The video takes you
from the sea at Negombo to Vil Ulyana , a stunning eco-friendly resort
on the plain near the rock fortress Sigiria, with its lusty lady cave
paintings, the ruins of the ancient kingdom of Polonnaruwa, the
Pinnawela Elephant Orphanage, the Temple of the Tooth at Kandy, a look at ficus the size of a house,
then up into the mountains at Hunas Falls and the tea plantatons of
Nuwara Eliya. DOWNLOAD MP4 ITUNES
Our driver pulls the car to the side of
the road to let a convoy pass. "A minister," he says, "best to
keep our distance."
This is Sri Lanka. A twenty year old
civil war has taught its citizens to stay clear of government
officials who might be targets of suicide bombs, and has scared
travelers away. A real pity as tourists have never been targets.
Not much has changed since I last
visited some fourteen year ago: the "lush green dream" I described in a story then or the little towns where a
Christian Church, a Mosque and Tamil and Buddhist temples might share
a city block. Nor the police barricades along the road except that
they now have become so ubiquitous that they carry advertising.
Traveling safely in Sri Lanka, or any
other place, is mostly a matter of avoiding the wrong place at the
wrong time: staying away from the
northern regions and avoiding public events attended by politicians.
Most Sri Lankans and visitors get along just fine, thank you.
I have a fondness for green places,
especially the redwood forests of Northern California, where I live.
What is different about Sri Lanka is its diversity of green. Driving
out of Columbo, the nation's capitol, you slip into a world which
some might consider an hallucination, from emerald apparitions of
lush wetlands and jungles where wild elephants roam, to
above-the-clouds tea plantations and fusty old golf clubs where the
Brits once took tea...and tee.

The Mother of All Ficus - Sri Lanka
"Green," in Sri Lanka, is now
coloring political culture as well as the scenery. The county is
aiming to become carbon neutral by 2018. Probably not as difficult as
in nations without Sri Lanka's lung-like ecosystem, a natural
respirator with ample natural foliage to suck up carbon and puff out
oxygen. We all know that tourism can do great damage to environments:
jetliners and diesel buses pollute, hotel developments create waste.
Led by Sri Lanka's tourism community, Sri Lanka's Tourism Earth Lung Initiative aims to aid that giant lung by creating best practice models for
transportation, hotels, resorts and tourist attractions while planting
even more trees. Yes, it is about saving the planet, but it is also
about preserving an industry that depends upon natural attractions to
survive. Anything that makes a traveler feel good about visiting
has to help.
Would I go back to Sri Lanka today
given recent incidents? I would, most definitely, as Sri Lanka is one
of the most physically-beautiful and culturally-interesting places I
have ever visited...and I haven't seen it all yet. Tourists have not
been targets. Frankly, I have always felt safer in almost all places
in Asia than I do in almost all large cities in the gun-slingin' US of A.
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