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talkSPORT Cricket Editor Jon Norman and George Dobell from thecricketer.com are in Dambulla for the final day of the Barmy Army Fans World Cup in partnership with Sri Lankan Airlines. With just a few hours to go until the start of the County Championship they both look ahead to the tournament and discuss the hopes and fears in much the same way cricket fans up and down England and Wales are doing today.Head over the talkSPORT Cricket YouTube Channel for a live stream from the action in Sri Lanka. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
talkSPORT Cricket Editor Jon Norman and George Dobell from the Cricketer.com have travelled out to Dambulla, Sri Lanka for the 2nd edition of the Barmy Army & Singapore Airlines Fan's World Cup to find out what it's all about.For a live stream head over to the talkSPORT Cricket YouTube Channel and hit subscribe.If you like what you hear please take the time to leave a 5 star review on the podcast page and follow @cricket_ts on X/Twitter. https://www.youtube.com/@talkSPORTCricket Thanks for listening to Following On: Bumble & Kimber Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Ấn Độ và Tích Lan là hai điểm đến gắn liền với cuộc đời Đức Phật và sự phát triển của Phật giáo. Trong Cẩm nang du lịch kỳ này, mời quý vị cùng Đăng Trình trò chuyện với chị Oanh Ngô đến từ Yes Travel để tìm hiểu các di tích Phật giáo tại hai quốc gia này, từ Tứ Động Tâm đến cây bồ đề Sri Maha, chùa hang Dambulla, và ngôi chùa Sri Dalada Maligawa – nơi lưu giữ xá lợi răng Phật, cùng những lưu ý quan trọng cho chuyến đi.
The Black Caps had plenty of wickets in hand but need to up their run rate if they're to win the rain affected opening one-dayer against Sri Lanka in Dambulla.
The Black Caps have been beaten by 45 runs under the Duckworth Lewis method in the weather affected opening one-dayer against Sri Lanka in Dambulla.
The Black Caps started their chase strongly but after losing both openers in the space of an over they struggled to keep pace with the run rate in this morning's 45 run loss to Sri Lanka in the weather affected opening one-dayer in Dambulla.
The Black Caps have secured a shared series result following a remarkable defence of just 108 in the second Twenty20 against Sri Lanka in Dambulla. Black Caps all-rounder Glenn Phillips joined Piney to discuss. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Sri Lanka were a short time ago 82 for 7 needing 27 runs in 25 balls to win the second T20 against the Black Caps in Dambulla and seal a 2-nil series win.
The Black Caps fast bowler Lockie Ferguson took a hat-trick as the tourists defended a modest total of 108 to beat Sri Lanka by 5 runs in the second and final T20 in Dambulla and level the series 1-all.
Fast bowler Lockie Ferguson took a hat-trick before leaving the game injured, as the Black Caps claimed a five run win over Sri Lanka in the second and final T20 in Dambulla to tie the series 1-all.
Paul Ford & Dylan Cleaver join Jason Hoyte for another episode of NZ's #1 cricket pod the BYC! In the latest episode, the fellas go deep into the greatest Test Series win in NZ cricket history. Then Black Caps legend Neil Wagner joins the show to discuss the team's success in India and chat about his new book 'All Out'. Finally, they look ahead to the Sri Lanka T20 Series and the squad in Dambulla.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
"After savouring Sri Lanka's western coast, the nation's famed cultural triangle serves up a bevy of World Heritage ancient treasures in the heart of the island. Travelling with On the Go Tours, we farewelled the city buzz of Colombo and drove east for several hours to Dambulla, home to the spectacular Dambulla Rock Temple. Sri Lanka has a long history of the presence and practice of Buddhism and this sprawling cave complex is quite the treasure-chest. The Dambulla temple is not only one of the oldest sites for Buddhist monasticism, but it has served as a pilgrimage site for twenty-two centuries. The massive cave temple complex is unique in Southeast Asia because monks carved the caves out from rock, towering 160 metres above the surrounding plains. There's more than 80 caves across the site, but the major attractions are spread over five caves which contain statues and paintings of Buddha and his life." Read Mike's full article here. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
One of the most impressive places in Sri Lanka is Sigiriya, a site often named the 8th wonder of the world. Sigiriya was also home to an ancient city that sat atop the monolithic rock towering 650 feet over the town of Dambulla in the Matale District of Sri Lanka. The site attracts thousands of tourists daily and has been a UNESCO heritage site since 1982. Many believe that the giant monolithic rock looks unnatural because of its perfectly flat top, which almost looks like it's been cut at a precise angle. The locals believe this ancient site was built thousands of years ago by an ancient Hindu god, named Ravana, who was part of an advanced race of beings known as the Asura. These deities are said to have come down from the sky and ruled over portions of humanity. There are strange scoop marks and holes in the rock, and at the top, there are bricks, marble blocks, and an enormous granite water tank found in the middle of the site. How all of them were built and how ancient carried the materials to the top is still unexplained.
