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Package Duration : 8 Days (Ex-Colombo)
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Sigiriya - 1
Night, Kandy - 2 Nights, Nuwara Eliya - 1 Night, Yala - 1 Night,
Galle - 1 Night, Colombo - 1 Night |
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Programme |
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Arrive Colombo Airport. After completing the
formalities proceed towards Sigiriya (140 kms.- 3 Hrs.)
Enroute visit the fishing village in Negombo which is the
center of the island’s fishing community. It is largely Roman
Catholic by faith, with huge imposing churches down almost every
street. The sea & the catamarans are the backdrop to the Negombo
scenery and Pinnawala, the elephant Orphanage. This orphanage
was established to feed nurse & house young elephants found
abandoned by their mothers. Often the young ones fall into pits and
ravines in their request for water during drought period. This is
the home to some 60 or more elephant orphans. A place you will
really enjoy and never forget. Most orphans are accustomed to their
curious human visitors are harmless. Started in 1972 the Elephant
Orphanage was relocated to at the present site in 1975 Bathing time
at Ma Oya just in front of the orphanage is sharp at 10 am and 2 pm.
Feeding time is about and hour earlier. Arrive Sigiriya. Check in
the hotel. Night halt at Sigiriya.
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In the early morning, visit to Sigiriya Rock
(the most significant feature of the Rock would have been the Lion
staircase leading to the palace garden on the summit. Based on the
ideas described in some of the graffiti, this Lion staircase could
be visualised as a gigantic figure towering majestically against the
granite cliff, facing north, bright coloured, and awe-inspiring.
Through the open mouth of the Lion had led the covered staircase
built of bricks and timber and a tiled roof. All that remains now
are the two colossal paws and a mass of brick masonry that surround
the ancient limestone steps and the cuts and groves on the rock face
give an idea of the size and shape of the lion figure. Though traces
of plaster and pigments occur all over this area, there are only two
pockets of paintings surviving in the depressions of the rock face,
about a 100 meters above the ground level. These paintings represent
the earliest surviving examples of a Sri Lanka school of classical
realism, already fully evolved by the 5th century, when these
paintings had been made. Earlier the Sigiri style had been
considered as belonging to the Central Indian school of Ajanta, but
later considered as specifically different from the Ajanta
paintings. The ladies depicted in the paintings have been variously
identified as Apsaras (heavenly maidens), as ladies of Kasyapa’s
court and as Lightening Princess and Cloud Damsels. There are also
remains of paintings in some of the caves at the foot of the rock.
Of special significance is the painting on the roof of the Cobra
Hood Cave. The cave with its unique shape dates from the pre-christian
era. The painting combines geometrical shapes and motifs with a free
and complex rendering of characteristic volute or whorl motifs. It
is nothing less than a masterpiece of expressionist painting.
After breakfast, leave for Kandy. En-route visit the Rock Cave
Temple of Dambulla (16 kms.). (dedicated as a UNESCO World
Heritage site in 1991, Dambulla Cave Temple (or the Golden Temple of
Dambulla) is the largest and best-preserved cave temple complex in
Sri Lanka. Situated in Dambulla, Sri Lanka in a region which
includes more than 80 caves, Dambulla Cave Temple features 5
well-preserved caves, each of which houses ancient statues of the
Buddha and historic artwork depicting the Buddha's life. The
Dambulla Cave Temple grounds also features a functioning Buddhist
Monastery dating back to the third and second centuries B.C. Built
at the base of a 150 meter rock face during a long period stretching
from the first century B.C. to 1250 A.D, the Dambulla Cave Temple is
comprised of five distinct caves, each of which functions as a
shrine room. While all five of the Dambulla Cave Temple caves are
worth exploring, these three stand out: Cave of the Divine King: the
first of the Dambulla Caves, the Cave of the Divine King is home to
a 14 meter tall Buddha statue carved out rock. Cave of the Great
Kings: the second of the Dambulla Caves, the Cave of the Great Kings
contains 56 statues of the Buddha. Great New Monastery: the third of
the Dambulla Caves, the Great New Monastery contains 50 statues of
the Buddha and statue of King Kirti Sri Rajasinha. During the King's
rule from 1747-1782, the ceiling and walls Great New Monastery were
painted in the traditional Kandy style of the times.). Then visit
the Nalanda Gedige (20 kms.) situated at the south of
the Dambulla Temple, about one kilometer east of the A9, is the
attractive Nalanda Gedige. The unusual image house was transferred
to this spot near the town of Nalanda when the Bowatenne Tank, which
is part of the Mahaweli Ganga Program, was built. The small building
is designed like a Hindu temple with a mandapa, an entrance hall
(originally roofed), a short passage to a bare cello, and an
ambulatory round the holy center. There is no sign of Hindu gods,
however, and the temple is said to have been used by Buddhists. This
is one of the earliest buildings of stone constructed in Ceylon. The
richly decorated facade sections, laboriously reassembled in 1975,
are predominantly in the South Indian style, and may have originated
in the eighth to 11th centuries, but cannot be precisely dated.
