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Hayes & Jarvis Takes Top Operator Spot In Sri…

tourists_srilankaLondon (PRWEB) — After recording an excellent year for its Sri Lanka programme, boosted by the ending of the Tamil Tiger conflict, Hayes & Jarvis has boosted its programme to the island in its new Indian Ocean Collection brochure for 2009/2010, just launched. A new island resort in the Maldives and more family and couple accommodation on Mauritius also feature in the brochure, while budget accommodation is offered to broaden the appeal of Dubai.

The long haul specialist says that it has now taken over the top spot as the leading UK operator to Sri Lanka and intends to consolidate this position by providing more tours and beach resort choice in the coming year. Hayes & Jarvis Programme Director Lesley Rollo said: “Sri Lanka benefited this year because it has offered great value for money, resulting in record bookings from families and couples who want to travel long haul but ensure that they pay the lowest possible price. Going forward, we have been careful to include tours and beach resorts that continue to offer good value at all levels.”

Two new short tours have been added to supplement the established Classic Ceylon tour. Cultural Kandy & Tea takes in Pinnawala Elephant Orphanage, the cultural attractions of Kandy and the tea plantations of Nuwara Eliya (four days from £219pp). The second tour, World Heritage Sri Lanka, also includes Pinnawela and Kandy but additionally offers visits to some of the Island’s World Heritage sites, including Sigiriya Rock and Dambulla Rock Temple (four days from £299pp).

Hayes & Jarvis has also revamped its Sri Lanka beach collection. At three and four star level there is a particular emphasis on all inclusive family accommodation, competitively priced from £849 per person for a five night all inclusive package at the Mermaid Hotel & Club, Kalutara (May-June 2010). At the same time, the operator has strengthened its five-star offer with the addition of the Heritance Ahungalla, designed by noted architect Geoffrey Bawa (from £899pp for five nights B&B including flights and transfers) and the famed Fortress at Galle (from £1,089 pp for five nights).

The Maldives has been buoyant for Hayes & Jarvis during a difficult season for the destination but Hayes & Jarvis says that there has been greater strength in the well-priced four and five-star island resorts than at the top end, leading it to focus expansion on resorts offering affordable ‘luxury for less’.

Additions for 2009/10 include the Hilton Maldives Iru Fushi Resort & Spa (five nights from £2,449), recently taken over by Hilton; Olhuveli Beach (five nights from £1,419) introduced in response to consumer demand and an affordable four-star plus option; and the new Centara Grand Island Resort & Spa, the Far Eastern hotel group’s first venture in the Maldives.

Due to open shortly, the resort is being positioned to attract diving enthusiasts as the diving there is rated as outstanding and includes an excellent house reef, complete with a dedicated sunken ship wreck. A six night package at the Centara Grand Island Resort & Spa costs from £2,029pp and includes All-Inclusive accommodation and SriLankan Airlines flights (1-15 November).

Although 2009 has also been a tough year for Mauritius, Hayes & Jarvis says that its passenger numbers have actually risen. Lesley Rollo said: “The destination has been protected to some extent from the UK downturn because transactions are made in sterling and not in US dollars, which has sheltered Mauritius from the weakness of the pound.”

For 2009/10 Hayes & Jarvis has added the well-known Shandrani Resort & Spa because it is ideal for families and offers five-star all inclusive accommodation at a very reasonable price – from £1,589 per person for a five night package including Air Mauritius flights (19 April-29 June). At the other end of the scale, Hayes & Jarvis has added the budget-priced All-Inclusive Veranda Palmar Beach after seeing good sales for Veranda’s other resorts on Mauritius (from £1,019pp for five night packages).

In Dubai Hayes & Jarvis has added a budget self-catering option. Golden Sands Apartment, located in Bur Dubai and a short walk from the prestigious stores of the Burjuman shopping mall, provides the long haul specialist with its lead-priced accommodation in Dubai, from £569 per person for three nights in a one room studio (September 2009). Although self-catering, this benefits from hotel-style facilities including a swimming pool, fitness centre, sauna, complimentary internet and a coffee shop.

The Hayes & Jarvis Indian Ocean Collection brochure is valid for bookings from September 2009 until January 2011. Prices start from £819 per person for a five night B&B package at the four-star Eden Resort & Spa, Sri Lanka including return SriLankan Airlines flights from London Heathrow and transfers (valid 1 September-31 October 2009).

