Overview
Situated in a biodiversity hotspot, Sri Lanka is home to a large variety of flora and fauna, much of it endemic to the country. This tour is filled with amazing nature trails and safaris helping you see the rare and endemic birds that call Sri Lanka home.
Accommodation: Goldi Sands
Room Category- Standard Room
Meal Plan- Full Board Basis (Lunch, Dinner, and Breakfast)
Upon arrival at Bandaranaike International Airport, you will be welcomed by our ground staff and transferred to your hotel in Negombo, Goldi Sands.
Check into your hotel and spend the remainder of the day in leisure.
Overnight stay.
Accommodation: The Plantation Hotel
Room Category: Deluxe Room
Meal Plan: Full Board Basis (Lunch, Dinner, and Breakfast)
After breakfast, leave Negombo heading toward the west to our first birding base, the lush lowlands of Kitulgala (4 hours drive). Roadside birding in Sri Lanka is refreshingly good. Blue-tailed Bee-eater, White-throated Kingfisher, White-bellied Drongo, Indian Roller, Sri Lanka Swallow, Scaly-breasted Munia, Brown Shrike, Indian Jungle Crow, Yellow-billed Babbler, Oriental Magpie-Robin, and Ashy Woodswallow are often seen perched on wires. Though we will no doubt see them again and again, these wayside temptations will be hard to resist. The odd Crested Serpent Eagle and Changeable Hawk-Eagle, sentinels on posts, will almost certainly bring our vehicle to a halt. The more common waterbirds such as Red-wattled Lapwing, Indian Pond Heron, Eastern Cattle Egret, Intermediate Egret, Black-winged Stilt, and Asian Openbill will certainly not be ignored either.
With all these leg-stretching stops it will be close to midday by the time we reach our overnight accommodation, The Plantation Hotel nestled in a well-wooded garden and overlooking the Kelani River, the setting for the renowned ’50s Hollywood blockbuster “The Bridge on the River Kwai”. After enjoying our first of many rice-and-curry lunches we will commence our quest for the island’s endemics in the well-wooded garden of our lodge. The resonant call of Yellow-fronted Barbet is likely to demand our attention first – a common element in the soundscape of the wet Sri Lankan hinterland. The gregarious Orange-billed Babbler with its constant chattering will be easier to locate. A gem of a bird, Sri Lanka Hanging Parrot – with its specific name beryllium named after beryl, a semi-precious stone found in Sri Lanka – may require scope views to properly take in its scarlet forehead and rump patch against a greener body.
Our night bird tally is likely to get ticking with the adorable Chestnut-backed Owlet at a stakeout. The well-wooded, home-garden-type birding, combining several “patches”, will add a mouth-watering array of birds to our tally in the form of newly raised endemic Sri Lanka Swallow (perched views on wires), Sri Lanka Green Pigeon, Chestnut-headed Bee-eater, Square-tailed Bulbul, White-browed Bulbul, Yellow-browed Bulbul, Tickell’s Blue Flycatcher, Orange-billed Babbler, Sri Lanka Grey Hornbill, Golden-fronted Leafbird, Red-backed Flameback, Black-headed Cuckooshrike, Sri Lanka Hill Myna, Common Iora, Purple-rumped Sunbird, Bar-winged Flycatcher-shrike, Orange Minivet, Brown-breasted Flycatcher, Asian Brown Flycatcher, Forest Wagtail, and perhaps Layard’s Parakeet, named after E. L. Layard, a 19th-century British civil servant, who added an astonishing 136 species to Sri Lanka’s avian inventory.
Overnight stay.
