Day 1:
Meet and greet our Chauffeur/guide at your hotel (06.00 AM) and leave for the Sinharaja rainforest. The guided walking tour of the Sinharaja rainforest lasts 3-4 hours and our nature guide explains to you about many dozens of trees, plants, veins, insects, animals and birds. After the guided tour of the rainforest drive to the hotel in Udawalawe. Check-in and leisure.
Day 2: Early morning (05.30 AM) drive to Udawalawe national park on a 4-wheel drive jeep. The safari lasts 3-4 hours and you will be able to sport elephants, jackals, deer, crocodiles, buffaloes, monkeys, and many bird species, perhaps you will also be able to spot leopards and bear.
After the safari leave for the pristine beaches of Mirissa, where you get 1 hour for leisurely stroll or you can plunge into the warm, torques water of Mirissa beach. Mirissa is one of the most popular places in Sri Lanka to visit for a beach getaway. Mirissa attracts thousands of travellers every year due to its unspoiled beaches and calm and clear water.
Later visit Galle Fort for a guided walking tour. With a tumultuous history dating back several centuries, the city’s strategic location made it a hub for trade by sea and subsequently a landing point for the island’s colonial rulers. A fort was built to ensure the protection and preservation of the city of the Portuguese in the early 16th Century and then extensively fortified by the Dutch during the 17th century. Originally the fort was an earthen structure with palisades, a rampart, three bastions, and a moat surrounding it. Under the control of the Dutch, they built impregnable fortifications with coral and granite stones and the Fort resembled a small laid-out walled town with a rectangular grid pattern of streets full of low houses with gables and verandas.
Turtle conservation centre. The five species of marine turtles nesting in Sri Lanka include the Green Turtle, the Leatherback, the Hawksbill, the Loggerhead, and Olive Ridley. Established to protect turtles that nest in Sri Lankan beaches from extinction, the marine turtle hatcheries are operated by the Wildlife Protection Society of Sri Lanka and rely on volunteers to help with their conservation project.
End of the tour