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David Peiris
0207 821 2316

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Whale Watching and Surfers Paradise Day Tour from Brisbane Australia

Whale Watching and Surfers Paradise Day Tour from Brisbane

whale-watching-and-surfers-paradise-day-trip-from-brisbane-in-brisbaneBOOK THIS TOUR – CLICK HERE!
From £53.16
Location: Brisbane, Australia

Experience the best that Surfers Paradise has to offer on this day trip from Brisbane. Cruise the canals and see the homes of the Gold Coast’s rich and famous. Watch humpback whales at play from your purpose built, whale watching vessel. In the afternoon, you’ll have time for your own exploration of Surfers Paradise before returning to Brisbane.

Highlights

  • Family friendly
  • Get up-close to native wildlife
  • Travel by boat and see the sights from the water
  • Pickup and drop off from Brisbane
  • 3.5-hour whale watching cruise
  • Commentary by a Marine Naturalist
  • Coffee and biscuits
  • 2-hour of free time to explore Surfers Paradise at leisure
  • Tour conducted in English

On arrival to Surfers Paradise, board your state of the art vessel. After a brief safety introduction, your tour starts with a scenic canal cruise down the Nerang River while your knowledgeable crew point out the spectacular homes of the rich and famous.

Your cruise continues past the beautiful South Stradbroke Island to the nearby waters of the Australian Whale Sanctuary. Each year between the months of May and October, humpbacks whales migrate to these subtropical waters to mate and give birth. You’ll have the opportunity to see the whales at play, often performing spectacular aerial leaps. There will be plenty of photo opportunities as bottle-nose dolphins, giant loggerhead turtles, killer whales and various sea birds also call these waters home. Your marine naturalist guide will also provide informative and unique commentary and the experienced crew are dedicated to providing you with the ultimate whale watching experience.

Following your cruise, you’ll have 2-hours to explore Surfers Paradise at your own leisure before returning to Brisbane. Stroll through the designer boutiques and explore the stunning beaches before your return to Brisbane.

Special Offer – Save 15% the recommended retail price. Valid for travel to July 31, 2009 – BOOK NOW!

Schedule

Departure Point: Tour departs from the following pickup points:

  • Gipps Street, Fortitude Valley (opposite Bunk Back Packers)
  • Rendezvous Hotel, Ann Street, Brisbane
  • Holiday Inn, Roma Street, Brisbane

Departure Time: 7:00am

Return Details: Returns to original departure point at approximately 3:30pm

For additional information GO HERE!

COMPARE AND BOOK FROM 174 HOTEL DEALS IN BRISBANE, AUSTRALIA


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O’Reilly’s Lamington National Park, Tree Top Canopy Walk and Wine Tasting Tour Australia

O’Reilly’s Lamington National Park, Tree Top Canopy Walk and…

Lamington_National_ParkBOOK THIS TOUR – CLICK HERE!
From £42.03
Location: Brisbane or Gold Coast, Australia
3.5star based on 10 reviews

Experience the natural beauty of the World Heritage area of the Lamington National Park. Enjoy spectacular views from Mount Tamborine, all the way to the coast. Wander through lush rainforest and listen to the birdsong of Bellbirds, Rosellas and Parrots. Take a tree top walk through this World Heritage forest. A day of amazing wilderness in the “Green Mountains”.

Highlights

  • Transport by air-conditioned coach
  • Hotel pickup and drop off
  • Local guid
  • Wine Tasting at Canungra Valley Winery
  • Tree top canopy walk
  • Family friendly
  • Tour conducted in English

You’ll be picked up from your hotel and travel to the World Heritage listed Lamington National Park. Visit an Alpaca Farm and a stroll along the Gallery Walk at Mt Tamborine’s unique local art and crafts shops.

Upon arrival at O’Reilly’s, you’ll be enchanted by the calls of an amazing array of native birds, not to mention the friendliness and hospitality of this renowned family-owned Guesthouse. Take a stroll along the tree top canopy Walk, 16 metres above the rainforest floor. Lunch (own expense) is available overlooking the lush valleys.

Tour continues with a visit to the award winning Canungra Valley Vineyards, enjoy wine tasting with the knowledgeable and friendly vintners in an historic Queenslander homestead before making your way back to your hotel.

Schedule

Departure Point: Tour departs from your centrally located Brisbane or Gold Coast hotel – OR – Central pickup points:

  • Brisbane: Transit Center, Roma Street
  • Gold Coast: Beach Road Transit Center, Bays 1-4

Departure Time: 8.45am

Hotel pickups commence prior to this time, exact pickup time will be advised on reconfirmation.

Times are subject to change due to local traffic conditions.

Return Details: Returns to original departure point

For additional information GO HERE!

4star

This was a most enjoyable day. I would recommend your tours any time, and hope to come back one day and do more of them! Thanks for making our short trip to Brisbane so enjoyable.

