Team-BHP > Travelogues


Reply
  Search this Thread
23,814 views
Old 11th November 2015, 14:27   #1
BHPian
 
Join Date: Sep 2014
Location: Hyderabad/NYC
Posts: 47
Thanked: 68 Times
Monkeys, Motorcycles and Misadventures - 2,000 km ride around Sri Lanka

Hey guys,

My cousin walked 1200 Kms across South India, then went to Sri Lanka, rented a motorcycle there and rode about 2000kms around Sri Lanka (apparently he wanted to retrace Hanuman’s path to Sri Lanka and rediscover his faith! Yeah, he is a bit crazy…) I managed to get my hands on some information and pics of his trip, so thought of sharing this with other Team BHPians as well. Enjoy…! If you guys want more details about his ride within Sri Lanka or even his walk in South India, please post them here and I will get answers..!

Monkeys, Motorcycles and Misadventures - 2,000 km ride around Sri Lanka-sri-lankaroute.jpg
The Route: So this is the map of the route that he followed - 2000 Kilometers on a motorcycle covering a majority of Sri Lanka’s beaches, national parks, heritage sites and religious shrines.



The setup: Valid Sri Lankan driver’s licenses or International driver’s licenses are compulsory to rent bikes. Temporary licenses can be acquired at the Department of Motor Traffic – Werahera branch in Boralasgamuwa, Colombo.
The price offered for the bikes - 17000 SLR for 17 days for a Hero Honda Hunk or 20000 SLR for a Yamaha, roughly $9 per day and $18 per day for a Honda Baja.

Monkeys, Motorcycles and Misadventures - 2,000 km ride around Sri Lanka-thebaja250.jpg
The Ride: Honda XR 250R Baja. 249 cc enduro motorcycle, 20Bhp at 8100RPM and 6 speed gear box

Daily Logs of the trip
Day 1 – After getting the bikes and gearing up - Negambo to Chilaw
Distance 60 Kms
Road conditions - Good

Monkeys, Motorcycles and Misadventures - 2,000 km ride around Sri Lanka-dscn4070.jpg
Road to Chilaw – pretty good driving conditions

Monkeys, Motorcycles and Misadventures - 2,000 km ride around Sri Lanka-dscn4084.jpg
Munneswaram temple near Chilaw - this was the place from the Ramayana where Lord Rama prayed to Lord Shiva for a solution to the Brahmana Dosha for killing Ravana

Day 2 – Chilaw to Mannar Island through Wilpattu national park.
Distance ~200 Kms
Road conditions – Average. Significant part of it is a dirt road which is fine in the dry season.

Monkeys, Motorcycles and Misadventures - 2,000 km ride around Sri Lanka-wilpatu.jpg
Wilpatu national park - famous for its leopard and elephant populations. It is one of the largest national parks in Sri Lanka covering over 130,000 hectares. It is known for its multitude of Villus (lakes) from which it gets its name. While driving through, spotted a couple of warthogs, a pair of hornbills, a huge variety of birds, monkeys and several monitor lizards.

Monkeys, Motorcycles and Misadventures - 2,000 km ride around Sri Lanka-dscn4231.jpg
Lighthouse at Talaimannar, the geographically closest point to India and the other end of Rama Setu. They have some boating with glass houses around here. Mannar has some really good food and bird watchers will love it here beacuse of the Giant's tank but very poor accommodation choices.

Monkeys, Motorcycles and Misadventures - 2,000 km ride around Sri Lanka-dscn4247.jpg
There were several wild donkeys in Mannar (this was roaming in the town). In the past some merchants from Arabia thought that it would be a good idea to introduce donkeys and Baobabs in Sri Lanka.

Day 3 –Mannar to Anuradhapura. Via Madhu Road Sanctuary, Silavatturai, and Wilpattu.
Distance – 100 Kms
Road conditions – Poor. Significant part of it is a dirt road which was pretty bad even in the dry season.

Monkeys, Motorcycles and Misadventures - 2,000 km ride around Sri Lanka-dscn4296.jpg
The road through Madhu Road Sanctuary was almost exclusively a dirt track and was a fun drive until this sign after which people start shitting bricks at every loud noise the bikes made.

Monkeys, Motorcycles and Misadventures - 2,000 km ride around Sri Lanka-dscn4550.jpg
Arrived in Anuradhapura to see this sight of the sunset over the Ruwanweliseya Dagoba

Day 4 – Went around Anuradhapura which was a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Sites to visit include Sri Maha Bodhi (Sacred Bo Tree), the Ruwanweliseya Dagoba, Atamasthana (Eight Great Places of Veneration), and the remnants of the ancient city of Anuradhapura.
Road conditions – Good.

