Trincomalee
This famous harbour, one of the largest and best sheltered in
the world, has at various times been the envy of the Danes,
Dutch Portuguese, British, French and japanese. During world
war II it became a naval base to protect the fleet of the combined
Allied Powers.
The
british explorer samuel Baker described it thus: "Few things surpass the
tropical beauty of this harbour, lying completely land-locked, it forms
a glassy lake surrounded by hills covered with the waving foliage
of cocoa-nut trees and plams of great variety. The white bungalows
with their red-tiled roofs, are dotted about along the shore, and two or three
men of war are usually resting at their ease in this calm retreat..."
The
men of war in the water these days are of the fishy variety. In July in particular
large numbers of Portuguese man -of-war drift towards the shore, many becoming
stranded on the beaches. Touch them at your peril for they are known to paralyse
their victims with their sting.
The
mention of Trincomalee to any Sri lankan is likely to induce wistful sighs
and clear, the skies as pink as paradise, and jungles where wild elephants
roam.
Sadly, it is these impenetrable jungles that have enabled the Tamil Tigers
to infiltrate the area.