Accommodation: The Plantation Hotel
Room Category: Deluxe Room
Meal Plan: Full Board Basis (Lunch, Dinner, and Breakfast)
Full day birding in Kitulgala for lowland endemics and specialties
The Spot-winged Thrush may greet the new day with its rhythmic dawn chorus. And it may perhaps come hopping in to find an easy meal at first light. The “pretty-dear” call, likely to be heard in the undergrowth, may betray a flock of Brown-capped Babbler, moving low. The Himalayan delight, Indian Pitta, might also be not too far if you can well. With more light of the day, the dawn chorus may peak with additional tunes of Green Warbler, Large-billed Leaf Warbler, Tickell’s Blue Flycatcher, and the aforementioned thrush, with harsher greetings from Chestnut-backed Owlet. Our morning’s birding will add a huge boost to our trip list, with the likes of Oriental Dwarf Kingfisher, Sri Lanka Drongo, Lesser Yellownape, Indian Paradise Flycatcher, Black-naped Monarch, Black-capped Bulbul, Indian White-eye, and Sri Lanka Grey Hornbill. We will cross the Kelani River in search of rarer gems. Foremost among these is the Serendib Scops Owl, discovered in 2001 and with an estimated population of only 200 – 250 birds in the wild. We will look for it at a daytime roost. The ultra-secretive Sri Lanka Spurfowl may require patience, as it is highly wary of people! Crimson-backed Flameback is also in this forest and is a gorgeous woodpecker. During the return journey, we will pause at a forest patch to look for a roosting pair of Sri Lanka Frogmouth, which is a South India and Sri Lanka endemic.
Overnight stay.
Accommodation: Blue Magpie Lodge
Room Category: Standard AC Room
Meal Plan: Full Board Basis (Lunch, Dinner, and Breakfast)
After some early morning birding and breakfast, we will drive to the amazing Sinharaja Forest Reserve, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, which represents the largest expanse of lowland rainforest in Sri Lanka and the premier site for endemics.
Reach your lodge which will be your home for the next 3 nights at Blue Magpie Lodge for lunch.
A highlight of birding in Sinharaja is seeing mixed-species bird flocks, which is a strategy adopted by birds in the tropics to maximize feeding efficiency and to reduce the risk of predation; these flocks are likely to be led by Orange-billed Babbler and Sri Lanka Drongo. The star of this coterie of flock-associated specials is the enigmatic Red-faced Malkoha – a canopy dwelling endemic, found typically at heights of 25-35 meters, with a remarkable ability to melt away into the dense thickets. White-faced Starling too keeps to the canopy. Ashy-headed Laughingthrush, in comparison, is found in bottom levels of the flock, often scratching the forest floor for insect prey, and Malabar Trogon hawks insects in the sub canopy and remains largely silent.
Overnight stay.
Accommodation: Blue Magpie Lodge
Room Category: Standard AC Room
Meal Plan: Full Board Basis (Lunch, Dinner, and Breakfast)
With a packed breakfast, we will reach the ticket office of Sinharaja and commence our foray into this endemic hotspot, looking for our targets. One of them is the montane endemic Sri Lanka Wood Pigeon, which descends to Sinharaja in search of seasonal fruits. With the right technique more bonus birds will come our way in the form of Sri Lanka Hill Myna, Indian Blue Robin, Slaty-legged Crake, and Indian Cuckoo. Finding an Indian Paradise Flycatcher, sporting its white ribbon-like tail streamers that are nearly a foot in length, maybe a possibility if we encounter a good flock. Chestnut-winged Cuckoo, another migrant that joins flocks, may, however, present a tougher challenge, as it isn’t as regular. We will also try for forest raptors like Besra and Crested Goshawk, which lurk behind flocks to catch birds. As of midday approaches, we may perhaps hear the blood-curdling screams of Grizzled (Sri Lanka) Giant Squirrels, which would betray the presence of more formidable forest raptors, such as Legge’s Hawk-Eagle and Black Eagle, soaring high above the canopy. In addition to the above, we will try to obtain improved views of the endemics already seen and try to again experience the magic of mixed-species bird flocks.
Overnight stay.
Accommodation: Blue Magpie Lodge
Room Category: Standard AC Room
Meal Plan: Full Board Basis (Lunch, Dinner, and Breakfast)
Today morning head early with a packed breakfast to the Ketellepattala road which is a jungle road bordering the rainforest. This rugged trail will be traversed by a 4x4 jeep, and you will pass homesteads that live side by side eking out a living from the riches of the forest. You will pass small crops of tea which these homes grow for subsistence, and these areas where the forests meet the homes and open areas are ideal for mixed flocks of birds who will pass while feeding on insects.
You will reach a homestead at the end of the road, where you will lie in hiding for the appearance of the elusive and shy Sri Lanka spurfowl which has grown accustomed to visiting the wooded backyard of this home every morning. Silence and remaining still is very important if you are to get a good glimpse of this endemic. Their presence often announced before they appear with their cacophonic call.