Alison Mitchell, Brett Sprigg and Charu Sharma debate who will be the next coach of the England white ball team after Matthew Mott stepped down following two years in charge.Plus we are joined by Columbo cricket journalist Estelle Vasudevan, who was in Dambulla when Sri Lanka women won their first ever Asia Cup title in front of their home fans. She tells us what the atmosphere was like and whether this could be the springboard for the women's team ahead of the T20 World Cup.Can cricket help rehabilitate prisoners? We hear from the President of Mexico Cricket Ben Owen and Ana Cecilia Septien Godard who plays for the women's national team. They tell us about their Cricket in Prisons programme. Image: The Sri Lanka team pose with the trophy for a group picture after the 2024 Women's T20 Asia Cup Final match between Sri Lanka and India at Rangiri Dambulla International Cricket Stadium on July 28, 2024 in Dambulla, Sri Lanka. (Credit: Getty Images)
Sri Lanka win the Asia Cup, Estelle Vasudevan & Madushka Balasuriya react the performance and bring you all the reaction from Dambulla.
Dominic Machado, Estelle Vasudevan and Mark Machado look ahead to the Women's Asia Cup which is in Dambulla. They look at the Sri Lanka squad, discuss which players might shine and what a good tournament would be for Sri Lanka
Jarrod and Behram unfold all the drama surrounding cricket off the field, over the course of last week, including the travel delays and inconvenience faced by Sri Lanka during the T20 WorldCup, Pakistan's consequent hotel change in New York, Dambulla's new ownership in the LPL, and India's chances of making the trip to Pakistan for the Champions Trophy 2025.-To support the podcast please go to our Patreon page. https://www.patreon.com/user?u=32090121. Jarrod also now has a Buy Me A Coffee link, for those who would prefer to support the shows there: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/jarrodkimber.Each week, Jarrod Kimber hosts a live talk show on a Youtube live stream, where you can pop in and ask Jarrod a question live on air. Find Jarrod on Youtube here: https://www.youtube.com/c/JarrodKimberYT.To check out my video podcasts on Youtube : https://youtube.com/@JarrodKimberPodcasts-This podcast is edited and mixed by Ishit Kuberkar, he's at https://instagram.com/soundpotionstudio & https://twitter.com/ishitkMukunda Bandreddi is in charge of our video side.
Estelle and Behram unfold all the drama surrounding cricket off the field, over the course of last week, including Pakistan's T20 World Cup squad, which was announced hours before the deadline, Justin Langer's withdrawal from the India head coach race, Sandeep Lamichanne's visa getting rejected by the US, and Dambulla Thunders' owner getting arrested for corruption.-To support the podcast please go to our Patreon page. https://www.patreon.com/user?u=32090121. Jarrod also now has a Buy Me A Coffee link, for those who would prefer to support the shows there: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/jarrodkimber.Each week, Jarrod Kimber hosts a live talk show on a Youtube live stream, where you can pop in and ask Jarrod a question live on air. Find Jarrod on Youtube here: https://www.youtube.com/c/JarrodKimberYT.To check out my video podcasts on Youtube : https://youtube.com/@JarrodKimberPodcasts-This podcast is edited and mixed by Ishit Kuberkar, he's at https://instagram.com/soundpotionstudio & https://twitter.com/ishitkMukunda Bandreddi is in charge of our video side.