Monkeys, Motorcycles and Misadventures - 2,000 km ride around Sri Lanka-jetewanaramadagoba.jpg
Jetewanarama Dagoba. The Dagobas are Buddhist shrines which have remains of monks and offerings of gold, precious stones and jewels encased in them. Each of them has a unique story/legend associated with them.

Day 5 – Anuradhapura to Trincomalee via Mihintale.
Distance – 100 Kms
Road conditions – Average. There were a few stretches of road with a lot of potholes.

Monkeys, Motorcycles and Misadventures - 2,000 km ride around Sri Lanka-dscn4810.jpg
Ancient monuments on the Road to Trincomalee about 10 Kms outside Anuradhapura.

Monkeys, Motorcycles and Misadventures - 2,000 km ride around Sri Lanka-dscn4808.jpg
Ancient statue of the Buddha near Mihintale. Nearly in all of the heritage sites, there are statues of the Buddha in various positions.

Monkeys, Motorcycles and Misadventures - 2,000 km ride around Sri Lanka-dscn4914.jpg
Road to Trincomalee. A pleasant drive for the most part. Met several people along the way all of whom wanted to talk cricket and invited home after finding out we were from India. This was the case all over Sri Lanka.

Monkeys, Motorcycles and Misadventures - 2,000 km ride around Sri Lanka-dscn4929.jpg
Finally at Trincomalee! Apart from the beaches it also has the Koneswaram Kovil - a Maha Shakti Peetha. This temple is also referred to as Dakshina Kailasam (Kailash of the south), as it is located on the exact longitude as Mount Kailash (home of Lord Shiva). According to the Ramayana this is one of the three sites that Lord Ram performed Puja to get rid of the ‘Brahmana Dosham’.

Day 6 – Scuba diving at Pigeon Island and side trip to Tiriyaya and back
Distance – 90 Kms
Road conditions – Average. Few stretches with potholes.

Monkeys, Motorcycles and Misadventures - 2,000 km ride around Sri Lanka-dscn4963.jpg
On the way to Pigeon Island- gets its name from the thousands of Rock Pigeons on it

Day 7 – Trincomalee to Minneriya via Medirgiriya.
Distance – 100 Kms (30 Kms of dirt roads)
Road conditions – Good highway. Average on the dirt road; there were no signs so getting lost is very easy.

Monkeys, Motorcycles and Misadventures - 2,000 km ride around Sri Lanka-dscn0016.jpg
Headed towards Watadageya (also called Medirigiriya) on a dirt road through a jungle and passed Kantale Wewa (huge and beautiful lake). After getting lost a couple of times, a few near wipe-outs and a few land mine scares, eventually made it.

Monkeys, Motorcycles and Misadventures - 2,000 km ride around Sri Lanka-dscn0036.jpg
The Medirigiriya Vatadage – a shrine built on an elevated platform with a circular protective wall around it. The steps leading up to the shrine were carved out beautifully and in detail. There were three sets of pillars in concentric circles and the top of each pillar was intricately carved. The shrine itself consisted of the stupa and four statues of the Buddha in various postures around it.

Monkeys, Motorcycles and Misadventures - 2,000 km ride around Sri Lanka-dscn0094.jpg
Wanted to see ‘The Gathering’ (during the dry season hundreds of elephants from across Sri Lanka gather at Minneriya to feast on the grass, mate, play, and interact with each other). Near the Minneriya lake spotted this lone elephant, so parked off the road and sat under a tree, watching it eat and drink.

Day 8 – Polonarruwa
Road conditions – Good.

“Polonnaruwa was the second ancient capital of Sri Lanka and a World Heritage site. If you had time to visit only one place in the Cultural Triangle, then this should be it. There is so much to see – huge statues, palaces, frescos, Viharas (monastery), Guardstones, Moonstones, Vatadages, baths, tanks, cave art, and several other relics.”

Monkeys, Motorcycles and Misadventures - 2,000 km ride around Sri Lanka-dscn4765.jpg
The Gal Vihara in Polonnaruwa – The huge statues (15 - 50 feet) of the Buddha here seemed to be a key draw and there were plenty of people here as opposed to the rest of the place. There were 3 huge statues of the Buddha carved out of stone (granite) in different poses (Seated - left, standing – middle, recumbent – extreme right || thanks Captain Obvious) and an additional statue in the cave. Interestingly the recumbent Buddha is supposed to be the pose in which he passed away. Our guide explained that the various signs of his passing were his half-closed eyes, the position of his head and hand on the pillow, the fact that his top leg was moved forward slightly.

