to.
We pulled in to Kandy late and even now I get a sense of
what my family must have seen – even though we are talking about the 1870’s
here. The town has a timeless feel and of course the surrounding countryside
hasn’t changed in a millennium. Kandy is a tourist destination and it is easy
to see why. We are going to see more of the place tomorrow – of course, and I
am looking forward to it.
Day 105 - Polonnaruwa, Sri Lanka
Day 105 - His.
We are staying in a small hotel called The Village and it
isn’t a patch on where we were last night though still pretty good in itself.
It was a bit unfortunate that we spent such a short time at our last hotel. But
as I say this one isn’t so bad. It’s arranged in a series of little chalets
that are the rooms and breakfast is the usual – for here – buffet. The beds are
ridiculously soft. When I got in it last night I sank into the mattress up to
my ears. Soft beds can be a real curse and I slept pretty badly. But coffee and
an omelette sorted that and I was ready for the morning. The morning incidentally
was pretty superb. We had bikes waiting for us and the plan was to cycle round
the ruins of the old town. This was a good idea.
If you are British – the idea of a medieval town conjures up
an image of twisty streets and small compact buildings and quite a lot of tea
shoppes. This place, though medieval, was quite different. It is a large
collection of ruins that had once been covered by the jungle and rediscovered
by the British who spent quite a bit of time rebuilding it – badly, and is
spread out over a rather large acreage.
We started off at the southern ruins and cycled first to the
Parakrama Samudra, a collection of ruined old houses with a large statue of the
king, Parakramabahu. (who is some old medieval
king from the second kingdom of Sri Lanka – our guide, who is pretty
knowledgeable, did tell us about it but I have forgotten – so feel free to look
it up). Apparently he was a great farmer and renowned for blowing his own
trumpet. Every great work done in the area was claimed by him even if he hadn’t
actually had anything to do with it. After that we cycled along a large man
made reservoir called the Sea of Parakramabahu. We continued onto the museum. It
was a small place but well set out and a good collection of models of the city
as it should have been and a fine collection of sculpture. But perhaps the most
memorable thing was one of the locals who was visiting the museum at the time wanted
to have his photo taken with the Aussie guy of the group. A little bemused our
new Australian friend agreed and ended up just outside the main building
holding hands with this stranger and posing for photos. It was something of a
new experience for him and I don’t think he has quite gotten over it. The next
place was called The Citadel which had the royal palace, the council chambers
then the royal baths. (Also a rat with a mole-like snout at the bottom of the
royal septic tank.) All pretty impressive ruins that the British had put back
together – again, wrongly – one of the elephant carvings had 5 legs.
The we went to a hindu temple the Shiva Deval, a tiny place
with an obvious phallus in the inner chamber that everybody wandered around
nodding and saying – yes, that’s a penis. Then we went to the quadrangle a
collection of administrative buildings all of which were impressive but the
complex had a large stone carving called ‘the book’ which mostly was a record
of the kings boasting. It was here he claimed he had built everything since
time began. Oddly enough the whole area is full of puppies. There are literally
hundreds of them and every time our guide squats down they come up to lick his
face.
From there went up to a large stupa surrounded by shrines.
Gal Vihara a large – and by large I mean large – stone carved out with 4 Buddha
statues. The statues were 6 or 7 meters high and the guards were pretty serious
about making sure the visitors showed due respect. Several people got yelled at
for crimes ranging from using an umbrella to trying to hug one of the statues
and one of the statues has a gunshot wound from some drunken British colonial
who thought it was an elephant. All in all a very cool morning.
Day 105 – Hers.
I loved the cycle ride – especially the ride back along
well-paved routes through the village and along the reservoir. We really must get our bikes out at home more
often....
There was supposed to be an optional activity this afternoon
of a jeep safari into one of the national parks – but all the recent rain has
meant that the grasslands and tracks are flooded and the animals don’t come out
into open anyway so Deva advised that it may not be safe and it probably
wouldn’t be worth the expense. He really
needn’t worry about us seeing wildlife, though – we have seen an amazing
assortment in the hotel and temple grounds.
Yesterday, we saw three land monitors, a turtle, several chipmunks, a
cave full of large bats and a huge variety of birds and butterflies. I was awoken at half past 5 this morning by
the males of the monkey family resident in our hotel grounds shaking a tree for
the fruit that then rolled off our roof.