However, the god Kubera appears on the south side of the tympanum
over the sanctuary, and this is a feature only to be found in Sri
Lanka. The temple, nestled in a marvelous setting, is hard to tear
yourself away from. In addition to this, the most important thing in
Nalanda Gedige is its relation to Ravana’s son Indrajith. According
to Ramayana itself, Indrajith conducts a yaga to retrieve a
mysterious and powerful vehicle that ever existed, granted to him by
Brahma. But the yaga was disturbed and Indrajith was killed in that
place. There is an unidentified statue found in Nalanda gedige by
the Archaeology Department of Sri Lanka. Its appearance has no
similarity with a human being but it shows more similarities to an
extra terrestrial being. Hence, it could be speculated that
Indrajith had called assistance from extra terrestrial beings and
tried to obtain one of their aircraft which was such a mysterious
and powerful vehicle. Even Ramayana itself admits that it was a kind
of a mysterious vehicle granted to him by Brahma. Such is the yore
and enigma of Nalanda Gedige. There is even a carving of Prince
Indrajith at the top of the Nalanda pagoda which has been built in a
later period to honour him. According to studies, Nalanda Gedige is
the place where Indrajith carried his sacred yaga to obtain that
precious aircraft) Thereafter visit to Spice
garden & Batik factory in Matale. Finally proceed towards Kandy
(26 kms.) Arrive at hotel in Kandy. Check-in the hotel. Night
halt at Kandy. |
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After breakfast, visit the city of Kandy. The
most famous landmark of Kandy is its lake, in the center of the
city. Udawatte-kele is a nature reserve surrounded by city. Further
visit the Peradeniya Royal Botanical Gardens, the finest of
its kind in Asia, the largest of the botanical gardens of Sri Lanka,
couldn't be better located. In the Mediterranean climate of Kandy,
the gateway to the Central Highlands, the Gardens, at an elevation
of 500 meters above sea-level, were tightly bounded on three sides
by a loop of River Mahaweli (Great sandy river), the largest river
of Sri Lanka. More than 4000 species include indigenous and
introduced plants. This garden is best known for it’s collection of
orchids the largest in Asia. Peradeniya is believed to take its
exotic name from Sinhalese names Pera (guava) and Deniya (a plain).
The name also reveals, although Guava is not indigenous to Sri
Lanka, introduction of the fruit to the island and cultivation had
occurred even prior to the era of British Colonialists in Ceylon.
The Gardens date back to the Kandyan kingdom, when they were used as
royal pleasure grounds. However, it was soon after the British
seized the Kandyan Kingdom that they were established in 1821. The
Gardens are elegantly landscaped over 150 hectares of beautifully
undulating grounds). Thereafter visit to Gem shop Kandy is
also famous for its shopping, gems and jewellery, handicrafts,
batiks, Kandiyan sarees etc. In the evening,
visit Dalada Maligawa (The Temple of the Tooth Relic). The
Sri Dalada Maligawa or The Temple of the Sacred Tooth Relic is a
temple built in 16th century within the royal palace complex which
houses the only surviving relic of Buddha, a tooth, which is
venerated by Buddhists. The relic has played an important role in
the local politics since ancient times, it's believed that whoever
holds the relic holds the governance of the country, which caused
the ancient kings to protect it with great effort. Kandy was the
capital of the Sinhalese Kings from 1592 to 1815, fortified by the
terrain of the mountains and the difficult approach. The city is a
world heritage site declared by UNESCO, in part due to the temple.
Monks of the two chapters of Malwatte and Asgiriya conduct daily
ritual worship in the inner chamber of the temple, in annual
rotation. They conduct these services three times a day: at dawn, at
noon and in the evening. On Wednesdays there is a symbolic bathing
of the Sacred Relic with an herbal preparation made from scented
water and flagrant flowers, called Nanumura Mangallaya. This holy
water is believed to contain healing powers and is distributed among
those present. Tooth Relic of the Buddha brought to Sri Lanka from
the Kalinga province in ancient India in the 4th century AD. Several
building have been added to the temple complex by successive rulers,
the latest being the Golden Canopy over the inner shrine where the
Tooth Relic is placed). Night halt at Kandy. |
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After breakfast, leave for Nuwara Eliya (76
kms.) the center of hill country, En-route visit Ramboda
Temple (Sri Bhakta Hanuman Temple, on these hills of Ramboda
where Hanuman was searching for Sitadevi. Chinmaya mission of Sri
Lanka built a temple with Hanuman as the presiding deity. On every
full moon day special pooja”s are conducted and witnessed by
thousands of devotees. The image of Lord Hanuman is 16 feet) and a
tea plantation and witness the manufacture of the world famous
‘’Ceylon tea‘’ at Makwoods Tea factory. Arrive Nuwara Eliya.
