
We left the oasis Kandelama reluctantly and traveled south and gained altitude quickly, winding higher with each mile. The landscape changed significantly. The trees which I isolated earlier in this adventure as seemingly important because of their appearing in unlikely places are teak trees. Everyone is growing teak in all stages, except virgin growth. I never saw any of significant size, more that 18 " diameter. You grow it and the government controls what happens to it, I gather.
The air became very smokey, paddies over this part of the country are being burned in preparation of the new growing season. Wolley says it's mist, but it has a blue cast which makes it grass smoke not moisture. We are on the way to Kandy at a moderately high altitude and an inversion is keeping the winds from dissipating the smoke. We took a diversion from the route and climbed a winding road up a valley to a peak in the Knuckle Range, so called because they look like knuckles of a fist. The first tea plantations appeared in the hills. The forest in relation with the tea was quite beautiful; the tea bushes spread in the curves of the hills in rows, some of the trees of the forest had vertical texture and some areas had horizontal texture. It looked like an abstract print; I was in awe of the beauty before me. In the fields the Tamil women bent to task, picking the tea and putting the tender leaves into a sack. The conflict between the government and the Tamil Tigers took on a new context in our eyes. The Tamil are Hindu and do the hard work in the tea rows and on the vegetable farms. They live in plantation housing. It reminded me of my Welsh forebears working the mines, living in company houses and buying at the company store.
We parked the van at the road's end. Rough-hewn food kiosks provided hot soup and cooked meats and drinks for the walkers. Some of these people looked a little hard for wear and seemed high with alcohol. We took the road to the mountaintop and embraced the exercise. A half mile up, a family had stopped in the road and was having food, picnic style; they greeted us with smiles and laughter and we looked at their food with appreciation. The end of the road was anticlimactic with a cell tower and fence keeping us away. The vista in every direction appeared obscured by the smoke, but what we could see was spectacularly beautiful. A distant mesa projected from a mountain with precipitous cliffs on all three sides provoked the imagination. It seemed remote and mysterious. On the way down we were inundated by a large family group singing and dancing and drinking their way to the top. They were excited to meet us and I did some dance steps to their music and they gave us some cakes to eat. It was an opportunity to eat local kiosk food, it was delicious.
Another diversion on the way, we stopped at a spice garden. It had exotic trees and plants growing in beds raised by coconut shells in patterns; it was very attractive. We saw ginger, cardamon, clove plants, cacao, coffee plants, pepper, a rubber tree with latex oozing down cuts into a cup. The milky juice smelled just like a latex glove and became rubbery in a few seconds. The best for me was a tree with a large dark area at its base; on touching the moist area my hand brought the smell of sandalwood. It was an amazingly complex aroma directly from the tree, it was the stuff of dreams. I could imagine the first human beings finding this tree and wanting it all over themselves and the girls being very appreciative to the guys bringing it home. The tour ended in a sales pitch of ayurvedic herbs and ointments. This was a surprise. I cut the pitch short and went to the shelf with the sandalwood bottles and was shocked by the price. I went down the line to the smallest bottle which had a price of $70. I walked away crestfallen and the salesman who had led the tour said I should make an offer and I thought $30 was a price that I could accept and we had a deal, 3,000 rupees. I can't wait to get it home and give the women a whiff. Oh, the magic.
We continued on and stopped at a batik workshop and we saw the technique for applying resist to cloth and by using multiple dye immersions a beautiful image appears at the conclusion. I had some experience dying eggs using a Ukrainian technique, called psanky that was similar. I understood the complexity and skill involved. This shop had some great art pieces, the prices were commensurate with the level of art. Steve bought a batik of tropical fish that was colorful and beautifully done. Much of the work was low-level commercial tourist art but there were some great pieces too. One piece, which had me meditating on the choices made and the skill involved was mostly white with the detail of the image in colors. For white to come out at the end of the process, at the first stage of the image the white has to be completely masked with resist and the detail of the image built up with subsequent color dye immersions and resist applications. This was a master work, and I am sorry that I didn't photograph it.
We arrived in Kandy the second largest city in Sri Lanka after Colombo; our hotel overlooked the lake and surrounding city and had many travelers staying there. It was a nice change from being the only or the few at dinner. Our deal with the hotels has included breakfast and dinner in the price. This was fun eating with a mix of travelers; we were the only Americans staying there, we saw very few in our travels. I had had a few drinks before dinner and a Sri Lankan band was playing some two-step beats in the dining room which had me dancing around the floor inspired.
