Sri Lanka enjoys a rich history, a laid back island culture, and some pretty awesome landscapes and scenery. We hired a car with driver for 10 days to tour the island’s sights, first winding our way up small mountain roads through the tea plantations, then to the important old capital of Kandy (where the tooth of Buddha is stored in the temple of the sacred tooth relic), and continuing on to the northern plains where one can find the ruins of ancient capitals and buddhist monasteries. We were not able to hike up to Adam’s Peak, also known as Siri Pada, or Holy Footprint, but we glimpsed it from afar. It is perhaps the most pilgrimaged holy site on the island: the Buddhists believe it was the last step Buddha took before entering paradise, the Christians believe that it is the first place Adam placed his foot on earth after being cast out of heaven, and some know it as Samanalakande, or Butterfly mountain, where butterflies go to die. For us heathens, we pilgrimaged to Little Adam’s peak, where we did a little dance upon summiting.
The hill country town of Ella
The hills of Sri Lanka once produced mounds of coffee, but in the mid 1800s suffered from a fungal disease called coffee rust, and it was all downhill from there as Ceylon converted its hillsides to tea production. Today Sri lanka is the world’s 4th largest tea producer and was just recently usurped by Kenya as the world’s largest exporter. Another lesser known fact is that 80-90% of the world’s real cinnamon is produced in Sri Lanka. The land itself is absolutely beautiful. It is full of mountainous peaks with lush terraced hills of green, all enshrouded in a cloud-like mist, which makes photography quite difficult. As we rode the train through the region, we observed the tea industry from afar, watching thousands of ladies making their way through the fields picking the tips of the tea leaves, placing their harvest into woven baskets carried on their backs. We also visited a tea plantation and factory where we learned the various steps and processes to bring tea from plant to cup. There is still a lot of manual labor in this operation, but we did see some cool mechanical sorters and electronic color sorters busting out tea leaves in grades, but there were no pink clad quality control teams in sight.
Tea plantation workers on a break
On our visit to Kandy, we had the kids convinced that out little cottage would be just like the one that lured Hansel and Gretel in, and it was not that far off the mark! The town itself was unremarkable. We visited an elephant orphanage, but the kids were more concerned with the Muslim ladies in Burhkas, still holding on to the notion that they are actually ninjas. We climbed the rock at Sigiriya (Lions rock), 200m high, to see the ruins of an old monastery on top, and climbed yet again to the ancient cave temples at Dambulla. All the while Phineas and Eilir clamored to be carried. We wonder how they will fare on our next stop: Nepal, for a 6 day trek in the Annapurna foothills! We’ll call ahead and request extra sherpas for sure.
Just follow these easy steps to a perfect cuppa tea
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The hill country town of Ella
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Our hike up to Little Adams peak
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Summit!
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Summit dance
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Giddy that the hike is over
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Pondering
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One of over 100 waterfalls we saw along the way
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Typical Sri Lankan fare: 5-6 curries with rice and sambal of shaved coconut and chilies
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Sri Lankan Socialist youth movement motor brigade
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Drying chilies and laundry in one fell swoop
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Awaiting our train in Ella. It was delayed, no surprise!
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Old school train departure signs
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Even older school track switching mechanisms
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2nd class car for the open windows!
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Winding through the hill country
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Ladies working the tea plantations. Women comprise 85% of the tea workforce.
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Tea plantation workers on a break
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A relatively uncrowded playground in Nuwara Eliya
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Easier said than done
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The botanical gardens in Nuwara Eliya
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Tea factory sorter machine
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Export bags
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Our Kandy cottage
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Bathing an elephant with our mahout
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It’s a little slimy in the mud here
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Tallest freestanding buddha in Sri Lanka!
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One very, very angry little man. Even cashews couldn’t cheer him up.
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Monkeys at the top
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Roadside fruit stall
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We tried about 8 different kinds of bananas- this is the only place outside of Hawaii where we’ve found apple bananas, our favs
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Tuk tuks everywhere
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A teeny tiny buddha on the stupa
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The small rock we are to climb up, 200m high, but it looks gigantic
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A view of a buddha across the valley
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Sweat, anger, demands to descend…
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Sigiriya cave art
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Collapsing and we’re only 1/3 the way up!
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The midway point: there used to be a lion’s mouth to enter through. now you can only see the paws.
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Summit of Sigiriya with expansive views
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Overlooking the old monastery pool
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Yum
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Our roti man
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Street food prep
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Kothu Roti
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New Japanese donated temple
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Checkers anyone?
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Cave temples at Dambulla
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Ah, back to Krishna in blue
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Rock art
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The cave temples of Dambulla
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Reclining Buddha of Dambulla
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Improvising take-away coffees
Beautiful pictures. So nice to read about your trip. All the best! Peter, Petra, Leah and Vincent
no wonder the tea is of erratic quality!!
we ned to get ladies in pink rajasthani dresses out to the plantations ASAP.