Check in the hotel.
Nuwara Eliya, also called as a Little England, is the most famous
hill resort in Sri Lanka, is located at the altitude of 2000 metres.
Land of the renowned Ceylon tea, the waving mountains of Nuwara
Eliya are carpeted by green tea plantations, punctuated with
bublisng streams and waterfalls. This picturesque town is overlooked
by Pidurutalagala, the highest mountain in Sri Lanka. This town is
picturesquely located on the shores of Lake Gregory in a prime tea
growing district.. Set up and developed as an English Village and
Health Resort by the 19th century British colonial settlers, its
older buildings such as the Post Office, Holy Trinity Church, the
Grand Hotel, Vintage Hotels and Houses and the Golf Club have old
English Architecture, pretty flower gardens and great nostalgic
charm. The sightseeing highlights are the Victoria Park, the Nuwara
Eliya Golf Course, the Hakgala Botanical Gardens.which has a good
collection of sub tropical and mountain flora.
After an evening tea, visit- Sita Amman Temple (this
temple is located at Ashok Van, which is believed to be the exact
place where Sita was held captive by the demon-king Ravana in the
Lanka of the epic, Ramayana. Myth has it that Sita, the wife of King
Rama, was imprisoned in the Ashoka forests of the region. The temple
trustees believe that this is no myth and that Sita's imprisonment
at this spot is a historical fact). Spend the evening walking
in the cool climate. Night halt at Nuwara Eliya. |
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After breakfast, leave for Tissamaharama Region
Stop at Ella to admire the magnificent view. & the sacred city of
Kataragama (124 kms.) (Kataragama a popular pilgrimage
destination frequented by adherents of all religions in Sri Lanka.
The main shrine devoted to Skanda popularly described in eulogies as
God having six faces and twelve arms whose assistance is sought for
worldly gain. The history of the shrine dates back to 2 century BC.
The annual procession held in July or August is the main event of
the shrine with fire walkers and Kawadi dancers. Offering to the got
are made at 4.30 am 10.30 am and 6.30 pm daily)
In the afternoon take a safari in Yala park by jeep.
The Elephant is undoubtedly the best known attraction at Yala, seen
in small & large herds. Herds of spotted deer are seen all over the
park. Monkeys-the pinkish rhesus and the Grey-faced Langur Monkey
live and play on the tree-tops and the ground below. Wild buffalo &
wild boar could give you a good surprise & the sight of a leopard
sunning itself or drinking water at a water hole could be memorable
experience .the peacock is easily the most famous of the birds at
Yala. The painted stork, many varieties of heron, the spoonbill, the
bee-eater, parakeets, and king-fisher & wood pecker are some of the
birds can be seen in the park. Arrive at hotel. Night halt at Yala.
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After breakfast, leave for Galle (140 kms.-
4 Hrs.). Via- Matara. Reach Galle. Check-in the hotel.
Galle is the capital of the southern province is a city with a
colourful history. UNESCO declared World Heritage Site the
magnificent Dutch fort is the most popular attraction of the town.
300 year old Dutch atmosphere is still very much alive around the
fort and amidst its many historical buildings not invaded by the
skyscrapers. The beautiful beach of Unawatuna is just 6 kms. south
east of the city centre. The southern coastal belt is the most
popular among the tourists and comes to life mainly from October
through April when the monsoon moves northeast and the sea becomes
calm with blue skies. The earliest European administrative centre of
Sri Lanka was the major port and the largest city until the British
shifted the port to Colombo. The City of Galle had been the European
administrative centre over 4 centuries.
