
We are learning about our host, whom Joel met on his previous return visit to Sri Lanka... now bringing us along on a repeat of that adventure... profiting for his experiences. We are in the presence of a playful mind... down to his andirons!

The periodic musings of a bellmaker... GRB / Gordon R. Barnett
We are learning about our host, whom Joel met on his previous return visit to Sri Lanka... now bringing us along on a repeat of that adventure... profiting for his experiences. We are in the presence of a playful mind... down to his andirons!
Inside is a sweet swimming pool & a a 3 bedroom house with ample terraces & decks... spaces to read or eat al fresco. A kitchen with part time staff to cook & serve. Maybe this is actually paradise!
I shall begin by by celebrating that the holiday bell sales season was satisfying, especially for Momo, who has been assiduously active in keeping the bells lively on various social media platforms. I thank her!
Then I report that Stephen & I celebrated very quietly, as is our preference. Even our honoring of Solstice--which is the actually true event--was subdued in the honoring of our need to take some quiet time to continue resting, because we were doing all the the business shipping atop the recuperation of jet-lag from literally flying to circumnavigate the globe during the month before.
So I will begin writing about those adventures... not so much using the usual chronological travelogue format, but choosing to relate shorter stories more succinct about moods, people & places. I am rather constantly working to improve my communication as I continue to record my life story in this blog of several decades & in my handwritten journal, spanning some forty years. I constantly muse being any kind of a writer at all...
One of the destinations Joel had planned was a visit to Yala Natoal Park, a preserve for wildlife protection, where we went on a Jeep Safari... on a cold rainy afternoon.
Jim, our driver, let us off with our luggage at the side of the road, where a Jeep took us down a very muddy track, with occasional glimpses of the ocean between shrubby trees growing out of sandy dunes.
We first were served a very good, if hasty, lunch under a thatched roof close to the waves off a sandy beach, close to the large tents where we left our luggage, because these were our lodgings for the night.
Impressed with the meals these guys prepared in kitchens with sand under foot & leaves for a roof? An unqualified YES!
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We five intrepid travelers: Edward on the left, Joel, Stephen & Nana. with his constantly carried tripod/selfie-stick |
Many more birds of mysterious variety, perching & seeming sometimes to be having lofty conversations. The trees surviving in these brackish waters were sculptural wildlife...
As a fine finale one family of elephants, two females, one a nursing mother with her baby were coming closer to the road, persistently wanting to cross where we were slowing to watch.. along with several other vehicles