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A Taste of Sri Lanka Sri Lanka Panorama Ceylon Tour

Sri Lanka Tailor Made

Discover this exotic island’s lush landscape and rich history

Experience this teardrop island’s vibrant culture and intricate heritage at one of our unique Sri Lanka Tailor Made hotels, including a restored tea factory.

Stay in the Cultural Triangle and discover mystical ancient cities, lush jungles and remote hill stations. Visit Dambulla’s cave temples with their breathtaking murals, inscriptions and statues; spot vibrant birdlife in Habarana and Kandalama; marvel at the magnificent carved Buddhas in Polonnaruwa; and climb Sigiriya’s incredible rock fortress.

Elsewhere, you can immerse yourself in Colombo’s enchanting blend of modern life and colonial charm; see the famous Temple of the Tooth in the royal city of Kandy; tour lush tea plantations in Nuwarra Eliya; and spot elephants and even leopards in Yala National Park.

Sri Lanka Tailor Made holiday highlights
•  Book one of our unforgettable Authentic Experiences – go elephant trekking from Habarana or tour Kandy’s famous sights.
•  At Ceylon Tea Trails, a cluster of restored tea planter’s bungalows, enjoy great value with all meals including afternoon cream tea included in the price.
•  Visit Yala Buffer Zone after dusk and spot animals including elephants, bears and leopards roaming the park’s perimeter.

Sri Lanka Tailor Made honeymoons
All our Sri Lanka holidays make great honeymoons, as you explore this exotic island's magical culture. Look out for our special labels on our favourite
honeymoon hotels for your romantic honeymoon. Please notes that due to local laws and customs, same sex honeymoons are not recommended in Sri Lanka.

Important Travel Information
When travelling to Sri Lanka you must apply for an ETA visa which allows entry into the country.  Names on the ETA must exactly match those appearing on your passport.  Therefore when booking  a honeymoon in Sri Lanka, brides need to ensure that they book under their maiden name as they will not be able to apply for an ETA under their new married name.



Sri Lanka Weddings
Getting married in Sri Lanka is a magical and memorable way to tie the knot. An exotic land of endless beaches and swaying palms as well as host to vibrant cultures and magnificent landscapes and wildlife, Sri Lanka is sure to infuse you with its beauty and wonder.

Sri Lanka also offers fantastic value, look out for our ‘Wedding’ labelled
Sri Lanka hotels for our specially negotiated Sri Lanka wedding packages. All of our Sri Lanka wedding hotels also offer Renewal of Vows ceremonies and many also offer special offers and discounts, please see the individual pages for details.


Sri Lanka Tailor Made multi-centre holidays
Combine your Sri Lanka Tailor made holiday with other resorts on this exotic island. You could unwind on sandy beaches or discover Galle’s impressive Dutch fort - or continue your holiday in another of our idyllic destinations, such as the paradise islands of the Maldives. Click here for details.

To tailor make your Sri Lanka Holiday:
•  Have a look at our Tailor Made Sri Lanka hotels

•  Call our experienced team on 01306 747002

•  Use our online quote request form


For further information on Sri Lanka Tailor Made holidays, take a look at our:
• 
Sri Lanka Tailor Made facts and information
• 
Sri Lanka Travel articles

Time difference / local time

GMT + 6 hours

Language

Sinhalese. Tamil and English are also widely spoken, and newspapers are printed in all three languages.

Currency

Sri Lankan Rupee

Safety

Ethnic disturbances rarely occur in tourist areas. We always follow Foreign Office advice on matters of security for British visitors, but crime against foreign visitors is virtually non-existent.

Highlights

Negombo
Head to the lagoon at dawn as prawn fishermen set out in traditional outrigger canoes and Indian-style catamarans to trawl where the waters, or at 10am as they return.

At the lellama (auction site),watch the fish being sold.

Kechimalai Mosque
Set on a headland, this landmark sits where the first Muslim settlers landed in the 11th century.