Dominic Machado, Estelle Vasudevan & Mark Machado talk through the chaos in the Lanka Premier League, why the Dambulla owner got arrested, what happened at the auction and the governance issues around the league.Subscribe to the Murali End Newsletter: https://muraliend.substack.com/
SBS Sinhala Sports Journalist Rangana Seneviratne is bringing you the latest information on the sports arenas in Australia and Sri Lanka - මේ සතියේ ඕස්ට්රේලියාවේ සහ ශ්රී ලංකාවේ ක්රීඩා ක්ෂේස්ත්ර වල අලුත්ම තොරතුරු රැගෙන ඔබ හමුවට එන SBS සිංහල සේවයේ ක්රීඩා මාධ්යවේදී රංගන සෙනෙවිරත්න ගෙන එන 'සතියේ ක්රීඩා විග්රහයට සවන්දෙන්න
103 BCE – 77 BCE “And then there were none” Agatha Christie With the murder of Khallata Naga, the Anuradhapuran Kingdom made the leap to regularizing regicide as if it was no more unusual than brushing one's teeth. Valagamba – the rightful heir and son of King Saddha Tissa – had first to defeat and kill Kammaharattaka, Khallata Naga's nemesis, before he himself could take what he clearly saw as his rightful place at the head of things. This he seems to have achieved with reasonable briskness, for by 103 BCE he was king. And obviously one who felt uncommonly safe –one of his first acts was to adopt the general's son and marry his wife.But decades of royal misrule had set in train a reaping of deadly consequences. Barely had the celebratory kiribath had time to be digested than all the hounds of hell slipped their leads. A rebellion broke out in Rohana. A devastating drought began – a less than positive development in a land where the king was considered to have the power to cause rain. The kingdom's preeminent port, Māhatittha (now Mantota, opposite Mannar) fell to Dravidian Tamil invaders.And at a battle at Kolambalaka, the hapless King Valagamba himself was defeated, racing from the battlefield in a chariot lightened by the (accidental?) exit of his wife, Queen Somadevi.In a 14 year tableau reminiscent of Agatha Christie's novel “Five Little Pigs” the grand Anuradhapura Kingdom was then manhandled to atrophy. Two of the Dravidians returned to India, leaving one of the remaining five, Pulahatta, to rule from 104-101 BCE, with history struggling to keep up.Pulahatta was killed by Bahiya, another of the five remaining Dravidians and head of the army, who was in turn murdered in 99 BCE by Panayamara, the third Dravidian who had been unwisely promoted to run the army.Proving those who do not read history are doomed to repeat it, Panayamara was assassinated in 92 BCE by his general, the fourth Dravidian, Pilayamara. Seven months was all Pilayamara managed to last - before dying in skirmishes with rebels and passing the throne to the last Dravidian and army commander, Dathika who ruled until his defeat in battle in 89 BCE.Despite losing his throne back in 103 BCE, the deposed king Valagamba had evaded capture, his many escapes and hiding places illuminating the map of Sri Lanka like a Catch-Me-If-You-Can treasure hunt. His most famous hideaway was probably the Gunadaha Rajamaha Viharaya in Galagedera, just where the flat plains of the Anuradhapura Kingdom rise into the mountains that enfold the centre of the island, and with them, protection and cover. From that time to the final routing of the invaders in 89 BCE, Valagamba carried out a guerrilla war that, month by month, won ascendency.Eventually grappling his way back to power in 89 BCE, Valagamba retook his crown through a series of small, successful incremental skirmishes - although, given the murderous incompetence of his Dravidian interlopers, it may have been like pushing on an open door.Valagamba's long and determined campaign to win back the throne he had earlier enjoyed just for a few months marks him out as one of the country's pluckiest rulers. His defeat and killing of the upstart Dathika in 89 BCE, gave him 12 years of real rule, and put the dynasty back at the centre of the state. Valagamba set to work building a monastery, stupa and more memorably converting the Dambulla caves in which he hid during his wilderness years, into the famous Rock Temple that exists today.Less adroitly, Valagamba managed to drive a wedge between the monks, his favouritism of one sect for another, setting in motion the island's first Buddhist schism.Despite this, it was under Valagamba's patronage that 30 miles north of Kandy 500 monks gathered at the Aluvihare Rock Temple to write down the precepts of Buddhism.It was to be momentous moment. Until then Buddha's teachings had been passed on orally - but repeated Chola invasions from India left the monks fearful that his teachings would be lost. The challenge they had set themselves was immense. Firstly, they had to recite the doctrines. That would have