Several of the family then sat outside our door to have their breakfast. The babies were a bit timid; they peeked down
from the hotel rafters and scampered away when they saw me. It seems that half past one is lunchtime
because there was a repeat performance when we arrived back from our cycle
ride. One of the large males bared his
teeth at Petra (a medical practice manager from Leeds who has the room next to
ours) when she closed her door loudly – fancy interrupting his civilised
meal..... Two mongooses (mongeese?) also
slinked across the wall behind our room and climbed a tree – I thought I might
have seen a mongoose once in India...these were so close that there was
absolutely no doubt at all. We have been
astounded at the number of dogs, puppies, cats and kittens that live near the
temples. One particularly friendly dog
took a liking to Deva this morning, licking his legs and sitting in the middle
his sand diagram as he tried to explain the history of one of the palaces. We haven’t, thank goodness, yet seen any
snakes. There are reportedly more deaths
from snakebite in Sri Lanka than in any other country. One member of our group – an accountant with
KPMG in London – is so afraid of snakes that even just seeing a picture of one
causes a panic attack; I hope for her sake (and ours...) that it is one form of
the local wildlife we miss altogether.
:
:
In place of the jeep safari, we had a free afternoon. There was a short heavy downpour, but many of
the group went for a swim after it had finished and sat around the pool. Caroline, the young Texan, also went for a
run. (Apparently, she saw two snakes. So much for not having seen any.... I
always knew running was bad for you....)
Rob and I decided to have a sleep when the rain began – and didn’t wake
up until it was time to get ready for dinner......
We had a special ‘jungle dinner’ this evening. We went by bus to a jungle lodge where we ate
a huge feast around a campfire and were entertained by our guide, driver, his
assistant and a couple of locals playing a drum – and beer bottles ‘strummed’
with rocks – and singing traditional songs.
The empty beer bottle instruments were interesting – one of the Aussie
lads (the same one who was photographed holding hands with a local this morning
– maybe he looks like a rock star) joined in with his own empty beer bottle –
maybe he’ll start his own bottle band at home and actually become a rock star!
The meal was spectacular – traditional rice with curry, of
course, but the curries were made with everything the guidebooks list as
traditional Sri Lankan fare: breadfruit, okra and pumpkin, as well as the
combinations we had seen previously. We
all tried the local spirit as well – it’s called arack and tastes like a very
mellow whiskey. We mixed it with cola;
it was very nice indeed and ensured a jolly party and a good night’s sleep for
us all.
Tuesday, 13 November 2012
Day 104 - Anuradhapura and Sigiriya (Lion Rock) to Polowaruwa, Sri Lanka
Day 104 – Hers.
After lunch we
reboarded the bus for the short drive to the Sigiriya (Lion Rock) rock
fortress. Dewa explained that King Kassapa, who had killed his father and feared
retribution from his half brother, built this virtually impregnable fortress in
471AD. We had been warned that the climb
was challenging and it was indeed -
stone steps and rickety stairways clinging to the rock face rose several
hundred metres to a terrace, which sits beneath enormous carved lion paws
(remnants of the lion façade that once protruded from the edifice) and further
climb up to the summit - where natural
springs feed an amazing hydraulic system of fountains (some still working) and
pools in the water gardens at the base of the rocky outcrop. Rob didn’t climb the spiral staircase to see
the unbelievably well-preserved 1500-year-old frescoes of well-endowed women –
nor the scariest staircase up to the summit.
I overcame my fears and held my breath – concentrating just on the steps
and not the drop – and made it up to both....and back down without incident.
An hour and a half
more on the bus brought us to Polowaruwa and our hotel for the next two
nights. We spent the evening chatting
with our group over drinks and dinner – they are a great group this time,
really nice people – and then scurried off to bed. Another full day tomorrow.......
Day 103 - Pinnawela, Mihintale and Anuradhapura, Sri Lanka
Day 103 – His.
