Click below for a brief with snap shots
Anuradhapura
Mihintale
Polonnaruwa
Sigiriya
Dambulla
Kandy
Pinnawala
Bentota
NuwaraEliya





 
The Orphanage was established to feed, nurse and house young elephants abandoned by their mothers, displaced from their natural environment by development projects. Most of the orphans cannot be introduced back into the wild, as other elephant family groups will not accept them. They enjoy a good life with their human parents, and many find good foster homes in zoos around the world. It is more interesting to visit an Orphanage at feeding or bathing time.

 


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SRI LANKA'S WILD LIFE
 
Wilpattu National Park was once the premier game park in Sri Lanka. Back in the early 1980s, it boated more than 200 game wardens, and a regular stream of visitors, before it was eventually closed because of the separatist conflict between government forces and the Tamil Tigers.
  Yala, a nature reserve and national park with a total protected area of 126,768 hectares, is the best place to see a variety of wildlife because of its scrub plains, lagoons and rocky sections. The ideal time for elephants is February to July and the park's other main residents, seen with the help of a guide and a four-wheel drive, are the sloth bears, sambur deer, spotted deer, wild boar, crocodiles, monkeys and buffalos.