Sunday, 5 May 2013

Around Sri Lanka in 14 days (with apologies Jules Verne)


 
We returned to Jaffna on the 2nd of May after the most wonderful 14 day tour holiday. Sri Lanka is such a beautiful country and it seemed that every 100km presented such a different experience it is almost as if it is several countries all rolled up into one. I will not bore you with all the holiday details but this post will be a quick snapshot of our trip and show you some pictures of our travels and an idea of the experiences we have had. It is a very edited version but may give you an idea

Our driver Janeka picked us up from the school on the morning of day one of the trip, Friday the 19th of April. Once out of Jaffna city itself the shocking poor roads gave way to quite reasonable surfaces which stayed that way for most of the trip. The roads were far better than expected.

Our first temple, 2600 years old!!!!

 
the rock temple
Our first night stay was in the city of Anuradpura, the site of one on the ancient capitals of Sri Lanka. Massive collections on temples and palaces were all around the area.

relaxing with a walk at dusk at hotel
 
 after temples all day
Day 2 saw us at more temples and it was very hot. It was soon apparent that the girls were not so impressed with temples (ancient ruins) as Andrew was and they went on a “temple strike”.  He went to most of the sites but the girls were more selective and stayed in the comfort of the air-conditioned van watching monkeys.






The palace at the ancient capital

statue of the dead budda

Day 3 saw us climb Lion Rock and to be honest I have no idea how we made it. An amazing collection of ancient gardens and palaces were sat on this impressive spot. Sarah loved the climb and Emma was luckily carried a fair way up and all the way down by a strong guide.






Lion rock


part of the climb up Lion Rock

Emma "helping" one of the guides up the rock

View from the top
Emma's helper, he carried her almost the whole way up and down the rock!

We travelled on a buffalo drawn cart, three wheeler and boat on a village tour and found how to cook some of the vegetables we see at the markets and how to make roti and pol sambol


great way to travel
A tough life for farmers, they guard their crops in huts like these high in trees from the nightly attacks by elephants
Jacinta making rice flour
my new day job
 



Day 4 saw us travelling to cooler Kandy with a visit to the Pinnewala Elephant Orphanage, watching the elephants bathing in the river. Our hotel in Kandy was probably the highlight of the trip for the girls. It was the pathway for a troupe of macaque monkeys from their evening home in the forest to the day time adventures around the lake area. Their route took them right past our windows!!!!!! The girls were totally blown away with the show each morning and evening. We may go back to Kandy for a week just to watch the monkeys and have the monkeys watch us.






Bath time at the elephant orphanage 

We also visited the “temple of the tooth” with the promise to the girls that this was the last temple.





Temple of the Tooth was beautiful

Day 5 saw more monkey watching and a stroll around the Kandy botanic gardens.





They grow the bamboo BIG round here


BETTER than TV.. WATCHING MONKEYS!!!
An appropriate warning!!

View from our hotel room window
We did not know who was watching who...or whom?????
Sarah was just so excited!

Day 6 and a windy drive from Kandy to Nawara Eliyia. We spent some time wandering through a tea plantation, watching the ladies pick tea. It’s a hard job and will not be a career change for us.  Contrary to the usual tourist images the women were mature middle aged not the slim young beauties seen in advertising.  We also visited the Mackwood Labrooke Tea Factory and on a brief tour saw how tea was picked, dried, rolled, fermented, heated and packed.  We had a lovely cup of tea and chocolate cake overlooking mountains covered in tea plantation.





A tough backreaking job

 




Beautiful country

Day 7 was a quiet day with the visit to a “milk farm” as they put it and a really good drive through the country side.

Day 8 was a 4 hour train trip through the tea plantations to Ella and then a drive to Uda walawe. We climbed little Adam's Peak which presented an incredible view. Also the weather change was amazing. It is easy to see how people lose their lives in mountain country. It went from sunny and clear to zero visibility in 10 minutes. We made a good choice to turn around from our climb as we saw the clouds pour in.




