Saturday, March 03, 2007

Sights and scenes of Maharagama Town Sri Lanka





Download Free Sinhala Mp3

Goto this site to download Sinhala Mp3 :


www.freesinhalamp3.com


And if you have classical sinhala songs please kind enough to upload them.

Thanks and enjoy!

Thursday, March 01, 2007

Glimpse of Naa Oyana Aranya










Neth FM

Sinhala Online Radio














To download latest softwares and other stuff

To download latest softwares and other stuff goto this blog

Behind Scene of Making EE Department Video at University of Moratuwa Sri Lanka

Behind Scene of Making EE Department Video at University of Moratuwa Sri Lanka

Director Mr.L.Meegahapola and co-director Mr. Anjula De Silva are working hardly on making the department video with Moratuwa university video team for the electrical engineering department. This is a shooting took place on 28th February 2007 at the power electronic laboratory in the electrical department. In this video Mr. B. Jayasekara is conducting a laboratory class section on brush less DC motors for undergraduate students.

This was taken under 176*144 resolution by a Samsung X700 mobile phone.


Nuwara Eliya

Nuwara Eliya (Tamil நுவரேலியா)(pronounced approximately /nuːrəliːjə/), meaning "the city in the open plain (table land)in the hills", is a town in Sri Lanka. It is at an altitude of 1,990 m (6,128 ft) in the central highlands, and is overlooked by Pidurutalagala, the highest mountain in Sri Lanka.

Due to the high altitude, Nuwara Eliya has a much cooler climate than the lowlands of Sri Lanka, with a mean annual temperature of 16 °C. In the winter months it is quite cold at night, and there can even be frost. although it rapidly warms up as the tropical sun climbs higher during the day.

The town really comes alive in April for the Sinhalese and Tamil New Year, and it is difficult to find accommodation as Sri Lankans holiday in the region during this period.

One of the distinctive features of Nuwara Eliya's countryside is the widespread growing of vegetables, fruit and flowers usually associated with temperate Europe. "Little England" has a somewhat incongruous conjunction of terraces growing leeks, beetroot and roses, interspersed with tea bushes on the steeper slopes.




Beauty at Horton Place (MAHAELIYA)
































20 miles (32 km) from Nuwara Eliya via Ambewela and Pattipola, is the Horton Plains only 3160 hectares in extent. Known to Sri Lankans as Mahaeliya, it became Horton Plains after Sir Robert Horton, British Governor from 1831- 1837.

Horton Plains became a Nature Reserve in 1969 and upgraded as a National Park in 1988 due to its unique watershed and bio-diversity values. Its flora has high level of endemism. The hills are covered with diverse wet low evergreen forest with even large trees grown flattened to the ground on the higher windswept slopes. Horton Plains harbours 52 species of resident birds and 11 species of migrant birds. More then 2,000 to 3,000 Sambhur, Bear Monkey, Leopard, Barking Deer, Giant Squirrel, Fishing Cat, Wild Boar and Hares roam in the forests and grasslands but only seldom they could be seen other than the Sambhur in the evening and morning.

Two escarpments-“World’s End” and “Little World’s End” falling from the Horton Plains 1000 feet and 3000 feet respectively, to the land below and the Baker’s Falls are places you should visit. This is the only Park where visitors could walk on their own on the designated tracks

Sunday, February 25, 2007

Saturday, February 24, 2007

Dunhinda Fall Sri Lanka with a rainbow

Dunhinda Fall Sri Lanka

Dunhinda Fall Sri Lanka






























To see the breathtaking beauty of Dunhinda falls(210 feet), you have to travel about 5 Km from Badulla along the Mahiyangana road, and walk for another 2 Km (trekking) away from the main road.






Dunhinda is the pride of Badulla and Sri Lanka's loveliest and most dramatic waterfall. This is a part of the "Maha weli" river system, carrying down the waters of Badulu oya. According to the folk history of Badulla, there was a time when the whole area, which is now the Badulla valley, was inundated due to the river being blocked by a Wild creeper which had grown where the Dunhinda begins it's drop. The king of that time gave a commission to a subject to have the creeper removed and save the valley. The task took three months and saw the birth of the waterfall and the safety of the valley.

How To make a simple looping paper airplane

With a little tweaking and practice, you can get this plane to fly back to you. To do this, give it some up elevator as shown. To throw, aim a little above level and launch the plane rolled 90 degrees to one side so it loops sideways and, hopefully, levels out flying back to you. Have fun.

How To make a good paper airplane

I designed this a few years ago and this is my favorite plane. I call this the X-Plane because it is great for experimentation and learning aerodynamics. You can move more weight to the fuselage by varying where the central flap is located, speeding the plane up. You can play with the vertical tail sizes and configurations. You can even flip the main wing folds from the bottom to the top to see how this changes the lift. This design usually needs some flaps to balance it out properly. Enjoy

Sunday, October 29, 2006

Safari trip to Udawalawa

Recently I and some friends went on a safari trip to southern part of Sri Lanka. It was a marvelous journey which took around three whole days and we managed sneak through beautiful jungles in Ceylon. On the first day we went to Udawalawa National Park where large numbers of Sri Lankan elephants inhibit. We had 75 elephant sights and most of the time they were in a herd of about 10-15 elephants. We could hire a safari jeep from the entrance and it costs us 2500LKR for the ride which lasted about 2hours. We started at around 10.30pm in the morning and at that time most of the elephants are on the move to their feeding places. There were two very little cute infant elephants and according to our Guide Mr.Siripala from Wild life authority they were about 3 days old. They were guarded by elder female elephants in the herd and also their mother elephants. The herd was very alert on the visitors and elephants in the herd were trying to put the baby elephants in the middle of them so visitors like us could not hurt them.

…..to be continued

Monday, December 19, 2005

About Myself

I am Kasun Kavinda and I live in Sri Lanka(Latitude -6 55 N Longitude -79 52 E).
I am 23 years old male and I graduated from the University of Moratuwa as
an Electrical Engineer in 2005 September.
I am currently working at the same university I graduated because I want to serve
the institute that has given me the knowledge.
I would like to continue my post graduate studies on one of the areas of
Electrical machines, Power electronics or Control systems
.