Welcome to Arcasia Tours Sri Lanka

Exotic Safari Destinations

Sri Lanka is gifted with a vast diversity of unusual geological & ecological biospheres to sustain a numerous variety of lifeforms, both fauna and flora of both tropical & temperate climes, unique to Asia for the exploration of the discerning traveler.

Safari convoys to probe & spot rare species of wild animals is a popular desire of our previous customers. So we keep upgrading our tour packages to include new & emerging destinations in order to enable our clients to be happy about where they go, what they 'see' & what they would discover on their journeys into the wilderness.

The following are some of the most intriguing destinations that we have selected for one to explore on a planned tour of the resplendent island.

Udawalawe National Park

JEEP SAFARI -- UDAWALAWE NATIONAL PARK

This is the safest way to observe wildlife in the wilderness, in a protected Jeep Safari. Certainly a good choice, as Uda Walawe National Park is pretty non-touristic, unusual & it is a cut above the well traversed Yala or Wilpattu Wildlife National Parks. There are more chances of spotting the wild leopards in the Uda Walawe National Wildlife Park than the other Parks, because it's out of the way from the roads & highways of the geographical area that most tour itineraries are scheduled & conducted. This is the reason why this Park is not too crowded, which implies that it is more suitable for spotting wildlife.

There are plenty of Elephant herds in this park, to enable the survival of orphaned elephants, an Elephant Transit Home has been established here to feed those who starve without sufficient greens to eat in the wilderness.

Sinharaja National Park

EXPLORE THE SINHARAJA RAIN FOREST RESERVE

The only one of its kind in the geophysical area of the south Indian Peninsula & this island nation in this region, taken as a discrete part of the world. The closest other Rainforest is in the Malaysian Peninsula across the ocean. The Sinharaja Rain Forest Reserve supports & sustains an abundance of creatures from reptiles like lizards & turtles, mammals like deer & buffalo, amphibians like Salamander & Iguana & birds like turkey & ducks to aquatic beings like fish & squid in addition to numerous varieties of tropical vegetation. It is an enchanting sanctuary to be with nature & ‘listen’ to the natural environment swarming with life as we know it. Though there are numerous other life forms which we look at, but fail to ‘see’, they are part of this wonderful biosphere. An absolutely absorbing experience to find out for one, the numerous intricacies of the instincts of nature is all here in its magnificence.

Yala National Park

It is the oldest known National Park in the world. Older than the names that we use to describe it, it is a natural forest where animals thrive for its conditions such as edible vegetation, tropical & dry weather with an abundance of estuaries enabling many life forms to exist side by side in this dense forest of large trees, plants, herbs, water bodies & vines. It is preferable to be silent in this kind of environment, stop talking & begin to listen to the sounds of nature. As the sounds we make are likely to disturb the wild animals, they can hide or simply disappear when they get perturbed. Lions, tigers, cheetahs & leopards had once lived here. However, due to the phenomenon of the extinction of species, only the leopards have survived as revealed in the survivor series. One would feel fortunate to spot a leopard & it can happen at the spur of the moment, unpredictably, spontaneously. Herds of Peacocks, monkeys & Elephants somehow seem to thrive as they appear on the scene as soon as one enters the park. Others materialize sooner or later as one goes deeper into the forest. The sound of the peacocks somehow seem to be working as an alarm giving the message to others to move away from where they are to run deeper into the wilderness as one drives in all protected & equipped.

Wasgamuwa National Park

Wasgamuwa National Park is a natural park in the wilderness of Sri Lanka situated in the Matale and Polonnaruwa Districts. It was declared as a National Park in order to protect and to make a refuge for the displaced wild animals during the Mahaweli Development Project in the vicinity in 1984 and is one of the four National Parks designated under the Project.

It is a wilderness in the interior part of the Central and North Central provinces adjoining the north-western part of the Gal-Oya National Park, so it is full of lush greenery suitable for all kinds of wildlife.

Elephants like this place as it is packed with estuaries where they hang out for the moisture drinking and playing with the water and the sinking mud. Wasgamuwa is derived from Walass gamuwa meaning Bear Wood, so there are plenty of sloth bear in the park.

Minneriya National Park

Set in the heart of the popular cultural triangle of Sri Lanka, Minneriya National Park is mostly known for its incredible elephant migration, which is one of Asia’s finest wildlife experiences as the giants tread between Kaudulla N.P., Wasgamuwa N. P. & Minneriya N. P.. This happens during the drier months of June to September, as many as 300 elephants congregate here, the biggest gathering of the gentle giants outside Africa, in the Minneriya National Park around the ancient Minneriya water tank (which dates back to 3rd Century AD), taking advantage of the receding waters that provide an important water source for their numerous needs of the essential moisture.

As it is so close to some of the other cultural attractions of Sri Lanka, it can be a great alternative to Yala and some of the other parks in the south and west of the Island.

Kumana National Park

It is located in the southeast of the Island, besides the Kumana Bird Sanctuary and the Yala National Park, the oldest known National Park in the world. Kumana National Park is an Internationally important wintering ground for migratory water birds in Sri Lanka. Kumana harbours more than 197 species of birds including migrating greater Flamingo, which migrate in large flocks to take a well-deserved break from flying across long distances of the seas, bays and the Indian Ocean. Kumana N.P. is an amazing maze of lakes, estuaries, lagoons, ponds, dunes & waterways which attract birds on inter-continental flights. During sunrise & sunset, these wetland waters glitter almost like gold which attracts photographers & travellers. It is home to the insignificant little bee-eaters to grotesque open-billed storks. Birds come all the way from Siberia & Mongolia and India to winter here in this Park. It is also home to civets, giant squirrels and plenty of crocodiles. Marine turtles including ‘olive ridley’, ‘green leatherback’ & ‘loggerhead’ lay their eggs on the coast of Kumana. Many big mammals such as hippopotamus, wild buffalo & elephants live side by side with the two-legged ones

Discover Sri Lanka

Rich in Culture and History

UNESCO World Heritage Sites

With a written history of over 2500 years of literature, spirituality, art, carvings, sculpture, healing therapy, and civil & hydraulic engineering works still well preserved, Sri Lanka has a vast array of physical evidence of a rich tradition & culture.

Some of these sites have been found to be so unique that international bodies such as the Departments of Art & Culture of Ivy League Universities of the west & UNESCO have intervened in order to protect them as World Heritage Sites.

The following are some of the most alluring sites that we have hand-picked for you to explore on a tour of the magical Island with us.

Eco Adventures and Picturesque Landscapes

Gifted with a valuable set of Mountain Ranges in the central regions of the most beautifully shaped Island on the planet, enables the discerning visitor to take panoramic views at awesome terrain & landscapes of numerous regions from atop numerous viewpoints. These Central highlands enable the traveler to enjoy seeing & capturing these breathtaking views of uncanny valleys, gaps, plantations, settlements & mountain ranges & feel the cool temperate climate far from the coasts. The high altitude enables one to gather an exceptional breath of fresh healthy oxygen from the crisp air & the collection of precipitation on the hills facilitates to distribution of water to numerous rivers, creeks, brooks, streams and other waterways with the essential water.

This water trickles down to the vegetation and the creatures which depend upon it in the diverse ecosystem of the Island of 25,000 square miles of rolling hills, plantations, settlements and National Parks.