COLOMBO - SRI LANKA - 11th Port of Call SUNSHINE ROUTE

 

Planet earth is uniue in all the universe for its abundance and variety of animals, every one of which should be protected

 

 

 

SOLAR NAVIGATOR 11th WAYPOINT

 

The Indian Ocean is notorious for tropical revolving storms.  Consequently, this leg of Solar Navigator's world navigation is potentially one of the most dangerous, depending on the time of year.  The distance between Jakarta and Colombo is approximately 1250 miles passing through the equator some 800 miles into the journey.  Elizabeth Swann will stop at Colombo to display its hydrogen, solar and other advanced electrical and electronic technologies and also to take on board provisions for the 12th leg of the world navigation.

 

 

 

 

ENVIRONMENT

 

Sri Lanka is shaped like a giant teardrop falling from the southern tip of the vast Indian subcontinent. It is separated from India by the 50km (31mi) wide Palk Strait, although there is a series of stepping-stone coral islets known as Adam's Bridge which almost form a land bridge between the two countries. The island is just 350km (217mi) long and only 180km (112mi) wide at its widest, and is about the same size as Ireland, West Virginia or Tasmania.

 

The southern half of the island is dominated by beautiful and rugged hill country. The entire northern half comprises a large plain extending from the edge of the hill country to the Jaffna peninsula. The highest mountain is the 2524m (1565mi) Mt Pidurutalagala near Nuwara Eliya, and the longest river is the Mahaweli which courses from the centre and empties into the Indian Ocean at Trincomalee. The best beaches are on the south-western, southern and south-eastern coasts.

 

Ebony, teak, silkwood and spectacular orchids are found in the dense south-western tropical rainforests. Hardy grasslands, rhododendrons and stunted forests predominate in the cool, damp highlands, and shrubs and grasslands survive in arid zones in the north. Animal life is profuse and includes the ubiquitous elephant, as well as leopards, deer, monkeys, sloth bears, wild boar, cobras, crocodiles, dugong and turtles. The island is an important seasonal home to migrating birds, including flamingoes, who flock to the lagoons, wetlands and bird sanctuaries for respite from the northern winter. The best time to see birds is between January and April.

 

 

 

 

 

Sri Lanka - elephants

 

 

 

Sri Lanka is a typically tropical country with distinct dry and wet seasons, but the picture is somewhat complicated by the fact that it is subject to two monsoons: the Yala season (May to August), when the south-west monsoon brings rain to the southern, western and central regions; and the Maha season (October to January), when the north-east monsoon brings rain to the north and east of the island. Temperatures in the low-lying coastal regions are high year round but they rapidly fall with altitude and in the hill country, where it feels like perpetual spring. The highest temperatures are from March through June, while November to January is usually the coolest time of the year. Rainfall is heaviest in the south, south west and central highlands; the northern and north-central regions are very dry. The best time to visit the west, south coast and hill country is between December and March. May to September is best on the east coast.

 

HISTORY

 

Sri Lanka's first settlers were the nomadic Veddahs. Legend relates them to the Yakkhas, demons conquered by the Sinhalese around the 5th or 6th century BC. A number of Sinhalese kingdoms, including Anuradhapura in the north, took root across the island during the 4th century BC. Buddhism was introduced by Mahinda, son of the Indian Mauryan emperor Ashoka, in the 3rd century BC, and it quickly became the established religion and the focus of a strong nationalism. Anuradhapura was not impregnable. Repeated invasions from southern India over the next 1000 years left Sri Lanka in an ongoing state of dynastic power struggles.

 

The Portuguese arrived in Colombo in 1505 and gained a monopoly on the invaluable spice trade. By 1597, the colonizers had taken formal control of the island. However, they failed to dislodge the powerful Sinhalese kingdom in Kandy which, in 1658, enlisted Dutch help to expel the Portuguese. The Dutch were more interested in trade and profits than religion or land, and only half-heartedly resisted when the British arrived in 1796. The Brits wore down Kandy's sovereignty and in 1815 became the first European power to rule the entire island. Coffee, tea, cinnamon and coconut plantations (worked by Tamil laborers imported from southern India) sprang up and English was introduced as the national language.

