Sri Lanka 10 day tour










Description of Sri Lanka 10 day tour
Price information
Departure information
This trip can be tailor made throughout the year to suit your requirements
Responsible Travel
As the pioneers of responsible tourism, we've screened this (and every) holiday so that you can travel knowing it will help support the places and people that you visit, and the planet. Read how below.
Planet
We work with selected local providers who are very committed to give guests the most authentic and original travel experience in Sri Lanka while leaving a lighter footprint on your trip. Our excursions maintain small-group sizes to limit the negative environmental impact in accordance to the carrying capacity of the visited site.When traveling to Sri Lanka, you support a country that puts a lot of effort into sustainable tourism and good environmental management practices related to energy, water, waste water and solid management practices. For example, around 70 to 88% of Sri Lanka’s hotels use solar power and energy efficient lighting methods.
- Accommodation & Environment
Even for a family holiday, sustainability and fun can be combined. For your tour we have chosen responsible resorts like Noel Rodrigo's Leopard Safaris. With a location on the fringe of Yala National Park, it is one of the top eco performers. The operator is firmly committed to reducing their carbon footprint, conserving nature reserves in which they operate and protecting the delicate balance of wildlife that thrives within them. The resort campsite was built in respect of its surroundings, and materials such as palm leaves for the roofs and the recycled timber furniture in the Luxury Lodge Tent are all sourced locally. Noel Rodrigo's are actively involved in various community and environmental projects including a tree planting campaign and collect vital information on Sri Lanka’s leopards for various local wildlife conservation organisations. They use renewable energy in their campsites, solar hot water pumps and solar powered heating for the shower in the Luxury Lodge Tent. They use organic toiletries, source food locally and also upcycle; currently they are using recycled bottles to construct their new staff quarters.
We have also chosen for you the Teardrop Group, a family-run, personal, small and single use plastic-aware hotel company. Your stay at Wallawwa for example will support a resort that uses LED lightbulbs and filtered water to cut down on plastic water bottles. They monitor their energy/water usage and use solar water heating. The Wallawwa’s own extensive fruit and vegetable garden supplies fresh produce where possible to the hotels’ restaurants.
You will contribute to the Why House with your stay, a hotel that recycles all plastics, composts their vegetable waste and uses solar power to heat the hot water. The pool uses ultra violet to cut down on chlorine and grey water is used for the gardens. Over the coming months they will replace nearly 600 light bulbs with LED.
In general, we are trying to keep the extra unneeded waste to a minimum in all our tours through our “bring it in, bring it out” policy for litter and rubbish such as food packaging and recycling wherever possible. In our UK and local offices we re-use or recycle the information booklets we provide to every client on arrival wherever possible. We also concentrate on providing information online via our website and electronically rather then producing a glossy brochure, hence reducing the use of paper and inks.
- Transport
Wherever possible we will try to include non-motorized ways of transport to limit your impact. In this trip, you will for example all go on a fun and sustainable bike, boats & bites tour and we also take you on a guided walk tour to Galle Fort. For our vehicles, we make sure that sizes are as small as appropriate and proper licensing on vehicles and certifying to national emission standards are maintained.
- Culture & Buildings
Your entrance fee to visit the Temple of Tooth helps maintain the conservation and maintenance of this Buddhist temple in the city of Kandy. It houses the relic of the tooth of the Buddha. Since ancient times, the relic has played an important role in local politics because it is believed that whoever holds the relic holds the governance of the country. Kandy was the last capital of the Sri Lankan kings and is a World Heritage Site mainly due to the temple.
Also Buduruwagala can be preserved thanks to your visit. It is an ancient buddhist temple complex or "rock of Buddhist sculptures", consisting of seven statues, dating back to the 10th century.
You will receive personal history lessons with a specialized guide on your visit to Galle Fort. This historical, archaeological and architectural heritage monument, maintains even after more than 423 years a polished appearance, due to extensive reconstruction work done by Archaeological Department of Sri Lanka.
- Nature
Sri Lanka is full of bountiful beaches, wildlife and natural areas. You will experience the charming coastlines and maybe be able to swim with giant turtles at Dalawella Beach in Galle. Visiting the Peradeniya Botanical Garden will help the Division of National Botanic Gardens of the Department of Agriculture to grow and conserve more than 4000 species of plants, including orchids, spices, medicinal plants and palm trees.
You will visit the Yala National Park and see animals in their natural habitats. Yala has one of the world's densest leopard populations (less than 50). Expect to see elephants, sloth bears, sambar deer, spotted deer, wild boar, crocodiles, monkeys and buffalos. Your visit at the National Park will contribute to the Department of Wildlife Conservation, who is the primary entity responsible for the maintenance of the national parks and wildlife reserves and the Sri Lankan Elephant Transit Home in Udawalawe.
People
We strive to help our clients connect with Sri Lanka and its local population in interesting and insightful ways. Our partners have a reputation for possessing an intimate, in-depth knowledge of Sri Lanka, with purposeful dedication towards enabling guests meaningful experiences. This has benefited not only clients and operators, providing more fulfilling trips, but is also positively impacting our host communities, providing immediate income and making their lives more sustainable and productive.- Supporting the community
Our local partners have helped many hosts to develop their experiences from a product development and pricing perspective, elevating their experience and its value. They have developed experiences from scratch with many hosts and communities to provide jobs and income to local populations e.g. The Sri Lankan Garden (also incredibly sustainable operation) and most recently with the new East Coast Project., working with an Australian NGO to develop experiences on the East Coast of the Sri Lanka, employing local staff and hosts in an area where there is a significant need. We choose our partners carefully and are constantly on the lookout for grassroots conservation projects and fair trade initiatives.
There are many of the hotels we work with that employ the majority of their staff from the local area, many have community initiatives in place and offer lucrative employment options in comparison to other trades.
- Campaigns & Charity
For many years our partners have worked with a small collection of schools where they have arranged for clients to help construct toilets, paint classrooms and have worked with charities such as The Foundation of Goodness and Child Action Lanka.
When staying at the Wallawwa, you can contribute to the gift shop, whose sales go to Wallawwa CARE, that raises funds for the local community; this includes donating to schools, sponsoring the education of local children, donating medicines and helping families with losses.
Also your hotel The Last House has built and continues to fund Santhosa, an award-winning primary school in Seenimodera, near resort. Following the damage and destruction of local schools by the tsunami, and in memory of the owner’s late wife Sarah, money was donated to build this school in 2005. Generous funding from benefactors in Hong Kong, Sri Lanka and other countries has helped the school grow into a shining example of Montessori methods; it recently won a government award for ‘Best Pre-School’ in the Hambantota/Southern Provincial District. Manor House Concepts continues to fund the school and every time a guest stays for two or more nights, US$5 from their bill is donated to the school.
- Local culture, tradition & connection
Your visit to the Loolecondera tea estate will help preserve ancient tea culture and promote local employment. It is not an ordinary tea plantation, as famous James Taylor, a Scottish cultivator, made the first successful attempt to grow and process tea in Ceylon there in 1867. This famous and old fashioned tea factory has a historical significance and still generates fine tea leaves featured in upcountry with an exceptional global demand. You can have a greater look at several ancient pieces of machinery built by British planters including a massive generator installed in 1935, which is even used in present day.
James Taylor was a nature lover, and had smoothly fabricated the Loolecondera tea estate with a minimum harmful consequence on the marvelous natural beauty unique to this panoramic land and its environment. The Loolecondera estate is a miraculously found natural model for its fabulous ecosystem integrity existing for longer years. You can also talk walks in the natural virgin forests at the estate, and explore the surprising fauna and flora and all the immense biodiversity.
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