Galle Fort
This fort is home to Dutch colonial buildings including the apparently-haunted 17th-century Government House and the Dutch Reformed Church, where you can see the tombstones of Dutch and British colonial officers.

Unawatuna
Visit between October and March, when sea turtles lay their eggs on the beach. A local hatchery looks after them until the baby turtles are ready to set off on their maiden voyage.

Matara
Take a bullock-drawn carriage through narrow streets and see two old Dutch forts and the lively local market. Nearby is Dondra, the island's southernmost point.

Tangalla
Dotted with sandy little bays, this region produces a perfume based on citronella, and its rest house was once a hangout of Dutch colonial officials.

Hambantota
Malay Muslims here earn their living from fishing and gathering salt in shallow pans from seawater evaporated by the sun.

Yala National Park
This elephant reserve is also known as Ruhuna National Park. Spot buffalo, deer, wild boar, even leopard; and birdlife including peacocks, pelicans, storks and spoonbills.

Kandy
Spread around an artificial lake, Kandy is home to the Temple of the Tooth, where the famous Buddha’s tooth is kept.

Peradeniya Botanical Garden
This 150-acre garden boasts tamarind, magnolia, jasmine and orchid trees, as well as an orchid house and spice groves.

Nuwara Eliya
This hill station is home to a British colonial church, post office, houses, gardens and country club – plus an 18-hole golf course. It’s surrounded by tea plantations.

Shopping

•   Bargain for the best price on anything you buy.
•   Kandy is known for its antiques, but anything made earlier than this century cannot be legally exported.
•   Sri Lanka mines sapphires, rubies, garnets, aquamarines, zircons and alexandrites, but has no diamonds or emeralds. Ratnapura is the country's gem centre, with several museums where you can watch polishing and buy unset stones. Be careful when buying gems. The State Gem Corporation will examine gems purchased elsewher free free of charge, but if they're fake it can't help you get your money back.
•   Buy masks in Ambalangoda on the southwest coast.
•   Basketware made from coir (coconut fibre) is good for carrying home all your other buys like lacquerware, dolls, casual clothing and beautiful saris.
•   Tea from the highlands is a refreshing reminder of your stay.

Flying time to destination

10¾ hours

Eating/Drinking

Food
•   As well as restaurants and cafés serving traditional Sri Lankan curries, and in some areas you’ll find familiar fast food outlets like Nandos and Domino’s.
•   After a spicy curry, try curd (from buffalo milk) with treacle, an indigenous sweetener, or wattallapam, baked custard.
•   Pani pol is a small coconut and honey cake.
•   Jaggery, a chewy sweet, is made with crystallized palm sap.
•   Fresh fruit includes passion fruit, guava, mango, papaya, pineapple, custard apple and rambutan. The delicious, purple-skinned mangosteen is at its best in June.

Water
•   Don’t drink the tap water. Most hotels offer boiled and bottled water, so stick to this instead.

Good to know

Dialling code
+94

Religion
Buddhism, Islam, Hinduism and Christianity.

History

Early times

The island is settled by colonists from India around 500 BC. The Indian emperor Ashoka (269-232 BC) sends his son Mahinda as a Buddhist missionary. King Tissa is converted.

2nd century AD

King Mahasena refines and expands the vital irrigation system.

12th century

The kingdom experiences its greatest prosperity under Parakramabahu, who makes Polonnaruwa his capital.

16th century

The Portuguese fleet is blown into Colombo harbour in 1505 and courteously received. The Portuguese move in on the island's three kingdoms: Jaffna, Kandy and Kotte (near Colombo). Portugal takes formal control of the island in 1597. Kandy continues to hold out and turns to the Dutch for help.

19th century

The British make the island a Crown Colony in 1802 and call it Ceylon. Despite the British promise to honour Kandy's independence, Kandy falls (1815) and the king is exiled to India. In 1876, entrepreneur Henry Wickham smuggles rubber seeds from the Amazon to London's Kew Gardens to cultivate trees for transplanting in Ceylon. Tamil labourers are brought in from India to help work the coffee and tea plantations.

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