 

Then known as Ceylon, Sri Lanka finally achieved full independence as a dominion within the British Commonwealth in 1948. The government adopted socialist policies, strengthening social services and maintaining a strong economy, but also disenfranchising 800,000 Tamil plantation workers. Sinhalese nationalist Solomon Bandaranaike was elected in 1956 and pushed a 'Sinhala Only' law through parliament, making Sinhalese the national language and effectively reserving the best jobs for the Sinhalese. This was partly instituted to address the imbalance of power between the majority Sinhalese and the English-speaking, Christian-educated elite. However, it enraged the Tamil Hindu minority who began pressing for a federal system of government with greater autonomy in the main Tamil areas in the north and east.

 

GOVERNMENT

 

President Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga was born to one of Sri Lanka’s most distinguished families on 29th June 1945. Her father, SWRD Bandaranaike, was a senior Minister of the Government at the time of her birth. He was later to become the Prime Minister of the country, while her mother, Sirimavo Bandaranaike, was to become the world’s first woman Prime Minister in 1961.

 

 

 

 

 

President Kumaratunga

 

 

 

President Kumaratunga had her early education at St. Bridget’s Convent, Colombo and at the Aquinas University College Colombo, where she studied for LLB. From there, she went on to the University of Paris, from which she graduated in Political Science. She also obtained a Diploma in Group Leadership from the same University. Her studies for the Ph.D in Development Economics at the University of Paris were interrupted by the call to serve her country, where her mother’s government had launched a wide ranging programme of reform and development. While in Paris, she also underwent training in political journalism at the prestigious Le Monde. She is fluent in Sinhala, English and French.

 

The Provincial Council Elections held in May 1993 represented President Kumaratunga's first entry to electoral politics. She was elected to the Western Provincial Council with an unprecedented majority, and was appointed the Chief Minister of the Province, the country's largest. In August 1994, she contested the Parliamentary General Elections as a member of the People’s Alliance party, and as the People's Aliance's Prime Ministerial candidate. She was elected to Parliament by an overwhelming majority, and was appointed Prime Minister in the People’s Alliance government that was formed on  August 19th, 1994. In the Presidential Elections held shortly thereafter in November 1994, she contested as the People’s Alliance candidate. She was elected President obtaining a record 62% of the votes cast.  Find out more about the Sri Lanka administration 

 

 

 

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Prime Minister    Parliament    Ministries    The Constitution 

 

 

CABINET MINISTERS

  1. Hon. Ranil Wickremasinghe - Prime Minister and Minister of Policy Development & Implementation

  2. Hon. Karu Jayasuriya - Minister of Power & Energy

  3. Hon. K. N. Choksy - Minister of Finance

  4. Hon. Thilak Marapane - (a) Minister of Defence     (b) Minister of Transport, Highways & Aviation

  5. Hon. S. B. Dissanayake - (a) Minister of Agriculture and Livestock  (b) Minister of Samurdhi

  6. Hon. (Prof.) G. L. Peiris - (a) Minister of Enterprise Development, Industrial Policy and Investment Promotion (b) Minister of Constitutional Affairs

  7. Hon. Tyronne Fernando. - Minister of Foreign Affairs

  8. Hon. Rauff Hakeem - (a) Minister of Port Development & Shipping (b) Minister of Eastern Development & Muslim Religious Affairs

