Kandy and Dalhousie

Jackamy
Paul & Derry Harper
Sat 15 Jan 2011 16:03
Saturday 15th January
We finally had time for a little walk around
after our night at Sharon Inn, our first taste of a Sri Lankan guesthouse. The
hotel is run by a German-Sri Lankan couple and although it looks incredibly
untidy and in need of a lot of TLC from the outside, inside it was immaculate.
As Amy had taken the role of tour guide and organiser she began to panic
wondering where on earth she had booked for us to stay but it was
great. Our evening meal was a traditional sri lankan buffet served in their
kitchen with other hotel residents from India and China. And although it was a
bit touch and go as to whether we would make it up the hill in the bus, we were
rewarded in the morning with great views over Kandy Lake and out into the
hill country.
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() After breakfast it was nice to
actually use our legs instead of sitting on the bus all day long. So, although
we were still on a tight schedule, we walked into town to visit the Temple of
the Sacred Tooth Relic. As the name suggests, the temple houses a tooth of the
Buddha, sri lanka's most important Buddhist relic. The tooth is said to have
been snatched from the flames of the Buddha's funeral pyre in 483 BC and was
smuggled into sri lanka during the 4th century AD, hidden in the hair of a
princess. The tooth gradually grew in importance as a symbol of sovereignty, and
it was believed that whoever had custody of the tooth relic had the right to
rule the island.
Once through the stringent
security, due to a bombing in 1998 by the Tamil Tigers, we made our way into the
temple with hundreds of worshippers, all of whom were carrying lotus flowers as
offerings to the gods. During offerings or prayers, the heavily guarded room
housing the tooth is open to devotees and tourists. However, you don't actually
see the tooth as it is kept in a gold casket. Guards keep the queue to see the
relic moving and no one gets more than 15 seconds inside the shrine room. Sod's
law came into play though, and when we were only a couple of metres away from
the shrine the queue was stopped and the room was opened up for private prayers.
After half an hour of standing still, slowly being crushed more and more and
people edged forward, the heat became too much and we had to step out, we just
couldn't wait anymore, which was a shame.
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Paul and Brian didn't come to the
temple, instead the opted to go and get haircuts. When we returned to the bus we
found Paul wearing the police shirt below. Once they stopped laughing and
managed to explain the story behind it we discovered that Paul was offered a
police, an army or a navy haircut. He chose the police!
![]() Off on the road again we made our
way through the beautiful hill country to Dalhousie, the home of Sri Pada or
Adam's Peak. Passing many waterfalls, all gushing with water thanks to all
the rain the country has had recently. They hill country received a years
rainfall in one month causing flooding and landslides with homes being destroyed
and some lives lost, including an elephant who was stuck 15 metres up a
tree when the water subsided. Poor Hemantha who has done a fantastic job
driving around the bumpy and windy roads also had to change a tyre due to a
puncture.
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Nestled at the foot of
the mountains, surrounded by tea plantations, Dalhousie is a
tiny settlement filled with energy. After walking around the town for even
just 5 minutes I defy anyone to be sad or down. The atmosphere is
buzzing as everyone is either excited about their forthcoming
pilgrimage or feeling exhilarated after completing it. There are dozens of
stalls all selling the same woolly hats, coats and jumpers but they aren't in
competition with one another and everyone gives you a smile. The stalls are open
24/7 and the families live in an extended section at the back of the stall, it
probably only stretches a couple of metres back. The whole place is decorated
with the blue, orange, yellow, red and white flags that you can see below, we
later learnt this is the Buddhist flag. Buses filled the car parks empty
and waiting for pilgrims to return or packed with pilgrims resting and
sleeping before the nights climb. After a guided tour of the town and
another guest house with 83 year old Brenda, who has climbed Adam's Peak 75
times, we went back to the hotel for a sleep before we awoke again at
02:00.
![]() ![]() Signposts for
Dalhousie........Colourful houses in amongst the tea plantations
![]() ![]() Stalls and buses line the dusty
streets
![]() ![]() Family's happy to see
us
![]() ![]() The kids love to pose for the
camera
![]() ![]() Proud of her shop and
inquisitive of us..................Amy and myself with Brenda
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