Sri Lanka
Janadhipathy Medura

Discover travel destinations of travelers writing a travel journal on FindPenguins.
Travelers at this place
    • Day 2

      Colombo

      December 8, 2022 in Sri Lanka ⋅ ☁️ 28 °C

      Nach einer doch ziemlich anstrengenden Anreise endlich das erste wohlverdiente Bier.
      Noch eine kleine Sightseeing Tour gemacht. Man wird auf der Strasse dauern angesprochen. Jeder möchte uns "helfen". Gratis natürlich.Read more

    • Day 43

      Incongruous Colombo, Sri Lanka

      December 13, 2019 in Sri Lanka ⋅ ☀️ 28 °C

      Colombo feels like a city trying to emerge from a difficult past. We saw extremes in wealth and lots of construction under way. The colonial past is very evident and we rather enjoyed the stop despite not feeling up to much sightseeing.Read more

    • Day 43

      Quick Stop Colombo, Sri Lanka

      December 13, 2019 in Sri Lanka ⋅ ☀️ 29 °C

      Still a bit lethargic with our colds we ventured ashore for a couple hours and took a Tuk Tuk with local driver USD12 for up to 2 hrs. He took us to a "gem museum" aka jewellery store, then a nice lake in the city where we could see a temple in the distance and get an idea of the city felt like. It's much cleaner and better organized than any of the cities we saw in India. No obvious smog. We also visited a tea factory which turned out to be a tea shop. Couldn't miss the famous Ceylon tea thing could we now? We tried some teas and actually bought a few, too. Will look forward to sharing with visitors at home! It was a very hot and muggy day so were glad to get back to comfort of our ship.Read more

    • Day 152

      Colombo

      February 28, 2019 in Sri Lanka ⋅ ⛅ 28 °C

      Colombo: 3-4 Millionen Einwohner und die typischen Gerüche, die auch in Indien und Nepal zu finden sind. Ja, irgendwie bin ich was das betrifft wieder dort angekommen, wo alles angefangen hat. 😄 Und auch hier wird man den ganzen Tag von Tuk Tuk Fahrern genervt. „Tuk Tuk, Mam?“ „Where are you going, Mam?“ „Need help, Mam?“ ...
      Diesmal falle ich auf einen älteren Herren rein, der mir was von einem Festival erzählt, dass ich unbedingt sehen müsse und mir ein Tuk Tuk organisiert. Relativ schnell merke ich, dass es sich hierbei um eine Stadtführung durch den Tuk Tuk Fahrer handelt und breche augenblicklich ab. Ich bin überrascht, ohne Diskussion werde ich auf meinen Wunsch zum Hotel zurückgefahren. „No problem, Mam. You are safe here, Mam.“ Ist was ich als Antwort auf meine Reaktion erhalte. Hmm, das ist mal neu!

      Ich bezahle meine 4€ für die 8km und gehe kurz ins Hotel, bevor ich meine eigene Sightseeingtour fortsetze. Ich hatte einfach keine Lust, den ganzen Tag in einem Tuk Tuk durch die Gegend zu fahren und wieder von einem Tempel zum nächsten zu jagen. Ich krame in meiner Reisekosmetiktasche nach meinem Ring, den ich genau für Asien eingepackt habe, setze ihn auf und bin ab jetzt: Glücklich verheiratet! Tadaaa!!! 🎊👏🤣

      Ich stiefle also einfach ein bissel mit meiner Kamera durch die Strassen, kaufe mir für 30 Rupees ein Chickensamosa und auf dem Local Fruit Market 6 Mangostan für 100 Rupees (Kurs 1:200) also 50 Cents. Ja, das ist wieder ein ganz anderer Schnack als in Australien und Neuseeland. Aber auch hier fällt auf, das Handeln alles ist und die Hautfarbe der Garant fürs „Übers Ohr gehauen werden“. Warum? Der Straßenhändler zuvor wollte tatsächlich 50 Rupees für 1 Mangostan haben! Netter Versuch!
      Read more