  9. Hon. Arumugan Thondaman - Minister of Housing & Plantation Infrastructure

  10. Hon. Mahinda Wijesekera - Minister of Fisheries & Ocean Resources

  11. Hon. (Mrs.) Amara Piyaseeli Ratnayake - Minister of Women's Affairs

  12. Hon. W. J. M. Lokubandara - (a) Minister of Justice, Law Reform & National Integration (b) Minister of Buddha Sasana

  13. Hon. Gamini Jayawickrama Perera - Minister of Irrigation and Water Management

  14. Hon. Rukman Senanayake - Minister of Environment and Natural Resources

  15. Hon. Alick Aluvihare - Minister of Home Affairs, Provincial Councils and Local Government

  16. Hon. P. Dayaratne - Minister of Health, Nutrition & Welfare

  17. Hon. John Amaratunga - Minister of Interior and Christian Affairs

  18. Hon. Lakshman Kiriella - Minister of Plantation Industries

  19. Hon. Gamini Lokuge - Minister of Tourism

  20. Hon. Ananda Kularatne - Minister of Southern Region Development

  21. Hon. M. H. Mohamed - Minister of Western Region Development

  22. Hon. Tissa Attanayake - Minister of Central Region Development

  23. Hon. Bandula Gunawardane - Minister of Rural Economy

  24. Hon. A. R. M. Abdul Cader - Minister of Co-operatives

  25. Hon. (Dr.) Karunasena Kodituwakku - Minister of Human Resources Development, Education and Cultural Affairs

  26. Hon. Imithiyas Bakeer Makar - Minister of Mass Communication

  27. Hon. Mahinda Samarasinghe - Minister of Employment and Labour

  28. Hon. Vajira Abeywardena - Minister of Public Administration, Management and Reforms

  29. Hon. Rajitha Senaratne - Minister of Lands

  30. Hon. Ravi Karunanayake - Minister of Commerce and Consumer Affairs

  31. Hon. Milinda Moragoda - Minister of Economic Reforms, Science and Technology 

  32. Hon. P. Chandrasekaran - Minister of Community Development 

Ministers of Non-Cabinet Rank 

  1. Hon. Kabir Hashim - Minister of Tertiary Education and Training

  2. Hon. Ravindra Samaraweera - Minister of Social Welfare

  3. Hon. Lakshman Seneviratne - Minister of Water Management

  4. Hon. H. G. P. Nelson - Minister of Irrigation 

  5. Hon. A. H. M. Azwer - Minister of Parliamentary Affairs

  6. Hon. P. Harrison - Minister of Housing Development

  7. Hon. Suranimala Rajapaksa - Minister of School Education

  8. Hon. Jayatillake Podinilame - Minister of North-West Region Development

  9. Hon. R. A. D. Sirisena - Minister of Samurdhi

  10. Hon. Johnston Fernando - Minister of Youth Affairs and Sports

  11. Hon. Lal Gamage - Minister Assisting Foreign Affairs

  12. Hon. (Dr.) Jayalath Jayawardene - Minister of Rehabilitation, Resettlement and Refugees

  13. Hon. Earl Gunasekera - Minister of Home Affairs, Local Government & Provincial Councils

  14. Hon. Thiagarajah Maheswaran - Minister of Hindu Affairs

  15. Hon. Rohitha Bogollagama - Minister of Industries

  16. Hon. Susantha Punchinilame - Minister of Small Holder Development

  17. Hon. Mohammad Mahroof - Minister of Urban Public Utilities

  18. Hon. A. L. M. Athaullah - Minister of Highways

  19. Hon. Piyasoma Upali - Minister of State Transport

  20. Hon. Noordeen Mashoor - Minister Assisting Vanni Rehabilitation

  21. Hon. Ranjith Maddumabandara - Minister of Tourism Development

  22. Hon. Hemakumara Nanayakkara - Minister of Agricultural Technology and Crop Productivity

  23. Hon. D. M. Bandaranayake - Minister of Paddy Cultivation

  24. Hon. Lakshman Yapa Abeywardhana - Minister for the Welfare of Migrant Workers

  25. Hon. Lucky Jayawardena - Minister for Registration of Land Ownership

