Pottuvil Point

Pottuvil Point Pottuvil Point Pottuvil Point

Small, hollow right-hand reef break about 6km north of Arugam Bay. Pottuvil Point is a playful right-hand, sand-bottom point and on a good south swell, the wave begins up the point and can run close to the shore for almost a kilometre. The wave breaks so close to shore that you can simply step off onto the sand and run back around the point. Pottuvil Point is generally a few feet smaller than Arugam Bay but still offers some nice walls and barrel sections on bigger swells. It is even rideable at one foot on a longboard.

Pottuvil Point Pottuvil Point Pottuvil Point
【LK94009731: Text by Lakpura™. Images by Google, copyright(s) reserved by original authors.】

About Ampara District

Ampara is belongs to the Eastern Province of Sri Lanka. It is a remote city on the East Coast of Sri Lanka, about 360 km from the capital city of Colombo. Ampara is the largest paddy harvesting province in the country, and has the Indian Ocean on the east coast of Sri Lanka as a fisheries resource. Most of the civilians are Sinhala, while Tamils and Sri Lankan Moors also live in the coastal parts of the district.

About Eastern Province

The Eastern Province is one of the 9 provinces of Sri Lanka. The provinces have existed since the 19th century but they didn't have any legal status until 1987 when the 13th Amendment to the 1978 Constitution of Sri Lanka established provincial councils. Between 1988 and 2006 the province was temporarily merged with the Northern Province to form the North-East Province. The capital of the province is Trincomalee. The Eastern province's population was 1,460,939 in 2007. The province is the most diverse in Sri Lanka, both ethnically and religiously.

Eastern province has an area of 9,996 square kilometers (3,859.5 sq mi).The province is surrounded by the Northern Province to the north, the Bay of Bengal to the east, the Southern Province to the south, and the Uva, Central and North Central provinces to the west. The province's coast is dominated by lagoons, the largest being Batticaloa lagoon, Kokkilai lagoon, Upaar Lagoon and Ullackalie Lagoon.