    • Day 151

      Von Christchurch nach Colombo

      February 27, 2019 in Sri Lanka ⋅ ⛅ 30 °C

      Es geht weiter! Heute ist der Tag meine langsamen Heimreise gekommen. 😩
      Um 5:50 Uhr stehe ich am Busstop, um zum Airport zu gelangen. Viel geschlafen hab ich die Nacht nicht. Im Flieger nach Melbourne, wo ich leider 7h tot schlagen muss, habe ich auch nicht schlafen können, mir dafür aber endlich “The Crimes of Grindelwald” oder auch “Grindelwalds Verbrechen” angesehen. Die Originalvertonung ist deutlich besser als die Deutsche. Aber um Welten! Ich habe kurz über eine nochmaligen Citytrip in Melbourne nachgedacht, mich dann aber doch dagegen entschieden und bin am Airport geblieben. Zudem musste ich ja noch meinen Boarding Pass für den Flug nach Colombo organisieren, der mir nämlich am automatischen Check-in bei Air New Zealand nicht ausgedruckt wurde. Auf Nachfrage wurde mir in Christchurch mitgeteilt, ich müsse dann zum Schalter meiner Airline und würde ihn dort erhalten. Naja, den erhielt ich letztlich kurz vorm Boarding vom Personal...

      Es folgten 10h 40min Flug nach Colombo. Genug Zeit um Filme zu schauen und kein Auge zuzumachen. Verdammt. Na vielleicht auch nicht so schlecht, dann wird der Jetlag übersprungen. In Colombo dauerte es dann gefühlt eine Ewigkeit bis ich durch die Immigration war und meinen Stempel im Pass erhielt. Kurz nach Mitternacht Ortszeit war ich dann,dank des zuvor organisierten Shuttles endlich im Hotel.
      Read more

    • Day 7

      Auf Wiedersehen Oman

      January 14, 2019 in Sri Lanka ⋅ 🌧 29 °C

      Oh mann, die erste Woche unserer Reise ist schon vorbei und damit auch unser Kurzaufenthalt im Oman. Und das Land auf der arabischen Halbinsel hat uns durch und durch positiv überrascht.

      An unserem letzten Tag vor der Abreise entschieden wir uns doch noch unseren touristischen Pflichten in Muskat nachzukommen und besuchten am Morgen die "Grosse Moschee". Diese wusste uns beide durch Ihre Grösse, die symmetrische Bauform, dem riesigen Teppich und den Kronleuchtern zu beeindrucken. Am Nachmittag liessen wir uns dann auf dem Weg an den Strand von einem freundlichen Taxifahrer noch dazu hinreissen den Sultanpalast zu besuchen. Dabei haben wir aber festgestellt, dass wir mit grossen Häusern hinter verschlossenen Zäunen eigentlich nicht sehr viel anfangen können ;).
      Wie auch immer, die letzte Woche hat uns gezeigt, dass hinter genau diesen Gittern in den letzten Jahrzehnten die Grundlagen für den wirtschaftlichen Aufschwung und die (soweit wir das beurteilen können) Zufriedenheit in der Bevölkerung gelegt wurden. Die Fäden werden dabei allsamt und bis ins kleinste Detail von Sultan Qabus gezogen, welcher uns auf unzähligen Bildern und Plakaten zugelächelt hat.

      Als kurzes Fazit zu unserem Aufenthalt können wir drei Punkte nennen, welche dafür gesorgt haben, dass uns der Oman positiv in Erinnerung bleiben wird:

      - Der Sultan; Während unseres Aufenthaltes zeigte sich uns immer wieder der Einfluss des Sultans, was uns die Omanis auch immer gerne (und zwanglos!) mitgeteilt haben. Das riesige und meist gut ausgebaute Strassennetz (wenn auch mehrheitlich ohne Trottoirs) oder dass jeder Omani auf seinen 23 Geburtstag ein Stück Bauland bekommt, sind nur zwei Beispiele. Unsere Anstrengungen auch negative Aspekte dieses totalitären Systems zu finden, scheiterten weitgehendst.
      - Wunderschöne Landschaft; Vorwiegend besteht das Land aus... Sand. Dies führt jedoch zu einem umso schöneren Kontrast, wenn plötzlich grüne Oasen und Flussläufe auftauchen. Davon haben wir in der Umgebung von Muskat leider nur einen Bruchteil gesehen, aber Salim hat uns mit Fotos davon überzeugt, dass wir bei unserem nächsten Besuch noch weiter in den Süden reisen sollten.
      - Freundliche und sehr respektvolle Menschen; Dieser Punkt ist uns von Anfang bis Schluss aufgefallen: Die auskunftfreudigen Taxifahrer (per Gesetz nur Omanis), das aufmerksame Personal in Restaurants, die hilfsbereiten Passanten und natürlich Salim:)