taken several years. Then they had to agree on an acceptable version of the teachings before transcription. That must have taken even longer. Finally came the lengthy work of transcribing them, using ola leaves from talipot palms.The Pāli Canon became the standard scripture of Theravada Buddhism, written in the now extinct Pali language, an ancient Indian language, thought to be the language spoken by Buddha and used in Sri Lanka until the fifth century CE. Scholars argue (as they do) about how much of the work can be attributed to one person or to Buddha himself – but believers are largely free of such elaborate debates. The Cannon lays out in clear and unambiguous terms the doctrines, and rules of conduct Buddhists should follow. It is made up of three parts:The Vinaya concerns itself mainly with the rules for monks and nuns. The Sutta Pitaka is the Cannon's practical heart, comprising around 10,000 teachings and poems of Buddha and his close companions that focus on the typical challenges of life.The Abhidhamma Piṭaka is where the higher teachings sit – the ones most focused around Enlightenment.Running to some 80,000 pages, the Pali Canon is roughly the size of a dozen Bibles. The cave temple in which it was created still exists, with numerous caverns and old inscriptions to view, despite parts of it having being destroyed in the 19 CE Matale Rebellion.The monks were probably still hard at work on The Pāli Canon when Valagamba died in 77 BCE, bringing his adopted son, Mahakuli Mahatissa to power.The illustration is from a painting by Rajni Perera, one of Sri Lanka's leading contemporary artists; based in Canada.The recording is read by David Swarbrick; and all disappointing, inexact and incomplete renderings of Sinhala and Tamil names are entirely of this own unintentional and apologetic making, for which your forgiveness is asked.The Ceylon Press currently produces three podcast shows.1. The Jungle Diaries (www.theceylonpress.com/thejunglediariespodcast)2. The History of Sri Lanka (www.theceylonpress.com/thehistoryofsrilankapodcast)3. Poetry from the Jungle (www.theceylonpress.com/poetryfromthejunglepodcast)
1,500,000 BCE to 543 BCE. “Wide open and unguarded stand our gates.” Thomas Bailey Aldrich. Adam's Bridge was a bridge crying out for repair, even before the great storm of 1470 shattered it forever. Unpredictable, and uneven, sailing had long been the better option. But for Sri Lanka's first settlers – who had still to master boats – a short walk from India was all it took. And walking was what the island's first settlers did: Palaeolithic and later Mesolithic migrants from the Indian mainland who simply strolled across, their effortless trek belying the extreme complexity that hundreds of years later would colour Sri Lanka's relationship with India – from war, intermarriage, Buddhism itself - and the borrowing of kings. Since Jurassic times, some two hundred million years ago, Sri Lanka had, as part of India, broken off from the great Gondwana sub content that had been formed in the Triassic era a hundred million years earlier. Adam's Bridge was becoming the sole point of access to the far south; but by 7,500 BCE it was almost unwalkable. Beguiling hints of these earliest inhabitants are still only just emerging. Excavations conducted in 1984 by Prof. S. Krishnarajah near Point Pedro, north east of Jaffna revealed Stone Age tools and axes that are anything from 500,000 to 1.6 million years old. As the fossil record demonstrates, the land they inhabited was ecologically richer and more dramatic than it is today, teaming not simply with a plenitude of the wildlife still found in Sri Lanka today, but with hippopotamus and rhinoceros as well. Hundreds of millennia later, one of their Stone Age descendants was to leave behind the most anatomically perfect modern human remains yet uncovered on the island. Balangoda Man, as he was to be named, was found in the hills south of Horton Plains inland from Matara, a short walk from the birthplace of Sirimavo Bandaranaike. His complete 30,000 year old skeleton is bewitchingly life-like. Probing his remains, scientists have concluded that Balangoda Man and his heirs were eager consumers of raw meat, from snails and snakes to elephants. And artistic too, as evidenced in the ornamental fish bones, sea shell beads and pendants left behind. All across the island, similar finds are being uncovered, pointing to a sparce but widespread population of hunter gathers, living in caves – such as Batadomba, Aliga and Beli-lena in Kitulgala. The tools and weapons found in these caves, made of quartz crystal and flint, are well in advance of such technological developments in Europe, which date from