Elephants, children and flowers

The first thing we did in Kandy was go to the elephant orphanage in Pinnawala. The General drove us and picked up his brother-in-law, who is a retired school principal to be our guide. This host is treating us like royalty and really making it a great trip.

We bought one ticket to feed a young elephant milk. There was a huge audience of school children on a field trip watching.

After that we also got to feed an elephant some fruit.

After that the principal told us the elephants would go down to the river for a bath, and we should move down there to get good spots. They actually have to walk through the town to get to the river. I ended up in too good a spot, I was trapped in a corner by myself. The elephants were as close as they looked in this video.

Once we finished watching them in the river, we headed back and I went on an elephant ride. I found out later that this wasn’t part of the orphanage, but was some guys running their own business. Anyway since I’d never ridden an elephant before I gave it a try. It was basically bareback, with nothing but a thin blanket. This actually made it pretty uncomfortable because my legs were spread too wide because the elephant was so big.

After the elephants we drove back to Kandy and stopped at a tea factory for a tour. Tea is one of the biggest exports of Sri Lanka. The tea plants are dried, then ground up, then separated into finer powder for tea bags and larger leaves for loose leaf brewing. They had a pretty interesting machine that separated the loose leaves from the loose stems using static electricity.

After the tea tour and a cup of tea, we got dropped off at the Royal Botanic Gardens. Once again it was full of students on field trips.

We’ve been to a lot of botanic gardens on our trips so it is hard to impress us. They did have a good variety of trees from around the world, and a nice orchid garden.

Finally we walked back to our Airbnb.

David

Colombo to Kandy

So we took the train from Colombo to Kandy. We had 1st class reserved seats in an air conditioned car, but it turns out we didn’t really need them. Yanmei took a tour of the train as shown in this video.

The train left on time and arrived early, but it still took over 3 hours to travel about 120km. It moves at a pretty leisurely pace and made frequent stops. The scenery was quite beautiful for much of the route.

Our host came to pick us up and drive us to their house. I saw on their house it said Major General, and I asked if he was a General in the Sri Lankan army, and he is, although he is retired now. When we arrived his wife prepared a lovely Sri Lankan lunch for us.

David

Colombo, Sri Lanka

Colombo is only a little over 3.5 hours flight from Kuala Lumpur, so why not? The first thing I noticed in the airport is their duty free has the standard stuff like alcohol and chocolate, but they also sell a full range of appliances like washers, dryers, refrigerators and TVs. I’ve never seen that before. Maybe there is a very high duty on those items.

We took a taxi to our Airbnb, although we should have taken an Uber. Lots of people were pushing taxis on us at the airport and I think we ended up overpaying, although it was still reasonable from my perspective, $20 for a 1 hour drive. Uber is great when traveling because 1 – you don’t need any local money, 2 – you don’t need to communicate with the driver, you set your destination in the app, the the Uber GPS tells the driver how to get there, 3 – no negotiation of price or tips.

Yanmei outside our Airbnb after we did a bit of grocery shopping.

The next morning Yanmei wanted to go to Pettah Market, so we ordered an Uber. In one of the few letdowns I’ve had with Uber, the driver dropped us off early because the traffic was so bad, which was probably true we could walk as fast as the car. The market was only a few blocks away but we became lost. I thought we were in Pettah market because there were hundreds of stalls selling various goods from shoes to cellphones. Yanmei kept asking me where the fruits and veggies were. Finally she asked a local and we found out the produce market is called Manning market and was nearby.

Soon we found the correct market.

After that we went to the train station to get tickets and then to the National museum. We saw a lot of school children visiting the museum. I saw some sketching images of the items on display. I remember doing that when I was in high school, having to draw something on a field trip for art class, haha. Anyway it became a recurring theme in Colombo, seeing students everywhere, which is a pretty big contrast from our other destinations so far. The fact that our Airbnb is near 3 schools probably contributed to it.

Sorry for the vertical video.

We headed home and then went out later to see the sunset on the beach, although we dilly dallied too much and missed most of it.

The next day Yanmei was tired, so I headed out on my own. First I went to Gangaramaya Temple, which is a relatively new temple (12 years old I think) which has a relic of Buddha’s hair.

Remove shoes to enter.

A lock of Buddha’s hair on the gold pedestal. It was a strange temple though. It felt like it may have previously been the residence of a hoarder that was tidied up an made into a temple. I’m not trying to be disrespectful, but it was full of what I would call junk, much of it with no religious significance. At first I thought it was donations, but then I found out how new the temple is and most of the stuff looks older than it.

Anyway after that it was a short walk to Seema Malaka which is another Buddhist temple on a island in a small lake inside the city.

After that I headed towards Independence Square. Along the way I passed Nelum Pokuna Mahinda Rajapaksa Theatre, with some more students on a field trip.

Independence Square.

In the distance you can see more kids 😀.

On the way back I saw some guys playing cricket.

I wish I’d kept clicking the camera because right after this a fielder dove in from the left and stopped the ball from crossing the rope, which would have been 4 points for the batter.

The final stretch of the walk home. Unfortunately the video isn’t as stable as I’d like, I just clipped the camera to my shirt.

David