Visit Galle fort (this fort was built
first by the Portuguese, then modified by the Dutch during the 17th
century. Even today, after 400 years of existence, it looks new and
polished with reconstruction work done by Archaeological Department
of Sri Lanka. Today Sri Lankan government and many Dutch people who
still own some of the properties inside the fort are looking at
making this one of the modern wonders of the world. The Dutch fort
also known as Ramparts of Galle withstood the Boxing Day tsunami
which destroyed the Galle town. There are many Moor families who
live inside this fort along with Sinhalese, Dutch, English,
Portuguese and Germans. More details regarding the history of the
fort can be found at the visitors centre and at the Dutch period
museum inside the Fort. Today, the citizens of Dutch fort in Galle
are trying to make this a free port and a free trade zone. If
successful no taxes are levied on the companies and individuals who
reside inside the city) and Dutch Reformed Church Built by a
Dutch Army officer at the site of a previous Portuguese church and
completed in 1754 the church is situated close to the new entrance
to the fort. The church contains record of marriages since 1748 and
baptism from 1678. The other significant of the building id there
are no pillars inside the building and the weight of the roof is
supported by the walls). Night halt at Galle. |
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After breakfast, proceed towards Colombo
(116 kms.). Enroute Visit- Kosgoda Turtle Hatchery (45
kms. from Galle) (the Wild Life Protection Society of Sri Lanka
operates a famous turtle hatchery near Bentota. It was established
in 1981 to protect Sri Lanka's turtles from extinction. The hatchery
pays fishermen for eggs that they collect at night along the long
sandy beach. 10% of the hatchlings survive their journey to the sea
– 10 times the rate in the wild. Visitors can see and sometimes
handle new born and older turtles. The main laying season is from
October to April but some eggs and hatchlings can be found at
Kosgoda throughout the year. The hatchlings are usually released at
2-4 days old)
Further visit- Bentota (this famous golden beach is safe for
swimming and particularly popular with foreign tourists. But other
areas have strong currents, so take local advice. The name is said
to come from a demon “Bem” who ruled the local river (river bank = “tota”).
The area is famous for jewellery, and it is possible to visit the
moonstone mines. There are Buddhist temples at Kande Vihare (160 ft
tall) and Sri Kalyanarama Maha Viharaya, Kaluwamodera (made from
ancient marble) There is a range of water sports on offer. There are
boat trips on the Bentota and Maadu rivers, with visits to local
temples and cinnamon estates and great opportunities to observe the
local wildlife. A romantic river safari is the highlight of many
people’s holiday, but more active holidaymakers can try surfing,
skiing and diving on the reef at Akurela beach. The Wild Life
Protection Society of Sri Lanka operates a famous turtle hatchery
near Bentota. It was established in 1981 to protect Sri Lanka's
turtles from extinction. The hatchery pays fishermen for eggs that
they collect at night along the long sandy beach. 10% of the
hatchlings survive their journey to the sea – 10 times the rate in
the wild. Visitors can see and sometimes handle new born and older
turtles. The main laying season is from October to April but some
eggs and hatchlings can be found at Kosgoda throughout the year. The
hatchlings are usually released at 2-4 days old)
Arrive Colombo. Check-in the hotel.
Thereafter visit- Colombo Fort (originally a fort during the
Portuguese and Dutch periods but now a major commercial center of
the country and housing major offices, big hotels, some of the
better shops, airline offices, banks, main post office, immigration
office, travel agents and restaurants. Within Fort are several
places of tourist interest, which can be conveniently seen on foot),
Pettah (adjacent to Fort is Pettah-Colombo's leading bazaar
district. It has narrow cobbled streets lined with shops and street
stalls that offer the most fantastic bargains and the most
unimaginable range of goods varying from bright printed fabrics,
suitings, undergarments, children wear, footwear and handbags to
electrical goods, semi precious jewellery, watches, rare first
edition books, cutlery and other household items. Each criss-crossed
lane of Pettah leads to the main street and each has developed its
own specialized characteristic. For example, household goods are
found on Keyzer Street. Prince Street is famous for glass, mirrors
and electrical items. Malwatte Avenue sells English, Sinhala and
Tamil music cassettes), Galle face green (a promenade on the
sea face stretching one and a half kilometers, it is a relic of the
British era. Laid out in 1859 it was used for horse racing. Today it
is the largest open space in Colombo and a famous picnic spot.) and
National Museum (Housed in a grand colonial building, the
National Museum is the custodian of Sri Lanka's cultural
heritage. Among its exhibits are a vast collection of half a million
books, more than 4000 archaic palm leaf manuscripts, rock sculptures
from the ancient cities, bronze brassware and royal weapons of Sri
Lankan kings, fascinating paintings of by gone eras and an excellent
collection of antique demon masks. The most interesting among the
exhibits are the regalia of the Kandyan Kings dating back to the
17th century) Evening free for relaxation. Night at Colombo. |
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After breakfast, transfer to the airport to
connect your flight for further destination. |
The above package can be
customized according to your needs and specifications. Please
contact our office for details. |