around 10,000 BCE compared to 29,000 BCE in Sri Lanka. Later evidence indicates that Stone Age hunter-gathers then made the transition to a more settled lifestyle, growing, at least by 17,000-15,000 BCE, oats, and barley on what is now Horton Plains, thousands of years before it even began in that fulcrum of early global civilization - Mesopotamia. Astonishingly, their direct descendants, the Veddas, are still alive today, making up less than 1% of the island's total population, an aboriginal community with strong animist beliefs that has, against the odds, retained a distinctive identity. Leaner, and darker than modern Sri Lankans, their original religion - cherishing demons, and deities - was associated with the dead and the certainty that the spirits of dead relatives can cause good or bad outcomes. Their language, unique to them, is now almost – but not quite - extinct. And perhaps it was the Vedda or their spirits that Fa-Hsien, the 5th century CE traveller had in mind when he conjured up his fable of early Sri Lanka in his book “A Record of Buddhistic Kingdoms:” “The country originally had no human inhabitants, but was occupied only by spirits and nagas, with which merchants of various countries carried on a trade. When the trafficking was taking place, the spirits did not show themselves. They simply set forth their precious commodities, with labels of the price attached to them; while the merchants made their purchases according to the price; and took the things away.“ Fa-Hsien's colourful travelogue shows just how readily the early origins of the country depend on myth and fable. Centuries passed before there are finally some tantalising hints of the Stone Ages' transition into the Iron Age, and with it more evidence of new waves of colonization into the island from India. As new travellers arrived from the sub-continent, Balangoda man and his ancestors were pushed into the more inaccessible parts of the country, especially the rainforests, a small part of which, Sinharaja Forest Reserve, miraculously survives in its original state today. Using the progressive technology of the iron age, the new colonists were able to clear land and plant crops, mine for metals like copper, and even establish pearl fisheries. By 1500 BCE there is evidence of cinnamon being exported to the ancient Egyptians. A series of major excavations in Anuradhapura dating to around 900 BCE has uncovered abundant treasure including artefacts that show the use of iron, the domestication of horses and cattle, the use of high-quality pottery and possibly even the cultivation of rice. The settlement was large – even by today's standards: 4 hectares. Other equally large settlements undoubtedly wait still to be found. One that has already been unearthed and studied are the burial mounds at Ibbankutuwa near Dambulla that date back to around 1,000 BCE. Here a wealth of pottery vessels interned with the dead contain ornaments of bronze and copper, beads and, most interesting of all, such stones as carnelian and onyx that could only have come to the island from India. Other such sites exist in places like Padiyagampola and Jamburagala in Yala. By the early 7th century BCE evidence comes of the use of the Brahmi script using a language that is an early form of Sinhala. Inventive, adaptive, increasingly sophisticated - urban living was arriving – whether as an independent island-wide development or because of the rapid spread of urbanised culture from India still using Adam's Bridge as a convenient thoroughfare, is still the stuff of impassioned academic debate. Either way, the evolutionary ball was rolling like never before. From urban living, came city states. And into one of these, in 543 BCE , stepped the Indian Prince, Vijaya. The illustration is from a painting by Rajni Perera, one of Sri Lanka's leading contemporary artists; based in Canada.The recording is read by David Swarbrick; and all disappointing, inexact and incomplete renderings of Sinhala and Tamil names are entirely of this own unintentional and apologetic making, for which your forgiveness is asked. The Ceylon Press currently produces three podcast shows.1. The Jungle Diaries (www.theceylonpress.com/thejunglediariespodcast)2. The History of Sri Lanka (www.theceylonpress.com/thehistoryofsrilankapodcast)3. Poetry from the Jungle (www.theceylonpress.com/poetryfromthejunglepodcast)
SBS Sinhala Sports Journalist Rangana Seneviratne is bringing you the latest information on the sports arenas in Australia and Sri Lanka. - මේ සතියේ ඕස්ට්රේලියාවේ සහ ශ්රී ලංකාවේ ක්රීඩා ක්ෂේස්ත්ර වල අලුත්ම තොරතුරු රැගෙන ඔබ හමුවට එන SBS සිංහල සේවයේ ක්රීඩා මාධ්යවේදී රංගන සෙනෙවිරත්න ගෙන එන 'සතියේ ක්රීඩා විග්රහය'ට සවන්දෙන්න.
