| I
remember visiting the quaint St. Andrew’s Church in Haputale on
one of visits to our beautiful highlands. At this location stands the
grave of W.S. Lankan heart. An epitaph on his grave reads, Here soars
our Island summit. Here I stand, in spirit, as in body once I stood, long
years ago, in love with all the land, this peerless land of Beauty’s
plenitude”, Standing a top the highest summit of the country he
wrote these words. (Lanka, from Pidurutalagala). Senior composer of the
famous ‘Hymn for Ceylon’, is one of many foreigners who fell
in love with our magnificent isle – specially the scenic beauty
of the hill country with its long winding rivers, the waterfalls, the
velvety tea gardens, the bold and lofty peaks.
The
abundance of waterfalls in the country is attributed to the geology of
the country with its pen plains and rocky precipices combined with the
quantum of rainfall in the hill country. Normal these falls are in “full
bloom” during monsoon periods, shining silver ribbons streaming
down mountain slopes on all sides.
Nestling
in this hill country are the fascinating waterfalls about which Fr. Mervyns
Fernando in his portfolio of Sri Lanka Light” Dancing Waters: Liquid
Light” dedicated to the children of Sri Lanka says, “The waterfalls
of Sri Lanka are symbolic of the beauty she offers her sons and daughters,
beauty which must inspire them, to rise to the heights of truth, goodness,
peace and love; to the “divine” abodes of metta, karuna, muditha
and upekha, to make her the paradise she is supposed to be”. Engrossed
with nature and its various wonders, waterfalls have always held me spellbound
with their mystic musical rhythms dancing and prancing from crag to crag
or silently trailing down wards in layers of cascading gossamer veils
in bright sunshine or pearly moonlight.
Research/ Study
Sri
Lanka has been blessed with as much as 382 waterfalls scattered throughout
the island. Stepping in to the limelight to instill into the public the
importance of conserving our waterfalls due to their cultural value and
the ties the falls have on the social life of the country, is the Lanka
Council on Waterfalls (LCWF) know also as the Lanka Diyaeli Sansadaya.
This I believe is welcome news to environmentalists and nature lovers
in the face of the many threats currently directed at some of our beautiful
waterfalls in the name of development.
Three
of our waterfalls – the Bambarakanda
Falls, the Kurundu
Oya Falls and the Diyaluma
Falls have been included in the list of World’s
Highest Waterfalls ranking as the 48th, 58 the and 62 and respectively
in the list.
Research
conducted by the LCWF has surfaced many waterfalls in several parts of
the island which has hitherto existed unknown and unsung. In August 2002
the LCWF conducted a research programme on Colombo District’s Waterfalls
i.e. the Dambora Fall,
Ranmudu Falls,
Kumari Falls and
Ella Uda Fall,
During workshops held in other parts of the country, the LCWF has discovered
19 waterfalls
in the Sinharaja Rain Forest area, six waterfalls in the Kalutara
District and nine waterfalls in the Matara
District in addition to the well known waterfalls in the island.
The
LCWF among its many activities is currently focusing on workshop, seminars,
research and study, data collection, compiling informative material, exploration
of waterfalls, contributions to publications and songs based on waterfalls
etc.
Constitution
The LCWF in compiling its constitution has included many far-sighted objectives.
They include increasing awareness and interest of the people with regards
the Water Falls in Sri Lanka whilst at the same time striving to create
a deeper under standing of the social life and the culture built around
these waterfalls with a view to protecting them; to improve the knowledge
of local and foreign tourists about the Water Falls of Sri Lanka with
the aim of minimizing possible threats to them; organizing workshops and
seminars with latest techniques on how to conduct research on water falls
to improve and enhance the knowledge of those engaged in research on waterfalls;
to collect and store researched data on waterfalls, publish research papers,
organize educational trips, conduct community based workshops and exhibitions
with a view for LCWF to become the Sri Lankan study center on waterfalls.
Threats
The
LCWF is in the process of designing a website with the assistance of a
South South Exchange Programme volunteer from Nepal Kedar Prasad Bhattari.
Preparations are also underway for the forth coming World Congress on
Waterfalls to be held in the future.
Several of our picturesque waterfalls including the beautiful Laxapana
Falls had been used to generate hydropower for the country. Seven more
beautiful waterfalls including the breathtakingly beautiful and exquisite
St. Clair’s Fall and the
Devon Fall to the central highlands which are popular tourist attractions
will be ‘doomed’ if a proposed hydropower generation scheme
gets underway, much against the advice of experts and geologists. The
country has as much as 101 rivers and experts and environmentalists belive
that mine and micro power generation schemes based on rivers could prove
to be a feasible alternative to the “falls” water –
rivers and falls – is the ‘life giver’ to the nation
besides being a foreign exchange earner for the country.
(Source
: http://www.dailynews.lk) |