The morning took us to the Pinnewala Elephant Orphanage, a place where orphaned elephants, injured elephants or ones that have lost their herd have a home. We arrived as the herd was being led from frolicking in the river through the town to the compound where they lived. The mahouts held them back until a barrier was lowered to keep the people back from the road. The herd then passed through the streets. I was standing at the barrier and could look in the faces of the babies and juveniles that walked by. I stopped videoing and just took it all in. The last elephant to come was a three legged guy, he lost his leg from a land mine. The remaining rear leg seemed almost to bend-to-breaking as he hobbled by. I began leaking tears, this elephant lives because of this place. In the compound under a shed-roof a huge male with the biggest tusks around stood chained; he was feeding on palm fronds. He was completely blind.
We went back to the river for some refreshment; two young elephants were in the river enjoying themselves in the water. The smaller would drape around the neck of his partner and push and dunk and just have a great time cooling and playing. I moved closer to them and one of the mahouts signaled me to come down to the river. I walked around to the steps and out on the bank. He indicated that I could come out to them. I got to the edge of the rock at head height to the bigger elephant and looked him in the eye and rubbed his trunk. The mahout gave me a leaf to feed him and I stuck my hand into his mouth with the leaf and the elephant liked it. I fed one to the smaller one too. The mahout took my picture out there with them. I was in joyful heaven.
We visited the Royal Botanical Gardens. Our trip guide and driver Wolley had left town for a few days to visit his family with a new baby, leaving his brother Stanley to take on the responsibilities of our care. It didn't bode well when Stanley almost hit another vehicle as we dropped Wolley at the station. It was hard giving up Wolley, he was a masterful guide and majordomo.
The botanical gardens reminded me of Golden Gate Park in San Francisco, a major park with grand walks and greens. Areas of the park featured different trees, I wanted to see the ebony plantings, we found one tree growing there. An area in the center of the park had a number of ceremonial plantings by famous people of the world. A mahogany tree of great height was planted by King Edward of England in 1906. A gardener buttonholed me and took me to see a scorpion that he had hidden near this tree. It was huge and black and shiny, much bigger that the ones in Marin County, Ca. He said the magic word "bats", I followed him through the trees to an area away from the central green. I could hear them from a long way, chattering in the tops. They were hanging by the dozens in a group of trees, squirming and having a busy time carrying on. One would fly off and circle and land again. I was so pleased to see so many of them together. Finding their bodies hanging from wires along the roads didn't seem so devastating anymore, they were in this place in the hundreds. I gave the gardener 100 rupees for his enterprise. Steve and I wandered around the park enjoying the varieties of trees and plants. I liked the great bamboo stands of trees twelve inches diameter reaching to the sky, looking like clumps of grass. We spent a couple of hours there enjoying the space. One odd thing we noticed throughout the park was couples. They were everywhere, holding hands, sitting, walking, huddling in enclosures. We never did figure it out, it was a Monday; it probably was a holiday. Everyone we encountered were couples, even the tourists were couples, except we two guys.
The next day we decided to forgo scheduled activities until later in the day, and venture into the city. I wanted to find an internet cafe and Steve needed to download images from his camera to a DVD. We walked along the lake into downtown Kandy. Everywhere we went people would watch us, some would ask us "where from?", most would smile or just look. I felt comfortable with the attention, it was fun. A group of teenagers came up behind and spoke in what seemed to be derisive manner, I did a quick dance turn not missing a beat and walked backwards to confront them with nonsense comments. They were a bit surprised, and laughed and later one of the boys asked if I understood what they were saying. I said no I didn't.
I spent the rest of the afternoon in the cafe writing my story and having a great time. Steve and I had some coffee in a real indigenous cafe, the coffee was cheap and not very good by our standards, which I have to add are of the very highest. I at least was a snob only taking the best coffee. I didn't drink very much on the trip, tea was always a better choice. The atmosphere was why we were there. Old men in their hats and manners acknowledged us on arrival and soon let us to our conversation. The server kept an eye out for us and escorted an overly aggressive and persistent supplicant away from our table.
Kandy's streets and walks overflowed with people and cars. Crossing the street was always a risky endeavor, the traffic comes from an unexpected direction; you have to think twice and three times as you cross. Vendors sell on the walks, toys, bedspreads, clothes, fruit, they control their spots and engage who they can to buy. Fences along the streets force pedestrians to cross in the block not at the corners. It makes for an intense experience on foot. More that once I had an out of body moment where I have an awareness of my life in Oakland on the otherside of the planet and I am here in this exotic place remembering and finding myself in this moment and it is to be cherished right now.