Dominic and Mark discuss the last week in the Lanka Premier League,They discuss if the wheels fallen off Jaffna Kings, what makes Dambulla so hard to beat, is Hasaranga a future Sri Lanka captain and if Angelo Mathews should return to the T20 national team
Our Podcast covers global sporting events on a daily basis and also provides a weekly sport news round up, which provides our listeners the option of clicking a button, listening in and staying attuned to global sport news at their convenience.
Our Podcast covers global sporting events on a daily basis and also provides a weekly sport news round up, which provides our listeners the option of clicking a button, listening in and staying attuned to global sport news at their convenience.
Our Podcast covers global sporting events on a daily basis and also provides a weekly sport news round up, which provides our listeners the option of clicking a button, listening in and staying attuned to global sport news at their convenience.
Our Podcast covers global sporting events on a daily basis and also provides a weekly sport news round up, which provides our listeners the option of clicking a button, listening in and staying attuned to global sport news at their convenience.
Our Podcast covers global sporting events on a daily basis and also provides a weekly sport news round up, which provides our listeners the option of clicking a button, listening in and staying attuned to global sport news at their convenience.
Colombo Stars Fail To Shine Dambulla Giants shot down the Colombo Stars by 18 runs after making a rousing 195 in their LPL match at the Premadasa Stadium in Colombo on Wednesday. Click play to listen to the entire story. Brought to you by SportCast.news To learn how to use podcasts, visit AceWebmaster.com/podcasts #Cricket #CricketMatch #CricketHighlights #CricketOnTheGo #Sports #SportsOnTheGo #CricketAudio #CricketPodcast #LankaPremierLeague #LPL
Jaffna Kings Feast On Dambulla Giants Jaffna Kings had one of the easiest wins in T20 cricket as they beat the Dambulla Giants by eight wickets with more than seven overs to spare in their one-sided LPL match at the Premadasa Stadium in Colombo on Tuesday. Click play to listen to the entire story. Brought to you by SportCast.news To learn how to use podcasts, visit AceWebmaster.com/podcasts #Cricket #CricketMatch #CricketHighlights #CricketOnTheGo #Sports #SportsOnTheGo #CricketAudio #CricketPodcast #LankaPremierLeague #LPL
Dambulla Giants Take Down Kandy Warriors A powerful start to Dambulla's innings saw the Giants finish at 190 for 7 before restricting the Kandy Warriors to 170-8, to win by 20 runs. Click play to listen to the entire story. Brought to you by SportCast.news To learn how to use podcasts, visit AceWebmaster.com/podcasts #Cricket #CricketMatch #CricketHighlights #CricketOnTheGo #Sports #SportsOnTheGo #CricketAudio #CricketPodcast #LankaPremierLeague #LPL