Day 9 – Polonnaruwa to Sigiriya.
Distance – 80 Kms
Road conditions – Good to Average depending on the route chosen.

Monkeys, Motorcycles and Misadventures - 2,000 km ride around Sri Lanka-dscn4958.jpg
Sigiriya (Lion’s Rock) is a World Heritage site and ancient capital of Sri Lanka. It certainly is unique, thanks to its location – it is built on a huge rock, 180 metres high. There were several things to see like the Royal Gardens, the Mirror wall, Lion staircase, and the Sigiriya Frescos – paintings of Apsaras (celestial nymphs).

Monkeys, Motorcycles and Misadventures - 2,000 km ride around Sri Lanka-lions-paws-sigiriya.jpg
Lion's paws at Sigiriya. Originally there was a full Lion structure here and visitors to the palace entered through the Lion's mouth. Time certainly took its toll.

Day 10 – Sigiriya to Kandy with visits to Dambulla, Nalanda and Aluvihara along the way.
Distance 90 Kms
Road conditions – Average. Plenty of traffic along this route.

Monkeys, Motorcycles and Misadventures - 2,000 km ride around Sri Lanka-dscn5237.jpg
The Dambulla Rock temple is one of the oldest Buddhist temples in Sri Lanka and a World Heritage site. It was built by King Abhaya in 1st century BCE and consisted of more than 80 caves. Five of these caves are famous for their paintings and 157 statues of the Buddha and other important figures of Buddhism.

Day 11 - Kandy and the The ‘Sri Dalada Maligawa’ or the Temple of the Tooth. It holds a tooth (canine) of the Buddha and is the most visited place in Sri Lanka. The sacred tooth cannot be seen directly as it is generally placed inside seven golden caskets which are adorned with precious gems.

Monkeys, Motorcycles and Misadventures - 2,000 km ride around Sri Lanka-food.jpg
Some of the amazing food we had along the way.

Day 12 – Kandy to Nallitanniya after visiting Pinnawala Elephant Orphanage, Aluthnuwara Dewalaya and Ramboda.
Distance – 150 Kms
Road conditions – Average from Kandy to Pinnawala. Horrible from Pinnawala to Ramboda. Average from Ramboda to Nallitanniya.

Monkeys, Motorcycles and Misadventures - 2,000 km ride around Sri Lanka-dscn5780.jpg
The elephant orphanage at Pinnawala

“The elephant orphanage at Pinnawala is located 30 kilometers from Kandy on the road to Colombo. Around 90 elephants including calves are present at the orphanage, a lot of which have sad stories. One of the saddest stories was that of a poor three legged elephant – Sama, who had lost her leg due to the civil war. The sight of it trying to walk along on three legs would move the hardest hearts but then who was responsible for it but the most savage of all animals - Man. This place was iffy and depressing.

The road to Ramboda was atrocious. It couldn’t possibly be even called a road. It wasn’t a road with potholes; it was potholes with a road. After a long 2 hours, finally through and butt cheeks could finally relax.

Our next objective was to trek up Sri Pada aka Adam’s peak, for which the town of Nallitanniya served as the base camp. Reached there at around midnight.

Day 13 – Trekked up Adam’s peak and moved to Nuwara Eliya.
Distance – 75 Kms
Road conditions – Average.

Monkeys, Motorcycles and Misadventures - 2,000 km ride around Sri Lanka-adam.jpg
What was supposed to be seen ideally – a perfect shadow of Adam’s peak at sunrise. What was actually seen was a white out. Wrong season so it was covered with clouds and mist. Just added this picture from google as a reference.

Day 14 – Visited Horton’s Plains National Park to see World’s End (Patal Lok as per the Ramayana), Mini World’s End, Baker Falls and a few other sights. Also visited the Hakgala Gardens or Ashoka Vatika as per the Ramayana. This was the place where Ravana kept Sita Devi prisoner, as Queen Mandodari would not allow her to be brought into the royal palace. This was also the place where Lord Hanuman first met Sita Devi and passed to her Lord Ram’s ring.
Distance covered – 50 to 60 Kms
Road conditions – Good.