      Der Fortschritt im Land bringt verstäntlicherweise auch negative Auswirkungen wie die unzähligen Baustellen mit Gastarbeitern welche nahezu die Hälfte(!) der gesamten Bevölkerung ausmachen und absurde Situationen wie Swimmingpools mitten in der Wüste. Trotzdem hat uns das Land insgesamt überzeugt und wir können es mit gutem Gewissen jedem weiterempfehlen!

      Am frühen Montag Morgen haben wir uns dann auf unseren Flug nach Sri Lanka geschleppt. Im Oman war es so, dass sich die Autofahrer kurz zugehupt haben um sich bsp. für einen gewährten Vortritt zu bedanken. Anscheinend gibt es seehr viele freundliche Menschen in Colombo, der Hauptstadt von Sri Lanka,  denn das Hupen ist in dieser Grossstadt, wo wir unser erstes Hostel gebucht haben, omipräsent! ;)
      Read more

    • Day 14

      Colombo 2; Fort and Galle Face Green

      April 8, 2023 in Sri Lanka ⋅ ☁️ 30 °C

      Our hotel is in Fort, now the central business district of Colombo.  There was a fort here, but the walls were demolished between 1869 and 1871 as the fort was obsolete and room was needed for new military barracks and urban development.

      There is still a strong colonial feel to the area, and we start our walk at the Colombo Clock Tower (1857), also known as the Old Colombo Lighthouse; it is no longer the tallest building in Colombo.  We see the Cargills Department Store, the Grand Oriental Hotel (GOH), the Dutch Hospital (actually in front of our hotel) and Fort railway station, still a major rail hub in Colombo.  Then it is past the old Parliament building (where the Presidential Secretariat is located).  There is a good view of the iconic Lotus Tower and Beira Lake from near here.

      We then walk down the Galle Face Green, on the south side of Fort; it used to be much larger and it was used for horse racing, golf, rugby and cricket (not all at the same time!) - it is now a popular destination for locals.  At the southern tip of the green is the Galle Face Hotel; founded in 1864, it is one of the oldest hotels east of Suez.

      It has been a fantastic trip to Sri Lanka.
      Read more

    • Day 2

      Day 2 - Peter Falk in a Dirty Mac

      March 5 in Sri Lanka ⋅ ☁️ 28 °C

      02:40
      That was CLOSE. Well, sort of.

      We’re just over an hour late landing, meaning I’ve less than an hour to deplane, get through security and get to my next flight. It’s departing from gate B22. The plane I’m on sails past the B gates, and ends up as far away at the A gates as possible. This just adds to my task. Sydney lady has given up the ghost, but I’m going to do my damnedest to make it. I hustle to the transfer desk, silently and not so silently swearing at slow moving people who get in my way. The queue at the security check is blissfully small. There’s still the usual rigmarole of removing liquids, taking out laptops etc etc. And there’s the usual category of passenger for whom this seems an utterly alien task. Having cleared security, I make for the transit station. The gate I need is SO far away that I need to take a train to get there. There’s another guy trying for the Colombo flight who’s just been on the Gatwick inbound flight with me. We keep pace with each other, we glare at the same people that slow us down - it’s good to have a comrade in these circumstances. Off the train, into a lift, the doors of which never seem to want to close. Out of the lift, find a sign for B22 - we’ve got about 5 minutes until the gate closes. There are slow people EVERYWHERE, but despite their best efforts, we both make it to the gate in time. Just in time, but in time nonetheless. We’re immediately boarded, find our respective seats, aaaaaaaaaand - sit there like lemons for 25 minutes while the plane waits for some passengers transferring from delayed inbound flights from Europe. I am a hot sweaty mess, and more than a little irked that my mad dash across the airport appears to have been unnecessary.

      07:30
      4 hours passes incredibly quickly. I manage to sleep for about 1.5 of them, and am only woken when the plane starts its descent into Colombo. I suspect the brief kip I’ve had will be enough to get me through the airport and to my hotel ok, but that my afternoon is going to be full of naps.