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En este nuevo programa del podcast Hola, Mundo hablamos del daño que genera el turismo descontrolado. ¿Hay esperanza?En este programa podrás encontrar: • Mapa sonoro: desde la estación de tren de Suzhou, China• Juntando palabras: El despiadado ciclo turístico• Mapa sonoro: desde un colegio en Luana Prabang, Laos• Liarse la manta a la cabeza by Chapka: Cassandra de Pecol• Cuando el destino no es el motivo: Fierita Catalano (@fieritacatalano) nos habla de cómo viaja por el mundo en función de lo que va votando su comunidad en @decidilo• Mapa sonoro: escuchando la radio en un bar de Dambulla, Sri Lanka• La Cara B de los viajes organizados y de los viajes improvisados• Lo que nos hubiera gustado saber antes de… empezar a viajar.Si te está gustando esto de escucharnos y vernos haciendo podcast, comparte y dale al boca a boca. No te quedes con las ganas y suscríbete en tu plataforma favorita: apple podcast, ivoox, spotify, castbox o google podcast. Y si eres muy de YouTube porque además quieres "verlo", suscríbete a nuestro canal. Aquí puedes ver la primera temporada: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RrIXXcLVrK8&list=PLpFNz2S2UB5yh5MOOq4UlA9BHnRI1W1Y2&t=0sAquí, la segunda temporada: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7DsYdnt4aLg&list=PLpFNz2S2UB5yr7Jw3JYXoIioACqSNjFKF&t=0sAquí, la tercera: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLpFNz2S2UB5xA666zUc_da-d_n3VLMYzbUna vez más, gracias a Chapka que nos apoya en esta nueva aventura y que por otra parte, te ofrecen un 7% de descuento con el código MUNDO al contratar tu seguro con ellos en: https://www.chapkadirect.es/?app=cd_aqr Quizás también te pueda interesar ver alguno de nuestros cortometrajes o documentales viajeros: - El síndrome del eterno viajero I: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7dKGcg_jBhw&t=0s- El síndrome del eterno viajero II: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uq5uQCFrNGw&t=4s- Hola, Mundo (el documental): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rGSLv0PjgF0&t=1164s- Anoniman, detrás de los carteles: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hjTnlejAgcI&t=52s Si te gusta lo que hacemos, puede que te gusten nuestros libros. Son “Tontunas Viajeras”, “Algo que recordar viajando con mochila" y "Algo que recordar viajando con bebé" y los puedes conseguir en: https://algoquerecordar.com/posts-destacados/siete-anos-en-dos-libros/ y https://algoquerecordar.com/ocurrencias/libros/tontunasviajeras-el-libro/A nosotros puedes seguirnos en nuestro blog algoquerecordar.com o en todas las redes con @algoqrecordar ¡Hasta el próximo programa! Lucy&Rubén
Turisme og overturisme. En mini podcast, som blev lavet foran templet i Dambulla midt inde i Sri Lanka. Den opstod spontant, men jeg vil gerne dele den med jer, som et rejsetip, til dig der gerne vil væk fra turistområderne og få autentiske oplevelser. Noget jeg virkelig har fundet ud af ved at rejse så meget, det er, at bare fordi det står på 'must do'-listen, så er det ikke sikkert, det er det værd, når det vrimler med turister. For mig, drukner et sted, når det er overfyldt. Så er jeg sådan set ligeglad med om, jeg burde have set Panama kanalens sluser, verdens syv vidundere, eller Eiffeltårnet i Paris. Ja bevares, det er smukt, men det giver mig ikke en fløjtende fis. Der er intet autentisk over det. Det rører mig ikke. Hør mere i podcasten, hvad vores unger mener om emnet, og del gerne dit allerbedste rejsetips her med os andre. Tak fordi du lytter. Del gerne i dit netværk. Du kan også støtte mit arbejde ved at smide en 10 krone i kassen. Det sætter jeg pris på. TAK God lytning.
Rob Key, Nasser Hussain, Ian Ward and the Evening Standard's Will Macpherson talk social media, pushy parents and more on a Sri Lankan road trip from Dambulla to Kandy. Tweet @SkyCricket with topics you'd like the boys to cover in the next episode.