Day 15 – Nuwara Eliya to Arugam bay, visiting other tourist spots and some caving along the way.
Distance – 180 Kms
Road conditions – Amazing. Wide, beautiful roads with curves and no traffic made this a dream stretch.

Monkeys, Motorcycles and Misadventures - 2,000 km ride around Sri Lanka-dscn6260.jpg
Amazing roads and weather

Day 16 – Surfing at Arugum Bay and drive to Galle visiting Katragama, Yala National park and Mirissa along the way. Was running out of time here so had to push through faster.
Distance – 300 Kms
Road conditions – Good for the most part. A few stretches had potholes. Since this passes through a national park, watch out for the elephant crossings.

Monkeys, Motorcycles and Misadventures - 2,000 km ride around Sri Lanka-dscn6876.jpg
Blowhole at Hummanaya - the only known blowhole in Sri Lanka and possibly the second largest blowhole in the world.

Day 17 – Galle Fort and drive to Colombo on the beach road.
Distance 160 Kms
Road conditions – Good.

Monkeys, Motorcycles and Misadventures - 2,000 km ride around Sri Lanka-dscn7017.jpg
“This is the end, beautiful friend. This is the end my only friend.
The end of our elaborate plans, the end. Of everything that stands the end.
No safety or surprise the end. I’ll never look into your eyes, again”

Last edited by GTO : 24th November 2015 at 09:48. Reason: PM coming up
kilireddy0 is offline   (37) Thanks
Old 23rd November 2015, 23:27   #2
Team-BHP Support
 
ampere's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: Bangalore
Posts: 17,919
Thanked: 12,884 Times
re: Monkeys, Motorcycles and Misadventures - 2,000 km ride around Sri Lanka

Thread moved out from the Assembly Line. Thanks for sharing!
ampere is offline   (1) Thanks
Old 24th November 2015, 08:18   #3
BHPian
 
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: London
Posts: 621
Thanked: 1,010 Times
re: Monkeys, Motorcycles and Misadventures - 2,000 km ride around Sri Lanka

Excellent write up and shows Sri Lanka from a different perspective.

Don't be sorry and this is not a long travelogue by any measure. In fact I would love to see more write ups and photos of the places you have skipped in this travelogue and believe me even others would love the same.

Regards
chandrda is offline   (2) Thanks
Old 24th November 2015, 11:08   #4
BHPian
 
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Pune - Now in Munich, Germany
Posts: 778
Thanked: 129 Times
Re: Monkeys, Motorcycles and Misadventures - 2,000 km ride around Sri Lanka

How are the highway traffic in Sri Lanka compare to India ? Is it possible to ship our own bike and ride there ?
pawan_pullarwar is offline  
Old 24th November 2015, 13:16   #5
BHPian
 
Join Date: Sep 2014
Location: Hyderabad/NYC
Posts: 47
Thanked: 68 Times
Re: Monkeys, Motorcycles and Misadventures - 2,000 km ride around Sri Lanka

Quote:
Originally Posted by chandrda View Post
Excellent write up and shows Sri Lanka from a different perspective.
Thank you, for the kind words.

Quote:
Originally Posted by pawan_pullarwar View Post
How are the highway traffic in Sri Lanka compare to India ? Is it possible to ship our own bike and ride there ?
Traffic is slightly lower on highways compared to India but Sri Lankan bus drivers are probably clinically insane. Not sure about how we can take it but I did meet one guy from India who was touring on his Enfield that he shipped from home.
kilireddy0 is offline   (1) Thanks
Old 24th November 2015, 13:17   #6
Senior - BHPian
 
r_nairtvm's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Dubai/TRV/BLR
Posts: 2,091
Thanked: 2,544 Times
Re: Monkeys, Motorcycles and Misadventures - 2,000 km ride around Sri Lanka

Quote:
Originally Posted by kilireddy0 View Post
Hey guys,

My cousin walked 1200 Kms across South India, then went to Sri Lanka, rented a motorcycle there and rode about 2000kms around Sri Lanka (apparently he wanted to retrace Hanuman’s path to Sri Lanka and rediscover his faith! Yeah, he is a bit crazy…) I managed to get my hands on some information and pics of his trip, so thought of sharing this with other Team BHPians as well. Enjoy…!
KR,

Thanks for bringing this thread and special thanks to your cousin. It brought back a lot of memories of my travels in those areas 3 decades ago.