  26. Hon. Keheliya Rambukwella - Minister of Science and Technology.

  27. Hon. Sarathchandra Rajakaruna - Minister of Indigenous Medicine and Disaster Relief  

Deputy Ministers

  1. Hon. Sajith Premadasa - Deputy Minister of Health

  2. Hon. Navin Dissanayake - Deputy Minister of Plantation Industries

  3. Hon. Indika Bandaranayaka - Deputy Minister of Environment and Natural Resources

  4. Hon. Sagala Ratnayaka - Deputy Minister of Power and Energy

  5. Hon. Muthu Sivalingam - Deputy Minister of Agriculture and Livestock 

  6. Hon. Basheer Segu Dawood - Deputy Minister of Housing

  7. Hon. M. B. Mohideen Abdul Cader - Deputy Minister  of Fisheries

  8. Hon. Mahinda Wijesekera - Deputy Minister of   Southern Region Development

  9. Hon. Bandula Gunawardane - Deputy Minister of Finance

  10. Hon. Milinda Moragoda - Deputy Minister of Policy Development and Implementation

  11. Hon. P. Chandrasekaran - Deputy Minister of Irrigation and Water Management 

  12. Hon. Jayasundara Wijekoon - Deputy Minister of Commerce and Consumer Affairs

 

STATISTICS & TRAVEL INFORMATION

 

Visas: Visitors from the USA, most western European countries, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, Israel, Japan, Singapore and Hong Kong do not require visas. Automatic entry for between 30 and 90 days is given on arrival.
Health risks: Cholera, hepatitis & malaria
Time: GMT/UTC plus six hours
Electricity: 230-40V, 50 Hz
Weights & measures: Metric
Tourism: 600,000 visitors annual estimate

 

SEASONS

 

Climatically the driest and best seasons are from December to March on the west and south coasts and in the hill country, and from May to September on the east coast. December to March is also the time when most foreign tourists come, the majority of them escaping the European winter.  Out of season travel has its advantages - not only do the crowds go away but many airfares and accommodation prices go right down. Nor does it rain all the time. Reefs may protect a beach area and make swimming quite feasible at places like Hikkaduwa, which during the monsoon can be quite pleasant.

 

 

SRI LANKA & INDIAN CONTINENT - USEFUL LINKS

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

WORLD GEOGRAPHY

 

 

 

Adelaide

Aden - Yemen

Afghanistan

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Asia

Athens

Atlantis - Plato's Lost City

Australia

Austria

Aztecs - Mexico

Baghdad

Bahamas

Bahrain

Bangladesh

Barbados

Beachy Head, England

Belgium

Benin

Berlin

Bermuda

Black Rock Desert

Bohemia

Bolivia

Bonneville Utah History

Bonneville, Utah, USA

Brazil

Brighton - West Pier

British Columbia

Buckingham Palace

Bulgaria

Burkina Faso

Burma

California

Canada

Canary Islands

Cape Horn

Cape Verde

Cape York - Au

Caribbean

Cayman Islands

Central Africa

Chichester Harbour

Chile

China

Columbo - Sri Lanka

Columbia

Corfu

Cowes, Isle of Wight

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Crooked Island, Bahamas

Cuba

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Czechoslovakia

Darwin - Australia

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Denmark

Eastbounre Pier, England

Earthquakes

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Europe

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Falmouth, Cornwall

Fiji

Finland

Florida

France

Galapagos Islands

Geography Links

Geography Mountains

Geography Records

Geography Resources

Geography Statistics

 

 