      11:15
      Arriving into a sub-continental airport, you’re really never sure what to expect. I’ve had good experiences (Goa), average experiences (Mumbai, Goa), and terrible experiences (Delhi, Goa). Colombo pleasantly surprises me. It’s a relatively modern building, well air-conditioned, and actually pretty well organised. There’s a slight hiccup at immigration when it transpires that I have yet to complete an immigration form that no one has told me about, but we smooth over that fairly quickly. 20 minutes after landing, I’m waiting at the carousel for my bag, and a further 15 minutes after that, I’m in the back of a very heavily air-conditioned cab on the way tot the city centre. My driver is a jaunty chap called Pradeep. He’s keen to practice his English, so I’m subjected to a rapid-fire interrogation - have I been to Sri Lanka before, where am I going while I’m here, how old am I, what I do for a living (that one’s interesting, to say the least)…

      Pradeep’s driving is - let’s not beat around the bush here, - atrocious. He’s not alone though - everyone driving on the roads seems to have a death-wish of sorts. I think my only comparable experience was my first cab trip from Mumbai airport into the city way back in 2007. On the Expressway, the concept of lanes is just really a guideline. Cars, bikes, trucks - all weave in and out of traffic to try and get where they’re going that tiny little bit faster. Pradeep’s Prius also makes a slightly worrying vibration as it reaches 100 kph. There’s also a faint smell of burning. A couple of times, he veers quite dramatically towards the central barrier. As we hit the outskirts of Colombo, the traffic slows. I think this is a good thing, as it means less chance of us smashing into another vehicle. What a tool. The additional vehicles merely mean the chance of incident has sky-rocketed, as there are more vehicles to hit. We approach a traffic light. There are 3 marked lanes for traffic. I count at least 8 cars abreast lined up at the front of the queue. All this near-death stuff shouldn’t detract from the thoroughly enjoyable, visual introduction to Sri Lanka. We race past rice paddies, many cricket pitches, several wattas (watta is the Sinhalese word for garden, and used idiosyncratically to describe the slums around Colombo, which - whilst nothing on the sheer size and scale of the Mumbai slums, are still notable. As we near the city centre, I’m fighting to stay awake. My eyes are hazy and heavy.

      My home for the next two nights is C1 Colombo Fort - a hybrid hotel/hostel that’s very well reviewed, and very cheap. They don’t have a room available for me at 10:00, and suggest I sit in the air-conditioned reception area to wait. I try reading, but nearly fall asleep. I try writing this journal, and nearly fall asleep. I try watching some TV on my iPad, and nearly fall asleep. Finally, I decide to try falling asleep, and nearly fall asleep. Something in the reptilian part of my brain won’t let me drift off in an unfamiliar place with my bags scattered around me. As self-defence mechanisms go, it’s not a bad one.

      17:30
      Three hours later, my room is finally ready. It’s basic, but clean and functional. Critically, it:

      a) is cold, and
      b) has a bed in it. Two actually.

      The guy who brought my bags up has barely left the room before I’m face down on the bed, deep in the land of zizz. I’ve nominally set an alarm for around 16:00, but decide to push this back an hour, and make the most of an unplanned afternoon. I wake up feeling pretty well refreshed. Still a bit jaded around the edges, but capable of leaving the hotel, and having an explore this evening. Quick freshen up I think, then off we go.

      19:30
      I’m not planning to stray *too* far from my hotel this evening. I’m staying in the Fort area of Colombo, which seems to have lots of options for food and some beers, and I just don’t have any sense of the city’s geography yet. It’s dark by the time I head out, so I figure discretion is probably the better part of valour this evening. There’s a weirdness about walking around a busy city for the first time at night - a slight tension. I don’t know which are the good neighbourhoods, and which are the ones to avoid. I definitely do NOT understand road crossing etiquette yet. There are no pedestrian crossings as such, so I just follow along with other pedestrians, in the hope that none of them are suicidal.