Train trip to Ella,

Little Adam's peak
Our great driver Janeka with Emma
The weather changed within minutes

Day 9, amazing with safaris in 2 different national parks, Uda walawe. in the morning  and Yala in the evening. Lots of elephants, buffaloes, monkeys, deer, crocodiles, birds but the absolute highlight was the leopard. We were so excited after quite a long chase to see it three times. It walked just in front of our jeep.  Apparently coming across a leopard is not too common.



Lots of water buffalo



 
Tonnes more photos of lots of animals but don't want to bore you, the Leopard was just so cool though!!!!
 
 

Day 10 saw us travel from Tissa to the far South and a stay at Unawatuna, a beach side resort just east of Galle.  You know the scenes of crystal blue waters with swaying coconut palms, sun lounges on the sand with dining tables on the beach.  That was it, a perfect location.



Traditional fishing on the Southern Coastline

Dinner in style on the beach near Galle

Day 11 Playing on the beach and pool and a trip around Galle to the historic Galle fort.



The Galle Fort overlooking city and famous cricket ground. A really amazing city. We would love to see more of it.

Day 12 On the way to Colombo saw another real highlight with the Madu Lake Boat Safari.  Sarah holding a baby monkey and baby crocodile was just awesome. Seeing that cinnamon sticks are still made by hand was impressive.  Fish nibbling our feet was very ticklish.



On the Mangrove and lake tour

Sarah said she would trade the squirrels in for the baby monkey
Next seasons handbag????
Making cinnimon sticks the hard way
Now we know how the worms feels
Sarah could not contain herself!!!!

Day 13 We had a quiet time in Colombo and did lots of R and R and Jacinta had some retail therapy. It was Labour Day holiday so they only things open were a supermarket, bookstore, and food court and it was so exciting to be in a clean shop with choice.  We were very surprised by our reaction to what we saw as a real western style stores and shopping malls. We had an experience of reverse culture shock. It will be interesting when we return home to see if the same thing happens.

Day 14 was a 9 and a half our drive. We could tell we were getting closer to Jaffna by the increased number of cows on the road, increased poverty and poorer road conditions.  We told the girls they weren’t allow to ask ‘Are we nearly there yet?’ until there the roads where single lane.

Sri Lanka is a very diverse country with jungle, beaches, hill country, ancient ruins cities, modern cities, agricultural areas and the war torn north.  We stayed in fabulous hotels and enjoyed the luxury of being on holidays with others caring for our needs and wants.

Coming back to Jaffna was a hard return to the real world. It is very hot and we are straight back into school work. Already the holiday is starting to be a bit of a blur and it is hard to remember all the experiences but we have 100’s of photos and hope you got an idea from the selection in this post.

Hope you enjoyed a taste of our wonderful adventure in this truely beautiful country. Now its back to the hard work.


4 comments:

  1. Let me be the first to say welcome back from your holiday. There were not too many photos, don't worry! They showed what you saw and got up to well and it was great to see what diversity there is throughout the country. It sounds like you had a wonderful time. I can just imagine the girls with the monkeys! My boys would be the same. Lovely to hear from you. I had been wondering when you were returning from holidays as we hadn't had an update in a while. Good luck with the heat and work. It must be incredibly humid.
    Take care.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Looks like you all had fun...lucky Emma, bet you wished someone could have carried you up too! I need some of those fish...were they nibbling off the dead skin? That pic of traditional fisherman would look great blown up on a wall! Ella wants to go to Ella now. She is home with gastro today...it is spreading! Keep cool! Lots of love from the Jarvis's xxxxx

    ReplyDelete
  3. OMG! I have never considered somewhere like that for a trip but that all sounds wonderful. It's hard to wrap your brain around the ruins that are 2600 years old! Amazing. And the animals - incredible! How beautiful was that leopard. I'd love to see those monkeys and go to the elephant orphanage, too. That's one trip I'm putting on my bucket list. Kylie Atkinson

    ReplyDelete
  4. sri lanka tours Famous for its beaches, the soft shores of this tropical island take two colours as you go along the coast, while the southern end of the island boasts soft golden shores, the Eastern area’s pristine white beaches are unparalleled in its beauty. Sri Lanka Beach Stay













    ReplyDelete