The main reason, it seems, for getting up at 5 in the
morning was so that we could get to the elephant orphanage in time to see the
herd being fed and taken for a bath. All very well in theory – but not so much
fun when you are stumbling around trying to find a missing sock and the sun
hasn’t even come up. Still, Patti had made me a coffee- we really are in
civilisation again: the hotel rooms have kettles and the jar of coffee we have
lugged all over India (the same one we bought in Nepal) has at last come in
handy – so, after a coffee, and a successful hunt for the missing sock we grabbed
our hotel-provided breakfast box and headed out for the bus. The breakfast was
supposed to be a chicken sandwich – it turned out to be boiled egg – which is
chicken in a way – and a banana. Actually it was pretty nice and I ate mine
fairly soon after setting off. The idea, no doubt, is to watch the passing
countryside. But, to be honest, I fell asleep.
I took only two and a half hours to get to the orphanage.
Apparently, Sri Lanka has 5,600 native Asian elephants and from that number
quite a few suffer some mishap and end up at the orphanage where they are
looked after until they can be returned to the wild. The orphanage has a herd
of some 65 elephants from new borns right the way through to one blind old
elephant with enormous tusks and quite a bad temper.
We all piled off the bus and wandered around the main
buildings for a bit having a look at the keepers taking care of their charges
and going off to the paddock where most of the herd hangs out. To be honest I
have never seen that many elephants in one place and the sheer number of them
was a sight well worth seeing. Around ten the keepers march them through the
town and down to the river for a bath. It is quite something to see a herd of
elephants walking through a high street – they raise quite a lot of dust. The
orphanage has spawned quite a little industry around it – of course – and the
place in the river where they bathe has seen quite a few cafes spring up with
viewing lounges where you can see the herd play in the water from the comfort
of a padded chair with a nice beer and air conditioning. I have to say I
preferred what we did in Chitwan where, basically, we got in the river with the
elephants and rolled around with them a bit. Although awe inspiring the Sri
Lankan version was a little surreal.
After the elephants we had a two hour drive to lunch. I
strongly suspect that the tour has to get us from A to B and in order to do
this it has a few stops every two hours or so to make the journey more
enjoyable. However, they do it very well and it was certainly a fun day. So,
lunch was at a little local restaurant where the main thing on offer was a
‘buffet’. Actually it was about half a dozen large clay pots of this and that
that you helped yourself to. After eating all of my breakfast and half of
Patti’s I wasn’t that hungry so I passed on it, though Patti tucked in and she
tells me it was very good – if not spicy enough.
Day 103 – Hers.
Lunch was the traditional rice with curry that I have now
had three times. They had clearly toned
down the spices for Westerners, but there was a little dish of the very spicy
salad at the end that I mixed in to get the heat I enjoy – and another dish of
very, very hot chilis that even I passed on..... A nice addition was some fried
fish, served at the table.
After lunch we drove another hour and a half to Mihintale –
the birthplace of Sri Lankan Buddhism.
Apparently, the Buddha visited Sri Lanka three times in his lifetime and
this was where he made an agreement with the king to spread Buddhism throughout
China and Southeast Asia. We climbed the
steps to the impressive large white stupa and photographed the large Buddha
statue and surrounding countryside. We
then climbed up a huge rock hill – some parts steps, some parts just
indentations in the rock to a viewing platform for an even better view. However, beautiful and impressive the
vibrant, colourful, busy Hindu temples are, I prefer the quiet simplicity and
serenity of the Buddhist holy sites. Our
guide, Deva, explained again how the Buddha came to be enlightened and we
wandered around for nearly an hour. As
with many other temples we have seen, the wildlife provided an additional
attraction. There were scurrying
chipmunks, monkeys nursing and disciplining their babies (apparently the done
thing in the monkey world if junior starts to wander is to haul him back by his
tail and then give him a big cuddle...) and two very odd turkey-like birds no
doubt pleased that Thanksgiving is only celebrated half a world away......
Another short drive to Anuaradhapura – an ancient capital
city – saw us arrive at another lovely hotel.
The standards of accommodation on this tour so far have been much more
comfortable than those in Nepal or India.
Our room has a balcony overlooking a lake; we have a kettle, hair dryer,
swimming pool, bar and wifi (though the wifi seems to be extremely slow and we
haven’t actually managed to connect yet).
I couldn’t manage dinner after such an enormous lunch, so
Rob went off on his own to join the group – he prefers the Westernised hotel
food. I am happy to wait until our next
local meal tomorrow lunchtime.
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