Reviewed by: Margaret C, New Zealand

COMPARE AND BOOK FROM 174 HOTEL DEALS IN BRISBANE, AUSTRALIA


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2 Day World Pass – Dreamworld and WhiteWater World, Gold Coast, Australia Australia

2 Day World Pass – Dreamworld and WhiteWater World,…

2-day-world-pass-dreamworld-and-whitewater-world-gold-coast-australiaBOOK THIS TOUR – CLICK HERE!
From £38.24
Location: Gold Coast, Australia
4star based on 2 reviews

Dreamworld and WhiteWater World Theme Parks provide a one stop shop for thrills, spills and family fun. It’s double the thrills and double the fun with a 2 day World Pass. And now World Pass lets you hop between Dreamworld and WhiteWater World as often as you like. Experience Dreamworld in the morning and cool off at WhiteWater World in the afternoon!

Highlights

  • Admission to Gold Coast Dreamworld Theme Park
  • Admission to WhiteWater World Theme Park
  • All rides, shows and attractions
  • Australia’s Good and Services Tax (GST)
  • Family friendly

It’s double the thrills and double the fun at Dreamworld and WhiteWater World Theme Parks! Get the best of both worlds at Australia’s favorite theme parks with the all new 2 Day World Pass.

The World Pass packages the best theme park experience on the Gold Coast and lets theme park goers hop between Dreamworld and WhiteWater World as often as they like, over two days!

One location – conveniently located right next door with an internal access point that makes it fast and simple. No driving between theme parks simply walk next door to enjoy a whole new world!

Dreamworld Rides: For thrills this big, there’s nowhere like Dreamworld. You want the most spine-tingling, knee-knocking scream machines in Australia? The Claw, Tower of Terror, Giant Drop, Cyclone, and the Wipeout are some of the tallest and fastest rides in the world… we’re not joking when we say they’ll get your heart pumping.

WhiteWater World Rides: WhiteWater World, on the Gold Coast, delivers thrills for all ages. With the hottest water rides on the planet. With four of the “world’s best” water slides and there is something for the whole family. The Bro, The Green Room, The Rip, The Temple of Huey, Cave of the Waves, Nickelodeon Pipeline Plunge, Wiggle Bay, Super Tubes Hydrocoaster.

Save with the Family Pass – available for mixed family groups consisting of 2 adults and 2 children (4-13 years) including friends and relatives.

Schedule

Departure Point: Dreamworld Parkway, Coomera, Queensland
Departure Time: Opening hours 10:00am to 5:00pm

Return Details: Tour returns to original point of departure

For additional information GO HERE!

4star

It was fantastic to be able to swap between the two parks on both days, as it was very hot when we visited. Both parks had awesome rides and my children and husband had the time of their lives. Great value. Glad we pre-bought to avoid the long queues too.

Reviewed by: IRENE D, Australia

COMPARE AND BOOK FROM 378 HOTEL DEALS ON THE GOLD COAST, AUSTRALIA


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BMI to code-share with Sri Lankan Airlines Sri Lanka

BMI to code-share with Sri Lankan Airlines

Sri-Lankan-AirlinesSri Lanka’s state-run national carrier SriLankan Airlines, said it had broadened a code share deal with UK’s bmi following the relaxation of British travel advice following the end of a war.

Bmi will shortly begin codesharing on flights between London, Colombo and Male operated by SriLankan, the airline said.

SriLankan and bmi have had a codeshare partnership since 2004. A code-share allows passengers of one airline to book and fly on designated flights of the other, effectively expanding its network.

SriLankan’s passengers on the Colombo-London route could fly on the same ticket to eight bmi destinations; Manchester, Bradford, Glasgow, Edinburgh, Amsterdam, Brussels, Dublin, and Belfast.

SriLankan’s Head of worldwide sales, Mohamed Fazeel said the expanded code share deal will strengthen British tourist arrivals to Sri Lanka with a top UK airline selling tickets to the country.

“This partnership also indicates the potential of Sri Lanka being rapidly recognised as a destination of choice among other European airlines and tour operators,” Fazeel said.

[LBO]

Sri Lanka: Paradise of green Sri Lanka

Sri Lanka: Paradise of green

Green-Sri-Lankaby Kalpana Sunder

Time and distance seem to have no meaning in this part of the world. Only when guide Nisaka says “only one hour left,” we think of time. We have heard that several times on our drive from Kandy, the cultural capital of Sri Lanka to Nuwara Eliya, the spectacular tea country, stopping several times to either sip some divine tea at a tea-factory or gorge on the luscious piles of Ramboutan and Mangusteen on the roadsides.