Germany

Ghana

Gibraltar - Links

Greece

Greenland

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Guinea Bissau

Hawaii

Holland the Nertherlands

Hollywood, California, LA

Hong Kong

Hungary

Hurricanes

Iceland

India

Indonesia Links

Iran

Iraq

Ireland

Isle of Man

Isle of Wight - The Needles

Israel

Italy

Ivory Coast

Jakarta - Java

Jamaica

Japan

Johannesburg

Jordan

Kent, England

Kenya

Korea South Republic

Korea North

Kuwait

Kyoto

Lanzarote, Gran Canaria

Las Vegas

Lebanon

Liberia

Libya

Liechtenstein

Life on Earth

Lithuania

London - Big Ben

London Eye

London Houses Parliament

London - Buckingham Palace

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London - Overview

London - The City

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Mali

Malta

Marshal Islands

Mauritania

Maya Empire - Central America

Melbourne, Australia

Middle East

Mexico

Monaco

Morocco

Mountains

Mumbai

Naples- Italy

National Geographic

Nepal

New York

New Zealand

Niger

Nigeria

North Africa

Norway

Nova Scotia

Oceans and Seas

Oman

Pakistan

Palermo - Sicily

Palestine

Palma - Malorca

 

 

Panama Canal - Links

Paris

Pendine Sands

Peru

Philippines

Pisa, Leaning Tower

Planet Earth

Poland

Port Moresby - PNG

Port Said - Egypt

Portugal

Puerto Rico

Qatar

Quebec

Rio de Janeiro

Romania

Rome

Russia

Salt Lake City

Samoa

Saudi Arabia

Scandanavia

Scotland

Senegal

Siera Leone

Singapore

Solomon Islands

Somalia

South Africa

South America

Southampton

Spain - Espana

Sri Lanka - Links

Stonehenge

Sudan

Suez Canal

Sundancer Holiday Resort

Sussex, England Index

Sweden

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Syria

Tahiti - Polynesia - Links

Tahitian - Men & Women Customs

Taiwan

Thailand

The Gambia

Togo

Tokyo, Japan

Tonga - Polynesia

Toronto

Trinidad - Lesser Antilles

Trinidad and Tobago

Tsunami

Tunbridge Wells, England

Tunisia

Turkey

Tuvalu Islands

UAE - United Arab Emirates

UK Statistics

Ukraine

United Kingdom

United Kingdom - Gov

USA

Uruguay

Vanuatu Islands

Vatican City

Venezuela

Venice

Vienna

Vietnam

Volcanoes

Volendam

Wales

Washington D.C.

WAYN Where Are You Now

Wealden iron industry

Wendover

West Africa

World Peace Supporters

Yemen

Yugoslavia

Zurich

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Solar Cola drinkers care about planet earth

 

.. Thirst for Life

 

Planet Earth Solar Cola can 330 mil

 

(330ml Planet Earth can)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

LEG

NAUTICAL MILES

BUNKERING

WAYPOINT

SUNSHINE DAYS

-

-

-

-

-

START

-

-

-

-

-

-

FILL UP

Gibraltar

00.00

1

729

-

Tenerife, Canary Islands

1.90

2

3,154

-

Trinidad, Port of Spain

8.21

3

1,182

1

Panama City

3.00

4

970

-

Galapagos

2.45

5

3,640

-

Tahiti

9.48

6

1,423

-

Tonga, Nukualofa

3.71

7

410

-

Fiji, Suva

1.07

8

1,886

1

Port Moresby PNG

4.91

9

340

-

Thursday Island, Cape York

0.88

10

724

-

Darwin

1.89

11

1,572

-

Jakarta, Indonesia

4.09

12

1,881

-

Colombo, Sri Lanka

4.90

13

2,109

1

Aden, Yemen

5.49

14

698

-

Jeddah, Saudi Arabia

1.82

15

670

-

Port Said, Egypt

1.75

16

1,111

-

Palermo, Sicily

2.89

17

170

-

Naples, Italy

0.44

18

940

FINISH

Gibraltar

2.45

-

-

-

-

-

-

23,609

-

RUNTIME DAYS @ 12.5kts

78.70

-

-

(ADD 3  DAYS)

RUNTIME DAYS @ 13kts

75.67

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

(ADD 4  DAYS)

14 KNOTS AVE INC

70.26

-

-

-

AT 15 KNOTS AVE

65.58

 -

-

-

AT 16 KNOTS AVE

61.48

 

 

 

 

 

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