      I head off in the vague direction of some places that sound cool, and end up in a very smart tea shop. Now look, I could tell you that tea is of almost religious importance in Sri Lanka, that I want to be respectful to this centuries old tradition. The truth is, as I was walking past, I thought it was a bar I was aiming for, and once I’d entered the tea shop, it felt rude not to order something. I peruse the menu like some kind of connoisseur, but the truth is I barely know my Ceylon Sapphire from my PG Tips. I opt for a Ceylon Souchong, on the basis that it’s got a fun name, and end up with a very cool pot of tea, and a little timer to tell me for how long the tea needs to brew. The flavour is amazing - vaguely fruity and hint of smokiness. Still, tea’s not really what I came out for…

      22:00
      Wandering around the neighbourhood, it transpires that I’m largely surrounded by big, international hotels, the eating and drinking establishments of which are typically very shiny, and (by Sri Lankan standards) very expensive. I stop at a bar for a beer, which costs me the best part of £5. There are two beers on tap, both of which are pretty standard lagers - Carlsberg, and a local brew called Lion. I plump for the latter, and it’s - well, ok I guess. It’s cold and refreshing, which is fun, but there’s very little in the way of flavour. Wine is both rare and expensive around here, so I may end up drinking large quantities of gin as my default setting.

      The bar has a distinctly international feel to it, by which I don’t mean that it’s terribly chic, and with the mystique of the jet-set, but rather that you could drop it into most global cities I’ve visited and it wouldn’t look out of place. What am I trying to say - there’s nothing ‘Sri Lankan’ about it - it’s catering to the type of traveller that has neither the inclination nor perhaps the time to dip more than a toe into Sri Lankan culture during their stay. I’m giving myself a pass for this visit, as I’ve only been in town a few hours. There are several TVs showing cricket in the bar, to add to the several TVs showing cricket in the airport arrivals lounge, and I’m reminded that Sri Lanka is as cricket mad as nearby India. The two barmen are enrapt by what’s showing. I turn to look, to see if it’s some International match that Sri Lanka are playing in today, but no - they’re hooked into a replay of a game from 2008, featuring two sides - neither of which are Sri Lanka. I’d love to see a cricket match while I’m here. Sri Lanka are currently on tour, so it’d be a domestic game, but some of the stadia used are those used for International cricket that I’ve seen on TV before, and it’d be a wonderful experience to spend a few hours at one of them.

      My dinner nearby , whilst excellent costs more then £20 - certainly more than I’d budgeted/bargained for. Still - it’s incredibly tasty. Some beautiful, plump battered prawns with a pineapple sambal to start. Seafood is, unsurprisingly, a huge part if this island’s cuisine. These sambals are also a staple of Sri Lankan dishes - midway between a relish, a sauce and a salad, spiked with chilli. It’s pleasantly hot, and the prawns are sensational. To follow I have a mutton curry with some plain steamed rice. It’s beautiful. Flecked with fresh curry leaves, definitely some coriander seed and cinnamon in there, and with meltingly tender, er, meat. In India, mutton tends to refer to goat, rather than the very specific definition in the UK of a sheep that is more than 2 years old. I suspect Sri Lanka is aligned to the former. Irrespective, it’s delicious.

      I briefly consider another beer, but I’m flagging. Despite an extensive afternoon sleep, I’m still working off 5 or so hours of sleep, so head back to the hotel. It’s still hot, and very humid. My room is a delicious cocoon of cool. I read for maybe 5 minutes before falling quickly into a deep sleep.
      Read more

    • Day 12

      Colombo

      January 31 in Sri Lanka ⋅ ☁️ 26 °C

      Colombo è molto grande ed è un misto di antico e moderno. Tanto è stato costruito da imprese cinesi come la Lotus Tower.
      L' ultima notte si fa nel lusso: Kingsbury Hotel 5 stelle molto usato anche per ricevimenti di matrimoniRead more

    • Day 12

      Balade et toilette des éléphants

      July 19, 2023 in Sri Lanka ⋅ ☁️ 31 °C

      L'association nous a permis de donner à manger à un éléphant, Laqchmi, une femelle de 55 ans. Nous avons aussi pu faire un petit tour sur son dos, lui gratouiller la peau dans la rivière à l'aide d'écorce de noix de coco, et en remerciement elle nous a gratifié d'une bonne douche !Read more

    You might also know this place by the following names:

    Janadhipathy Medura

    Join us:

    FindPenguins for iOSFindPenguins for Android