Manors and castles, gingerbread houses and elite clubs, golf course, strawberries and cream…. Nuwara Eliya (often shortened to Nurelia and meaning city of lights), is Sri Lanka’s main hill resort perched at over 6000 feet in the shadow of the country’s highest mountain Piduruthalagala (fondly dubbed Pedro by the British!) and is more British than Britain! This town was discovered in 1826 by some Europeans on an elephant-hunt and Sir Edward Barnes, the then Governor, developed the town and encouraged Scottish and British planters to settle here, and grow the famous Orange Pekoe tea.

We see the quaint red-bricked Post-office, the 18-hole golf course and a bizarre mix of modern concrete and Georgian bungalows, arriving at the Grand Hotel for a very late lunch. This was built in 1891 and has a Tudor façade, gardens spilling with petunias, colonial kitsch, and polished wooden floors which transport you to the sahib era. Our rooms are replete with sepia photos of a bygone time and real fire-places. We feel like regal squires awaiting Jeeves in a P G Wodehouse novel!

As the mist rolls in, we pull on our woollies hurriedly and attempt to make the best of our short time here. The town seems to encourage a sluggish pace, and we sense a time-warp here. There is the centuries old Victoria Park filled with Bougainvilleas and begonias framing gabled roofs and an undulating sea of green. We amble through a market flooded with woollens and jackets in latest European fashions at outrageously low prices.

Retail therapy done, we walk past the glistening Lake Gregory with its backdrop of mist-shrouded mountains and vistas of emerald green tea-slopes dotted with tea-pickers straight out of an Air Lanka Poster! There are well-tended gardens and fields covered with ‘English’ vegetables like cabbage, leeks, cauliflower and potatoes. We pass the elite Hill Club originally a club started in 1858 for the ‘sahibs’ but today converted into a hotel. Our guide tells us about the strict dress-code prevalent here even today — gentlemen must wear suits and ties! We hear about the cross- country motor races and the dirt bike races here in the month of April which makes it a ‘hot’ destination then.

For a dose of mythological history, we drive to Sita Eliya, where the demon Ravana is supposed to have imprisoned Sita. This is a temple built in the typical South Indian style, with stucco images of the Puranas and scenes from the Ramayana. A Tamil-speaking priest interacts with us, and shows us the three idols discovered here a century ago, one of them being that of Sita. We see the sanctum for Hanuman, the monkey God who vowed to return Sita to Lord Rama. Lending credibility to this lore is a giant footprint of Hanuman, near the rocky stream below. Nisanka tells us that there are specialised Ramayana Trail tours offered by different companies to visit the innumerable sites in this country linked to this epic and we put it on our wishlist!

The next day after a hearty Sri Lankan breakfast of hoppers, sambol and curry, we drive out of the town to see some splendid waterfalls. The geographical feature of Sri Lanka where there are numerous rivers radiating from a central highland, has created more than one hundred

waterfalls. We see the famous Devon falls named after a pioneer coffee planter, rising up to more than 95 km and falling in two cascades. We hear that it is threatened by a proposed hydro-electric scheme and see bathers access it through a green footpath way below! Next on our list is the St Clair’s Waterfalls, which is grandeur, personified with three cascades. Opposite this is a modern tea-centre with some great tea and jams on offer. We see swarms of camera-totting students and teachers enjoying the pristine views! The Ramboda falls is spectacular, roaring angrily down black rock and creating a rainbow spectrum in the mild drizzle. We rue the fact that we don’t have the time to see it up-close.

Our quest for adventure leads us to Kitulgala, on the highway from Nuwara Eliya to Colombo. The name Kitulgala is derived from the vast number of ‘Kitul’ trees which abound here. Kitulgala’s claim to fame is the filming of portions of David Lean’s Oscar winning epic Bridge on the river Kwai on a make-shift bridge on the Kelani River. The rock-strewn Kelani River has a stretch of rapids surrounded by high banks of bamboo and is ideal for white-water rafting. We strap on our life-jackets and helmets with some misgivings and words of reassurance from Nisanka, who assures us that it will be ‘thrilling’! Life-threatening experiences bring out the best in us, they say, and this is no exception. Fording the foaming waters with our guides from an adventure sports company, along a five kilometre stretch, we emerge victorious and exhilarated. This has been a truly fitting finale to our sojourn in this green paradise.

— Kalpana_63@hotmail.com

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Rick Stein in Sri Lanka in search of recipes Sri Lanka

Rick Stein in Sri Lanka in search of recipes

“Ask him what happened,” David, the director, said.

“What actually happened to you in the tsunami?” I said, thinking what a great place for a party the house on the tiny Taprobane island would be.