Later in the day we went to a gem sales studio, Wolley had arranged for us to visit. I am not sure if Steve had any idea that we would be subjects to hard sell; I was surprised. We were patient with the sales pitch being delivered by a very beautiful woman in a sari, she was charming and sophisticated. It was worth the time just to look at her and listen to her speak. We were not experiencing many of the women of Sri Lanka, it was mostly men who were dealing with us. I had been feeling better since Kandelama and I began to pay more attention to the women passing. Afterward, we went to a social club for a performance of Kandy Dances. Our entrance fee was covered by the gem store apparently. We had prime seats in front of the stage and the crowd swelled behind us, tourists and locals and friends of the performers. The group did about a dozen different numbers. Two pairs of drummers played behind the dancers. The drums were held at waist height and horizontal and they had skins at each end. Each pair beat so quickly and in sync with each other, that a separate voice was created from their mutual drumming. Then the other pair would begin and they interchanged during the performance. In front were women dancing in colorful costumes, gesturing with hand mudras and swaying and turning. The male dancers carried the performance to athletic levels, one then another doing continuous back flips across the stage. These performers were not unlike our own group of performers in Jubilee American Dance Theatre from Oakland, CA, they were older musicians and dancers. When one of the more chubby dancers finished his back flips he looked particularly proud of himself. I was impressed. I was convinced that the most beautiful dancer was catching my eye as she danced; Steve didn't agree with me though. The performance ended with a fire-walking exhibition. The whole performance was wonderful, it had beautiful men and women and colorful costumes, exciting music and the dances were expressive and new to us. As we left the auditorium we entered the front of the club where numerous large tables were spread out and display boards backed the wall behind. On the boards were rows of numbers. Around the tables were mostly men, young men, working men gambling. They surrounded the tables with heads down, over piles of money splayed out. It was intense, but I didn't understand any of it.
Steve, Wolley and I drove down to the Shrine of the Tooth which lay at one end of the lake. The Tamil Tigers had set a bomb at the entrance to the temple and killed 13 people. The police have since blocked the traffic through the grounds of the temple and the connection to the city at that end of the lake. We removed our shoes outside and checked them into a booth and entered the temple. Steve encountered a self appointed guide and Steve quickly disappointed him. We went our separated ways inside the shrine. I went deep into the space to a large side room entering through a large doorway. This room had a large Buddha figure at the left and to the right it opened to a gallery. Along the walls were a "stations of the cross" sequence of paintings of Buddha's life and the journey of Buddha's tooth. Apparently after the Buddha was cremated a devotee picked out of the ashes, a tooth; the story of the tooth is told from the cremation to its present location in the sepulcher in the temple. We were here to witness the opening of the doors to the sacred vessel. As I gazed about this room lit with gold and silver and paint, images set large on the walls, I was taken by another vision, a woman standing next to me looking up at the icons; with her were two young women, her daughters. I have to say that the place had subtlety taken over my senses because she just struck me in my heart. She was tall, grown-up; she had a personal style of dress, hair style and to the earrings hanging from her lobes. I couldn't turn away. I wished for someone like her in my life. In the lights of this room she was a Goddess. I moved on.
I explored the library and other shrines in the building and the time came for the opening of the chamber which was in a structure within the main temple. I had an epiphany, here in its completeness was an example of the shrines of Anuradhapura. We went up the wooden stairs to the upper level of the structure. Here people were gathering, facing doors set in a wall. Two monks stationed at either side engaged the crowd. Along the wall from the left, people lined up to the doors. Along the wall from the right people were lined up too. A gong sounded and the doors opened and I could look in. I saw a large stupa-like gold container in the back of the room bathed in warm light. I snapped a photo and got in line at the left to make my pass by the doors. The line began to move and elbows came out as the more devoted edged forward. I looked in as I passed the two monks and moved out. The people on the right were to partake in special prayers after this viewing. We stayed awhile after taking in the power of this place, Steve had found a crystal Buddha in a side shrine that was remarkable. We left the building and got our shoes and returned to the Thilanka Hotel for dinner and contemplation.
To see photos from "Tooth in Kandy", click on link:
http://picasaweb.google.com/joejamesphoto
Joe James