Quote:
Originally Posted by pawan_pullarwar View Post
How are the highway traffic in Sri Lanka compare to India ? Is it possible to ship our own bike and ride there ?
Pawan -short answer - You can. See this link for further information.

http://www.customs.gov.lk/highlights/carnet.pdf

http://www.uscib.org/sri-lanka-ud-1659/

http://www.dailymirror.lk/17181/cust...carnet-permits

Best Regards & Drive/Ride Safe

Ram
r_nairtvm is offline   (2) Thanks
Old 24th November 2015, 13:36   #7
Senior - BHPian
 
Tushar's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2014
Location: Mumbai
Posts: 1,152
Thanked: 8,572 Times
Re: Monkeys, Motorcycles and Misadventures - 2,000 km ride around Sri Lanka

Talk about one hell of a trip! This is a great, brief yet informative post. I doubt organized trips will give us this level of insight. You've given me a good look into a country that's so close to us, yet I know so little about. Thanks for taking out the time to detail the road conditions too.

Quote:
The road through Madhu Road Sanctuary was almost exclusively a dirt track and was a fun drive until this sign after which people start shitting bricks at every loud noise the bikes made.
That "mines" sign is alarming enough to get me believing in the powers of nimbu-mirchi. Any idea why the mines were there?
Tushar is offline   (1) Thanks
Old 24th November 2015, 15:13   #8
BHPian
 
rangan's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: Bangalore
Posts: 117
Thanked: 22 Times
Re: Monkeys, Motorcycles and Misadventures - 2,000 km ride around Sri Lanka

Must be one amazing road trip !
Myself and a bunch of friends were planning to ship our bikes and ride there a few years ago. Just about when we made up our minds the conflict has escalated and we dropped the idea.

Thanks for reviving the idea now
rangan is offline   (1) Thanks
Old 24th November 2015, 15:32   #9
BHPian
 
Join Date: Nov 2013
Location: Trivandrum
Posts: 80
Thanked: 67 Times
Re: Monkeys, Motorcycles and Misadventures - 2,000 km ride around Sri Lanka

This is the first time I am reading a travelogue on Sri Lanka. Excellent write up.

When I saw the first couple of pictures, it was hard to distinguish from South India. So similar. But as I came across further pictures, it was clearly distinguishable from India though I cant state a reason in why. Each country has its own identity - true that.


Thanks
Anand
Anand3553 is offline   (1) Thanks
Old 24th November 2015, 18:05   #10
BHPian
 
peterjim13's Avatar
 
Join Date: May 2014
Location: Kochi/S.Bathery
Posts: 672
Thanked: 669 Times
Re: Monkeys, Motorcycles and Misadventures - 2,000 km ride around Sri Lanka

That was quick.

Could you please add more pics if you could find. Very curious to understand how the highways, looked like along with some more pics of the wildlife, and I know for sure that there are some incredible hill stations with all those tea estates and rubber plantations.

Thanks
peterjim13 is offline   (1) Thanks
Old 24th November 2015, 18:47   #11
Distinguished - BHPian
 
neil.jericho's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: Cochin
Posts: 3,796
Thanked: 19,200 Times
Re: Monkeys, Motorcycles and Misadventures - 2,000 km ride around Sri Lanka

A senior of mine from my PG days has recently released a book by the same name. If I am not mistaken, he is kilireddy0's cousin. The book has a 5* rating on Amazon India and I have seen very positive reviews of it from friends.
neil.jericho is offline   (1) Thanks
Old 24th November 2015, 23:27   #12
BHPian
 
Join Date: Sep 2014
Location: Hyderabad/NYC
Posts: 47
Thanked: 68 Times

@r_nairtvm (Ram) - You're welcome! I passed on the message to him and he said it must have been a hell of a trip 30 years back with everything being unexplored and scant info. It was pretty ok for him on the highways but in the off beat areas it was wild.

@Tushar - Yes, he did the trip independently. Organized tours don't let you drive through some of the 'wilder' areas and in general don't let you monkey around too much. And what are we driving for if not for the freedom it offers, yes?

He said the mines were placed by the LTTE during the war. Apparently it's only far up north and the roads are mostly safe.

@rangan - It's a must do trip. I added it to my list after hearing his stories and looking at the pictures he took. He said that since you are planning to do the trip, additional places to consider are - Nallur Kandaswamy temple, Jaffna, Batticaloa (Scuba with wrecks), Sinharaja Forest Reserve (world natural heritage site).