Taprobane-Island

Airy bedrooms with antique four-poster beds set around a spacious central area with a tropical breeze blowing through one bright open door from the sea and out towards the shore on the Sri Lankan mainland.

“I was swimming around Taprobane,” Geoffrey Dobbs said. “All I felt was a slight swell under me but then I noticed that I was about 20ft higher up the island than seconds before. The next thing I was swept across the bay and found myself clinging on to the mast of a fishing boat like that one on the shore over there, just by that house.”

He pointed to a pale blue and yellow outrigger about half a mile from where we were standing.

I asked him if he had been frightened.

“I didn’t have time. I didn’t even realise it was a tsunami until all the water that had swelled inland rushed back out again and the whole of Weligama Bay drained out to sea. I could have walked over to a couple of spots that I dive to regularly.”

The swaying palm trees and arrival of my second lime soda made it all seem so improbable. It was hard to imagine the immense loss of life and the suffering of the communities living all along the shores of the Indian Ocean.

I didn’t stay at Taprobane. Instead, I was at one of Dobbs’s other guest residences, the Sun House, near Galle, a cool colonial home surrounded by verandas and frangipani trees with fans swishing in every elegant room.

We were making my Far Eastern Odyssey, a cookery series set in South-East Asia, and that morning had filmed a fish curry being cooked by the wife and aunt of a fisherman in a nearby village, just behind the beach. They were using a fish called parawer, caught that morning.

I had been out with the fishermen, watching them pay out a long net in a large circle that they pulled in by hand. I had been much enthused by their spirit, cheerfulness and skilful co-operation in the tricky undertaking of setting the net and pulling it in with nothing but muscle power.

I watched Chandrika, the aunt, delicately and somewhat dangerously slice garlic, red onions and ginger against a large, sharp blade held between her feet as she sat on the floor in the tiny kitchen of the fisherman’s house.

She lost three of her family, including her baby son, in the tsunami. Their pictures were on the table in the front room, where we later sat down to eat the fish. She had simmered it in water and coconut milk, then fried together the onions and garlic with green chillies, cinnamon, curry leaves and roasted spice.

She layered the cooked fish with the spicy vegetables and left it all to infuse for 20 minutes while she boiled red rice. I sat down with them and ate the delicious fish with my fingers while reflecting on the power of food to at least help to alleviate the effects of tragedy.

I had felt similarly a few days earlier in Colombo, while eating crab at the New Yarl Eating House, a Tamil restaurant at Wellawatta. It was the day after the Tamil Tigers had rather defiantly flown two tiny aircraft from a clearing in the jungle in the north and bombed Colombo. Both were shot down, one crashing into the main tax office. Two people were killed and about 50 injured.

We had been sitting at a table by the pool, overlooking the sea, at the Mount Lavinia Hotel eating prawns with tomato, pineapple curry with cinnamon and pandan leaves, and egg hoppers — crisp and lacy rice pancakes with a fried egg in the centre — that were sprinkled with a hot sambol of grated coconut and roasted chilli. We thought it was a firework display somewhere in the city.

The next day I sat eating chilli crab in the tiny, sweltering New Yarl. It was one of the best crab dishes I have tasted. Frightfully hot, it was made with tomato and coconut milk, roasted Sri Lankan spice powder and masses of chilli and served with ice-cold Coca-Cola.

My companion was Savin, a local journalist, who endeared himself to me by pronouncing that Coke tasted better out of glass bottles. Again I had this feeling, in a restaurant full of Tamil and Sinhalese customers, of the civilising influence of great food.

I reflected, too, on the occasional glory of a soft drink and the wonderfulness of Sri Lankan crabs or, indeed, any seafood from there. In a world were there is ample evidence of overfishing, at least there are plenty of fish in the waters around Sri Lanka.

Roadside stalls selling fish are all along the coast road from Colombo to Galle. And there’s not a fish farm on the island; even the prawns, as big as lobsters, that I saw being sold by a fisherman holding them up in the middle of a busy road in Colombo were wild.

I went to the Negombo fish market, which is on the beach just north of Colombo, with Dharshan Munidasa, a Sri Lankan-Japanese restaurateur. With his Japanese hat firmly on he explained that the market was heaven for perfect sushi and sashimi.

There were a bewildering number of pelagic fish such as tuna, Spanish mackerel, bonito, trevally and kingfish, and plenty of large snapper and mullet. The prawns were still jumping and the squid and cuttlefish were so alive that you could see their skin change colour where you touched them.

