Kandy is the cultural capital and also the second largest city in Sri Lanka. It was the Kandyan Kings who nurtured and propagated Buddhism together with this town. According to a belief, Buddha’s tooth relic was smuggled from India so as to protect it from the so called evil kings. They believe that the tooth relic brings in prosperity to the land where it is kept.
Tamil is the official language in 
addition to Sinhala and most of them converse easily in English or Tamil. We 
were advised in the beginning not to engage in conversation on controversial 
issues with the natives. There is some amount of mistrust between the Tamils and 
Sinhalese. At the same time we also found many of the temples being renovated 
even in lesser Tamil dominant towns.
Sri Lanka has a very good road 
network through out and reasonably good rail connectivity, of British Era, 
between major cities. We wanted to feel both the experiences and planned to take 
up the 3 hour bus journey from Colombo to Kandy, to begin with.
In about an hours time, the bus 
reached hilly terrain, leaving behind the hot and humid coastal planes. The bus 
was almost full. A Sri Lankan girl sitting behind me showed the point to get 
down to reach the elephant orphanage at Pinnawala. It was originally started as 
an orphanage for elephants and calves that are handicapped by landmine 
explosion. Now it is one of the biggest centres for Asian Elephants. She also 
showed us some other points of interest like the rail museum, and the botanical 
gardens while travelling in the bus. In between an elderly women kept her heavy 
baggage below the seat of our son, depriving him of the comfortable leg space. 
Our Son Achu wanted to convey his displeasure but I stared at him to keep 
quiet.
We had  booked a room in “Sevana 
Lodge” Kandy well in advance. It had basic facilities like airy rooms, good 
linen, neat toilets and  hot water shower. The owner with her family is living 
downstairs. She has converted the 1st 2nd and 
3rd floors into a Guest house.
Auto Rickshaws (Tuk Tuks) are 
available through out though the cheapest and best mode for local travel is the 
town buses.
Kandiyan people are beautiful. They 
are not very fair but have good features possibly due to the traditional 
classical dance form they practice. We got a glimpse of one such dance in Kandy. 
It resembled a war dance and had combination of excellent reflexes, songs and 
rhythm of drums.
Kandy has a beautiful lake in the 
middle, beside the famous Tooth Relic Temple, (Dalada Maligawa), the most sacred 
of all the Buddhist centres in the world. The ticket costs SL Rs.1000/- for 
foreigners and SL Rs.500/- for SAARC country citizens. The Structure was 
partially damaged once by the LTTE bombers killing eight people.
Sri Lankans are big fans of 
elephants. Elephant tusks (ivory) are displayed in all Buddhist shrines. The 
annual festival of the tooth temple (resembling the Dussera of Mysore) and the 
procession involving elephants and Kandiyan Dancers is world famous.
Sri Lankans have better civic sense 
compared to Indians. The towns and cities are kept clean. Parts of Kandy town, 
its junctions, roads, old buildings and sub-ways resemble some unknown town in 
England or Europe. Yes, the influence of the Colonial past. Unpredictable rains 
added to the charm.
The second major attraction in Kandy, 
the Royal Botanical Gardens at Peradenia, five miles away from the town, is the 
home for the rarest species of plants in Sri Lanka. Said to have set up in the 
13th century by the Kandiyan Kings, this 150 acres garden is a 
professionally managed centre displaying botanical wealth of Sri Lanka. The 
creative and scientific method of display of different species is praiseworthy. 
There are sections allotted for different species having different variants of 
same species found in the sub continent. One cannot finish the whole area in a 
day. We spent half a day in the garden. A must visit place in Kandy.
We also visited a hill town, Nuara 
Elia, located about 70 miles south of Kandy, famous for the tea plantations 
described as the Switzerland of Sri Lanka. Europeans preferred to stay here for 
the cool weather. It is also an escape for the Sri Lankans from the scorching 
heat of Colombo. Paucity of time and non availability of train ticket forced us 
to reduce the trip to a one day affair hiring a cab, which costed us SL 
Rs.4000/-. It was school holiday time in Sri Lanka.  The hill station has under 
it a vast area of tea gardens and associated processing centres. A very big lake 
and a beautiful garden are the major attractions.
We found here a temple dedicated to 
Goddess Sita (Sita Elia). According our Ramayana, this area should have been 
Ashok Van. The priest showed us the footprints of Hanuman who landed here in 
search of mother Sita sitting below a Ashok Tree.
It was great to witness the expertise 
and professionalism with which the PWD people work here. It took only an hour 
for them to clear the road block caused by a landside in the Nuwara Elia- Kandy 
Section. JCBs were being put to use to remove the earth and big cutting machines 
removing the fallen trees.
While returning from Kandy, we opted 
for Train Journey. Only 3rd class tickets were available, obviously 
the cheapest. Train journey offers most of the panoramic view of the hill 
country. Excellent Sri Lankan Tea and some snacks were provided to us in the 
train. Overall, the two and half hours train journey from Kandy to Colombo was 
the highlight of our trip.
Authored by: PN Sampath Kumar,
Cochin Shipyard, Kochi.
Second of the Series
Cochin Shipyard, Kochi.
Second of the Series







 
Nice pictures and excellent narration .Thanks for this beautiful travelogue .Having not read much about Srilanks before ,this interesting series is a complete revelation to me .
ReplyDeletenice description about kandy and sl
ReplyDeletei also travelled through your words
thanks for sharing
its a beautiful place..i remember my days of travel there...
ReplyDeleteVery beautiful pictures with excellent description. Wonderful post.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful post. Kandy looks like a must visit place in Sri Lanka! One fact I know about the place is that Murlitharan, the highest wicket taker in test match cricket was born there!!!
ReplyDeleteVery picturesque, loved the pics.
That train journey must have been very exhilirating.
ReplyDeleteThose trees are really big.
Love those dances and their costume.
simply beautifully captured shot...lovely going through this wonderful Srilankan city.
ReplyDeletenice pics..it somehow reminds me of munnar.
ReplyDeleteSo well described. Nice scenic sights too.
ReplyDeleteHello, P.N. Subramanian.
ReplyDeleteThe landmark architecture is grand.
The magnificent composition.
Greetings.
ruma
Thanks for stopping by in my blog, you have lovley pictures in your blog! gloria
ReplyDeleteNice pics that look like fun!
ReplyDelete♥
ReplyDeleteआपको सपरिवार
नवरात्रि पर्व की बधाई और शुभकामनाएं-मंगलकामनाएं !
-राजेन्द्र स्वर्णकार
Great post! Fantastic narration and visuals! Thank you so much for sharing the beautiful tour.
ReplyDeleteThe Photographs are beautiful and I could get a feel of the place from your lively narration.
ReplyDeleteआपको नवरात्रि पर्व की बधाई और शुभकामनाएं|
ReplyDeleteNice narration backed by a collection of beautiful pictures.
ReplyDeleteMust visit.
Ashish
--
Life?!?
So well articulated, congrats for this to the author. Enjoyed reading every part of it
ReplyDeletebueatiful like travelling srilanka
ReplyDeleteNavratri ki hardik Shubhkamnayein Aapko aur aapke paariwar ko:)
ReplyDeleteKandy seems so beautiful and full of history and your article along with the narration has lots of beautiful pictures. Botanical garden, Buddhist temples Hindu temples Hanuman foot prints and what not . Thanks for sharing it with us. We need to learn a lot about civic sense from our little padosee.
ReplyDelete