Iron Age Burial Site At Ibbankatuwa


Originally posted on HMWS Blog:
The Early Iron Age in Sri Lanka lasted from 1000 to 600 BC. An iron age settlement was founded around 900 BC at the site of today’s Anuradhapura – the first capital of Sri Lanka. Discovery of pottery from the site bearing Brahmi script and red glass beads indicate contact with North India and…

Eyeballing Elephant in Musth


Originally posted on HMWS Blog:
? “You are guaranteed elephants at Hurulu Eco Park” the man at the hotel said. I had never heard of Hurulu. I knew both Kaudulla and Minneriya National Parks near Habarana usually had large herds of Elephants. In fact, Minneriya is renowned for its “Elephant Gathering” when herds of over…

Mystical Ritigala


Originally posted on HMWS Blog:
Deep inside a Strict Nature Reserve are the sprawling, jungle-covered ruins of an extensive monastic and cave complex. The broken stone structures, fallen carvings and once-sacred caves lie on a 766m hill, a striking feature that looms above the dry central flatlands of Sri Lanka. It was a place of refuge as long…

Ironwood & Rose Quartz


Originally posted on HMWS Blog:
One sunny afternoon last week, I drove to the village of Madatugama in the North-Western Dry Zone of Sri Lanka to see the Island’s largest Ironwood forest and the biggest Rose Quartz deposit in all of Asia ? Ironwood Mesua ferara is one of Sri Lanka’s native plants with bright red leaves…

Amazing Hasthi Kuchchi


Originally posted on HMWS Blog:
Hasthi Kuchchi in the north-western province of Sri Lanka is one of the oldest temple complexes of the country, built between 307–267 BC as a meditation centre for Buddhist monks. This was the location where King Siri Sangha Bo (251–253 AD) offered his own head to a peasant. Today, the partially…

Road To Habarana


Originally posted on HMWS Blog:
? It is six in the morning on Independence Day and I am on a coach to central Sri Lanka in search of ancient monasteries and rose-quartz mountains ? I am off on my travels again, this time to the North-Western Province of Sri Lanka, spending two nights at Habarana…

“Miracle Of Asia”


Originally posted on HMWS Blog:
It has an international conference centre without conferences, an international airport where no planes land, a port without ships and an international stadium without games. It is the Sri Lankan town called Hambantota. Some call it the Miracle of Asia! ? We returned to Tissa after the morning game drive…

A Game Drive At Yala


Originally posted on HMWS Blog:
Yala National Park is the most visited and second largest national park in Sri Lanka. Initially, it was a hunting ground for the elite when the country was under British rule. It was designated a wildlife sanctuary in 1900 and a national park in 1938. Yala has a protected area of nearly 130,000 hectares…

Kataragama


Originally posted on HMWS Blog:
“Nineteen kilometres further inland from Tissa lies the small and remote town of KATARAGAMA, one of the three most venerated religious sites in Sri Lanka (along with Adam’s Peak and the Temple of the Tooth at Kandy), held sacred by Buddhists, Hindus and Muslims alike – even Christians sometimes visit in…

Tissa & Ranminitenna Cinema Village


Originally posted on HMWS Blog:
After the hot water wells at Madunagala that morning, we drove the fifty odd kilometres to Tissamaharama, or Tissa as the town is commonly called, stopping briefly to taste fresh yoghurt at the state run farm in the village of Wirawila. ? Tissa was the capital of Sri Lanka’s Ruhuna Kingdom in…