@Anand3553 - From what he said it's like mini India. But since it's smaller you see a vast change with very little distances. They have beaches, forests, mountains, highlands, and marshes all in close distances. Food is also very similar but different. I'm gonna quote from his book -
"The food in Sri Lanka seemed familiar because of the ingredients used, but was quite different from Indian food at the same time. It had a similar taste, thanks to the spices and masala, but the same dishes were prepared in completely different ways. Apart from the usual suspects like rice, dal, roti, and curry, we had eaten String hoppers (weird looking parathas made of thin wiry noodles), Kottu, spicy mutton, Sambola (coconut-based chutney of sorts), jackfruit curry, squid, and a hundred types of fishes (yes, they eat plenty of fish). We also had brilliant desserts like sweet yoghurt, Balatur (three-layered sweet with ice cream, fruit, Sherbet, and dragon fruit), Faluda, and an assortment of cakes and biscuits.

Everything looked enticing and there were so many varieties of food available that deciding what to eat always took us forever, “I want what the person next to me is having. On second thoughts, the person behind me is having something interesting too; think I will have that instead. Oh and perhaps that fish curry and Kottu as well. Dammit, just get me one of everything you have on the menu!” Considering the quantities we were devouring, we would probably have to be rolled out of Sri Lanka by the time the trip would be done."

@peterjim13 - Yes, I know it's short. I realized that after I made the post. (first travelogue; lo siento). I had a word with him and am trying to get a detailed post up. For now I'm filling in the gaps by asking him for missing info. Please let me know if you are looking for any specific info.

To answer your questions -
> The main highways (Colombo to Galle) and (Colombo to Kandy) were pretty good 4 lanes/2 lanes at parts. The rest of the highways were like our state highways (good stretches interspersed by a few stretches of potholes). The roads through Wilpattu and Madu sanctuary were double lane Dirt roads.
> The national parks are chiefly famous for Elephant and Leopard populations. Also crocs, deer, langurs, donkeys (yeah donkeys run wild). Marine life includes Whales, Turtles, dolphins all of which can be seen around Mirissa.
> He said the only hill station he was at is Nuwara Eliya and that it was very beautiful. Very similar to Munnar.
I'll try to get more pics ASAP.

@neil.jericho - If you are talking about Monkeys, Motorcycles, and Misadventures by Harsha. Yeah that's my brother. Glad to make your acquaintance and hope to catch you around on a ride!

I passed on all the feedback and asked him to join up. Until then I'll be helping answer all the questions and to pass on the message.

Last edited by Aditya : 25th November 2015 at 07:36. Reason: Merged back to back posts
kilireddy0 is offline   (3) Thanks
Old 25th November 2015, 09:24   #13
BHPian
 
FORTified's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2014
Location: Bangalore, Indi
Posts: 287
Thanked: 1,082 Times
Re: Monkeys, Motorcycles and Misadventures - 2,000 km ride around Sri Lanka

Superb posting. Another 1000 photos also will not do justice to this trip. So, we have right to crib that there are very few of them there . Please add as many as you can.

One small correction : It is not "Brahmana dosha". It should be "Brahma hatya dosha". King Ravana is said to be a brahman and Rama killed him and looking for solution to get out of that dosha.
FORTified is offline   (1) Thanks
Old 25th November 2015, 12:46   #14
BHPian
 
Join Date: Oct 2012
Location: Hyderabad
Posts: 386
Thanked: 143 Times
Re: Monkeys, Motorcycles and Misadventures - 2,000 km ride around Sri Lanka

Absolutely amazing piece of write-up!
Actually we should applaud your cousin to take up such a journey .. cheers to him, seems to have covered vast variety of destinations.

And yes it does look like these are teaser pics, and possibly you will come back with more.
Craving for more!
deepv is offline   (1) Thanks
Old 26th November 2015, 00:28   #15
BHPian
 
Join Date: Sep 2014
Location: Hyderabad/NYC
Posts: 47
Thanked: 68 Times
Re: Monkeys, Motorcycles and Misadventures - 2,000 km ride around Sri Lanka

Thanks FORTified and deepv ! Yes, I'm working on getting more pics and will be adding them.

Quote:
Originally Posted by FORTified View Post
One small correction : It is not "Brahmana dosha". It should be "Brahma hatya dosha". King Ravana is said to be a brahman and Rama killed him and looking for solution to get out of that dosha.
Thanks for pointing this out FORTified. I'll pass on the message.
kilireddy0 is offline  
Reply

Most Viewed
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search

Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Team-BHP.com
Proudly powered by E2E Networks