England won a rain-affected second one-day international against Sri Lanka in Dambulla to go 1-0 up in the series, with live commentary on talkSPORT2.Mark Nicholas, Darren Gough and Gareth Batty review the action and are joined by the England captain Eoin Morgan. For information regarding your data privacy, visit acast.com/privacy
Jon Norman is joined by a cast of thousands in the build up to the 2nd ODI in Dambulla. With a spiritual odyssey to the nearby Buddhist caves completed the team reach the stadium and get reaction from Joe Root about Shane Warne's claims it would be beneficial for England that he stepped down as captain. For information regarding your data privacy, visit acast.com/privacy
England's first one-day international against Sri Lanka was abandoned after 15 overs because of rain in Dambulla, we brought you the action live on talkSPORT2. After play was called off we were joined by the England captain Eoin Morgan and opener Jonny Bairstow. We also got the post-match thoughts of Mark Nicholas, Darren Gough and Mark Butcher! For information regarding your data privacy, visit acast.com/privacy
Nasser Hussain, Ian Ward and Rob Key preview England's tour of Sri Lanka ahead of the first one-day international in Dambulla on Wednesday
The talkSPORT team have arrived in Dambulla and today Jon Norman is joined by Gareth Batty, Jarrod Kimber and a bandaged Andrew McKenna. You will also hear from Mark Wood and Tom Curran.Calamity also struck one member of the team. So who was it who injured himself in front of the watching England team whilst trying to take a catch? For information regarding your data privacy, visit acast.com/privacy
För tredje och sista gången besöker Resdamm Sri Lanka. Denna gång tar vi oss an den kulturella triangeln med höjdpunkter som bestigandet av den mytomspunna klippan Sigiriya samt grottemplet Dambulla.
The Amateur Traveler talks to Karl Anders who has traveled to Sri Lanka 8 times after striking up a friendship with the late author Arthur C. Clarke who settled there. Karl takes us on a vital tour of Sri Lanka from the capital of Colombo to the beautiful beaches to some of the archeological ruins at Dambulla, Sigiriya, Anuradhapura and Polonnaruwa. Dambulla is notable for some of the cave murals. Sigiriya is particularly notable for the rock fortress, ruins of a palace high on this rock outcropping and again some of the cave murals. Anuradhapura and Polonnaruwa both also have numerous stupas (a mound-like structure containing Buddhist relics). The inland high mountains are home to the tea country, plentiful tea fields and numerous tea factories. Karl recommends the Galle Face Hotel and some of the other inexpensive hotels left over from the British era. He also recommends hiring a car and driver/interpreter and avoiding the traffic and public transportation. We also talk about the recent civil war.
Amateur Traveler Podcast (iTunes enhanced) | travel for the love of it
The Amateur Traveler talks to Karl Anders who has traveled to Sri Lanka 8 times after striking up a friendship with the late author Arthur C. Clarke who settled there. Karl takes us on a vital tour of Sri Lanka from the capital of Colombo to the beautiful beaches to some of the archeological ruins at Dambulla, Sigiriya, Anuradhapura and Polonnaruwa. Dambulla is notable for some of the cave murals. Sigiriya is particularly notable for the rock fortress, ruins of a palace high on this rock outcropping and again some of the cave murals. Anuradhapura and Polonnaruwa both also have numerous stupas (a mound-like structure containing Buddhist relics). The inland high mountains are home to the tea country, plentiful tea fields and numerous tea factories. Karl recommends the Galle Face Hotel and some of the other inexpensive hotels left over from the British era. He also recommends hiring a car and driver/interpreter and avoiding the traffic and public transportation. We also talk about the recent civil war.
The Amateur Traveler talks to Karl Anders who has traveled to Sri Lanka 8 times after striking up a friendship with the late author Arthur C. Clarke who settled there. Karl takes us on a vital tour of Sri Lanka from the capital of Colombo to the beautiful beaches to some of the archeological ruins at Dambulla, Sigiriya, Anuradhapura and Polonnaruwa. Dambulla is notable for some of the cave murals. Sigiriya is particularly notable for the rock fortress, ruins of a palace high on this rock outcropping and again some of the cave murals. Anuradhapura and Polonnaruwa both also have numerous stupas (a mound-like structure containing Buddhist relics). The inland high mountains are home to the tea country, plentiful tea fields and numerous tea factories. Karl recommends the Galle Face Hotel and some of the other inexpensive hotels left over from the British era. He also recommends hiring a car and driver/interpreter and avoiding the traffic and public transportation. We also talk about the recent civil war.