Munidasa bought tuna, snapper, trevally, squid and prawns and a fish unknown to me that he called half beak. It looked like garfish and he later took it back to his restaurant, Nihonbashi, right in the centre of Colombo and created a sashimi that would equal anything in Tokyo.

I’m sure that I could be called a little naive to recommend Sri Lanka as a holiday destination — because of the bloody civil war — but the people I met made me believe that reconciliation could prevail and that the local population would welcome us.

They are attractive, funny, hard-working and sunny in spite of the hardships of living in a Third World country that had a devastating tsunami four years ago and a long-running civil war.

What I should also be saying is: go there, because the curries are so good, the beaches are so unspoilt and empty, the surf is consistent and the countryside will charm you. I had no idea how good the food would be: not only the seafood but also the vegetable curries that were so delicious that they would almost convert me to vegetarianism.

I ate jackfruit curry, deep-fried egg and tomato curry, cashew and snake gourd curry. I had pumpkin curry and garlic curry. All were rich in coconut milk and flavoured with long dark pieces of cinnamon, deeply roasted curry spices, fiery green chillies and the almost distinctly tropical flavour of curry and pandan leaves.

At times, when I was eating those curries — particularly at the Sun House — I was known to utter with extreme emotion on the perfect match between a fiery curry and a cold Lion beer.

Rick Stein’s Far Eastern Odyssey, £25, BBC Books. The accompanying TV series is on Thursdays, BBC Two, 8pm

Click here to read the article on TimesOnline

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Boutique chic on the Sri Lankan shores Sri Lanka

Boutique chic on the Sri Lankan shores

flickr_amanwella_bath_tangalle

By Primrose Skelton

For many years Sri Lanka has been in the news for all the wrong reasons – war between the country’s military and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) was ongoing for 26 years and then in 2004, the Boxing Day tsunami devastated much of the south coast.

But with a ceasefire and the effects of the tsunami barely visible, this beautiful country is looking to bring back tourists and find a new place in the heart of those who visit.

The teardrop-shaped island in the Indian Ocean has amazing diversity for a place so compact. From the bustling capital Colombo on the west coast – just a five hour direct flight from Dubai – to the gently arcing golden-sand beaches of the south, to the magnificent Hill Country where misty clouds hang over mountains, waterfalls and verdant tea plantations – this small country has a lot to offer to every type of traveller. For me it had to be about luxury and there is an array of excellent boutique hotels catering to the most discerning holidaymaker.

As my husband and I wanted to see as much of the island as possible, while still being able to relax (it was our honeymoon after all), we were recommended an itinerary organised by Red Dot Tours, a British and Sri Lanka run company based in Colombo, specialising in luxury tailor-made packages. During our 12-night stay we explored the The Hill Country, two different sections of the south coast and the historic town of Galle where its colonial past (the British and Dutch have both ruled the country) is reminiscent in the architecture and expatriate way of life.

On route to our first hotel, we stopped at the Pinnawela Elephant Orphanage, where visitors can see the magnificent mammals in their natural habitat. Started in 1972, the retreat houses adult and baby elephants who have lost parents or been relocated from the north because of war. At 10am and 2pm, about 60 elephants make their way across the water to be fed. Visitors’ can get pretty close and watch as feeding time takes place – it’s a truly great experience.

Our first three nights were spent in the idyllic surroundings of The Lavender House, a stunning five-bedroom tea planter’s bungalow set amid the Hellboda Tea plantation in Pussellawa, between Kandy and Nuwara Eliya.

With its friendly staff – who at the time were catering to only the two of us – to the home cooked cuisine and personal touches this guest house looking over the misty mountains feels more like staying in someone’s home.

While the accommodation is located in the middle of nowhere, it is the perfect place to sightsee. Kandy, just over an hour’s drive away, houses the Temple of the Tooth, where a sacred tooth relic of the Lord Buddha is enshrined and the beautiful Kandy lake – a lovely centrepiece for the town created in 1807. On the outskirts are the Peradeniya Botanical Gardens, which has a wonderful orchid collection. Both sites can easily be seen in a day.

On the journey back, be sure to stop at a roadside cafe where you can try traditional Sri Lankan rice and hoppers (bowl-shaped pancakes), or pull over at a fruit stall selling bananas (there are 18 varieties) and rambutan.

Although Sri Lanka is rarely cold, May to September is low season with temperatures at around 28 degrees and a chance of rain. But for many Dubai residents this is likely to be a draw.

If seclusion and picture perfect beaches are what you are after then head to Amanwella, situated on the south coast. The drive from Kandy can take up to eight hours, but each kilometre is worth it as you pull up to the stylish and contemporary hotel.

Amanwella fronts a crescent shaped beach near the small port of Tangalle offering privileged seclusion and a respite from the modern world. All 30 suites feature their own plunge pools, and terraces with views of the ocean and coconut groves.

Enjoy five star treatment, whether relaxing in the 47-metre pool or indulging in the authentic cuisine, over-looking the waves lapping onto the shore. After a hard day sleeping on a hammock or walking along the beach, why not retire to the trendy sunken bar area with it’s white leather sofas and range of cocktails? Remember to wear your finest – this is no place for traveller attire.

Irrespective of their cultural background, Sinhalese, Tamil and Muslim locals welcome visitors with immense pride. Pride in their food, pride in their land and – especially – pride in their national cricket team. And there is no better place to see them play than on home turf at the Galle International Stadium.

The magnificent 17th century Dutch fort, which surrounds the old town of Galle, is a Unesco World Heritage Site and a popular attraction in which spectators can watch play for free.

The small streets and alleyways within the 300-year-old fort have a colonial atmosphere and its many historical buildings have not been invaded by skyscrapers. Take in daily life while spending your rupees in one of the many independent shops. Head to Sithuvili for painted traditional boxes, Buddhist panels and masks, Olanda Antiques for china, brass and furniture, Laksana for gems and Barefoot for hand-woven fabrics before taking a pit stop at Pedlers Inn for a drink and light lunch.

High-end luxury accommodation is easy to find in Galle with a range of great places to stay. The Dutch House is one of two colonial guesthouses situated on a steep, leafy street just outside Galle town. This 19th century mansion has been beautifully restored into an exquisite property offering the look and feel of the old with all the luxury of the modern.

Four spacious suites, nicely arranged in a horseshoe, are equipped with antique four-poster beds, fans, en suite bathrooms and a rich array of carefully chosen local furniture and fabrics. Take afternoon tea on the veranda (ask for the banana cake) or relax on the day bed overlooking the croquet lawn and pool. Dinner is served in the The Sun House opposite, but before eating have a drink in Dicks Bar and learn about the annual Galle Literary Festival.

On returning home, make a stop at The Wallawwa, a new hotel just a 15 minute drive from the airport. Rest in the beautiful gardens, indulge in a spa treatment and fill up on delicious pineapple curry, before heading home.

Faced with funding a war and weathering a global financial crisis, Sri Lanka’s proud population has had it tough for a few years. But equipped with a stellar combination of scenery, culture and history, Sri Lanka is firmly back on the radar for curious travellers and those looking for a unique experience.

Read the essential guide on Emirates Business 24/7

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The Legend of the Ramayana trail – Sri Lanka Sri Lanka

The Legend of the Ramayana trail – Sri Lanka

waterfall-on-Ramayana-trail-sri-lankaWith a quarter-century of ethnic conflict and terrorism in Sri Lanka left behind, the island nation, known for its sun-kissed beaches and rolling tea gardens, is wooing Indian tourists like never before by developing a Ramayana trail to enable them to visit the Lanka of demon king Ravana.

The Sri Lankan tourism department has identified about 50 sites that are said to be connected to the Ramayana that tells the tale of the Hindu god Rama, whose wife Sita was kidnapped by Ravana and taken to ‘sone ki Lanka’, or the golden kingdom of Lanka.

“One just needs to talk to the local people, who would immediately tell which event in the Ramayana unfolded where,” said S. Kalaiselvam, director general of the Sri Lanka Tourism Development Authority.

“We are developing the Ramayana trail and the sites that are easily accessible will be part of this trail. I am confident that tourists, particularly Indians, will find the visit along the Ramayana trail satisfying.”

A 600-step climb, for instance, takes the visitor up to the cave in modern-day Ella in central Sri Lankawhere Ravana is supposed to have hidden Sita.

Sri Lankan tourism officials say the cave is connected to tunnels proving “beyond doubt the architectural brilliance of King Ravana”.

“A close look at these tunnels indicate that they are manmade and no natural formations,” said Wijae Manawadu, a tourist guide.

Then there’s the spot in Divurumpola where Sita is said to have undergone the famous ‘agni pariksha, or fire test, to prove her virtuousness.

“Disputes can be settled simply by taking oath in Sita’s name at the place where the fire test took place. It is actually legal tender,” a tourism official said.

Rama is believed to have installed a shiva lingam, an icon of Lord Shiva, at Manawari Kovil in Chillaw, which is about 65 km from capital Colombo. It was a remedy to get rid of ‘Brahmahathi Dosham’ for having killed Ravana who was a Brahmin.

Legend has it that during the battle with Ravana, Rama’s brother Lakshman was seriously injured. Hanuman was asked to fetch the life saving herb Sanjeevani from the Himalayas. He couldn’t locate it but brought the entire hill instead, five parts of which are said to have fallen in Sri Lanka.

A hill at Dolukanda, about 100 km from the national capital, marks one of the five sites.

At Seetha Eliya, on the hilly Nuwara Eliya-Welimada road about 195 km from Colombo, is where Sita is believed to have bathed. A temple has come up at the spot, and there is also a huge footprint imprinted in stone that legend says belongs to the monkey god Hanuman.

The red earth of Ussangoda in coastal Sri Lanka is considered suitable evidence by the tourism officials to state that this was the place Hanuman took on Ravana.

“In the event that unfolded, Hanuman’s tail was set on fire by the demons and he in turn went on to torch some parts of Ravana’s empire. Ussangoda is one of the places that was torched,” said a tourist guide.

Sri Lankahas a host of other Ramayana sites of considerable interest to all believers.

According to historian Neil Kiriella, there is historical evidence to prove that the epic took place in Sri Lanka.

“There are 87 rock edicts that refer to Ravana and Sita. Several incidents in the Ramayana took place here,” he said.

With the mapping of the Ramayana trail, Sri Lanka, which banks on tourism as a mainstay of its economy, is targeting an increase in tourist arrivals from India.

Said Indrajith De Silva, assistant director in the Sri Lanka tourism promotion bureau: “With Tamil Tigers gone, there has been an increase of Indians coming to Sri Lanka.”

Up to June 30 this year, he said, 30,902 Indians had come visiting. “In June 2009, 6,124 Indians came here while in June 2008, the figure stood at 5,664,” De Silva said.

[IANS]

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Best of Brisbane Full-Day Sightseeing Tour Australia

Best of Brisbane Full-Day Sightseeing Tour

best-of-brisbane-full-day-sightseeing-tour-in-brisbaneBOOK THIS TOUR – CLICK HERE!
From £58.08
Location: Brisbane and Gold Coast, Australia
3.5star based on 9 reviews

Discover Brisbane’s historic city centre, river and wildlife on a full-day tour. You’ll tour Brisbane’s city-centre attractions by coach, visit Queensland’s oldest residence at Newstead House, take a cruise along the Brisbane River, cuddle a koala at a wildlife sanctuary and enjoy Brisbane’s most iconic views from the Mt Coot-tha Lookout.

Highlights

  • Transport by air-conditioned coach
  • Hotel pickup and drop off
  • Local guide
  • Morning tea
  • Entrance fees to Lone Pine Koala Sanctuary
  • Sightseeing cruise
  • GST (Goods and Services Tax)
  • Tour conducted in English

On your coach tour through Brisbane’s city centre you’ll pass prominent buildings like City Hall, Parliament House, St Johns Cathedral and Treasury Casino, and feel the vibrancy of the city’s past and present.

After the tour you’ll enjoy morning tea by the Brisbane River at the Breakfast Creek Hotel and explore the grounds of Newstead House, Queensland’s oldest residence, with wide colonial verandahs overlooking the river.

Then you’ll see why Brisbane is known as the River City . From Newstead House, you will cruise up the river past prestigious suburbs and historic buildings, including the magnificent sandstone buildings of Customs House. You’ll cruise under Story Bridge past the Kangaroo Point Cliffs to South Bank, where you’ll sample the cosmopolitan delights of colorful South Bank before an afternoon visit to Lone Pine Koala Sanctuary.

Australia’s oldest and largest koala sanctuary, Lone Pine gives you the opportunity to cuddle a koala, an unforgettably moving experience available only in Queensland. Lone Pine is home to other unique Australian fauna such as kangaroos, wallabies and wombats.

On your return to Brisbane you will visit Mt Coot-tha Lookout to take in views spanning the Great Dividing Range to the west and Moreton Bay and islands in the east.

Schedule

Departure Point: Tour departs from centrally located Brisbane and Gold Coast hotels – OR – Brisbane Transit Centre

Departure Time:

  • Brisbane Transit Centre 9:15am
  • Gold Coast 8am

Hotel pickups commence prior to this time, exact pickup time will be advised on reconfirmation.

Times are subject to change due to local traffic conditions.

Return Details: Returns to the Brisbane Transit Center at approximately 5pm

For additional information GO HERE!

4star

It was a nice trip, and my kids loved the tour, especially to visit koala bear and kangaroo sites. The river cruise round Brisbane also increased our knowledge of the history of the city. Tour guide/driver was very caring.

Reviewed by: Kah Heng L, Malaysia

COMPARE AND BOOK FROM 378 HOTEL DEALS ON THE GOLD COAST, AUSTRALIA


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