This location is also great for sightings of the endemic Green-billed Coucal and Chestnut-backed Owlet. Your village tracker would also have located the presence of the most prized endemic in this area the spectacular Serendib Scops Owl, often located early morning before dawn from its call, and thereafter you will be taken to its daytime roost. This is of course depending on luck hence as in nature nothing is a guarantee.
Return back to your hotel for lunch, and thereafter continue birding inside and outside the national reserve.
Overnight stay.
Hotel: Mandara Resort
Room Category: Standard Lagoon Room
Meal Plan: Full Board Basis (Lunch, Dinner, and Breakfast)
After a final morning birding in Sinharaja and breakfast, we will head to the beautiful southern coast of Sri Lanka at Mirissa (4.5 hours drive) to get into a suitable location for the pelagic trip tomorrow.
Reach your hotel Mandara Resort for Lunch and overnight stay.
Accommodation: Oakray Wild
Room Category: Superior Deluxe Room
Meal Plan: Full Board Basis (Dinner and Breakfast from Hotel), Lunch at select restaurant en-route.
We will be up early for a really exciting prospect, the chance to go whale watching in the stunning Indian Ocean for the morning. Our main target species is the largest mammal on the planet – the magnificent and unrivaled Blue Whale, which can reach lengths of over 30m! Seeing these huge creatures will be hard to beat, although we could also possibly find Sperm Whale, Bryde’s Whale, Orca (Killer Whale), Short-finned Pilot Whale, Risso’s Dolphin, Spinner Dolphin, or Long-beaked Common Dolphin. A range of seabirds are possible (e.g. Bridled Tern, Pomarine Jaeger, Wilson’s Storm Petrel, Brown Noddy, etc.); however, our main focus of the pelagic is on the sea mammals.
After the pelagic trip we will move up the coast to Tissamaharama (3 hours drive), our base for a couple of nights as we explore this excellent area for a wide range of birds.
Lunch will be served at a select restaurant along the way
Upon arrival, head towards the Tissa and Deberawewa wetlands. These are great for many species of waterbirds such as Black, Yellow, and Cinnamon Bitterns, Watercock, Great Stone-curlew, Indian Stone-curlew, Eurasian Curlew, Marsh Sandpiper, Wood Sandpiper, Green Sandpiper, Lesser Sand Plover, Greater Sand Plover, Little Ringed Plover, Little Stint, Kentish Plover, Red-necked Phalarope, Small Pratincole, Western Reef Heron, Striated Heron, Little Egret, Black-headed Ibis, Glossy Ibis, Eurasian Spoonbill, Black-necked Stork, Little Cormorant, Indian Cormorant, Oriental Darter, Spot-billed Pelican, Yellow-wattled Lapwing, Black-tailed Godwit, Garganey, Northern Pintail, Northern Shoveler, Caspian Tern, White-winged Tern, Whiskered Tern, Common Tern, Greater Crested Tern, Lesser Crested Tern, Little Tern, Brown-headed Gull, and Greater Flamingo. Other species possible in the area may include Clamorous Reed Warbler, Eurasian Hoopoe, Ashy-crowned Sparrow-Lark, Brown Fish Owl, Yellow-crowned Woodpecker, and Ashy Drongo.
Also, a local village contact will take you to their village gardens, which have confirmed roosting sites of Jungle Owlet, Oriental Scops Owl, and Brown Fish Owl.
By late evening head to your hotel Oakray Wild for check-in, dinner, and overnight stay.
Accommodation: Oakray Wild
Room Category: Superior Deluxe Room
Meal Plan: Full Board Basis (Lunch, Dinner, and Breakfast)
An early morning hops on a safari jeep and head towards Bundala National Park with a packed breakfast (1 hour from the hotel). We will spend the morning birding the fascinating habitats of Bundala National Park, Sri Lanka’s first Ramsar site. This is the premier site for waterbirds, and you can often get close to the birds in the vehicles to get very good photographic opportunities. We will get there as early as possible to maximize our time in this wonderful set of habitats. Some of the species possible here include Black, Yellow, and Cinnamon Bitterns, Watercock, Great Stone-curlew, Indian Stone-curlew, Eurasian Curlew, Marsh Sandpiper, Wood Sandpiper, Green Sandpiper, Lesser Sand Plover, Greater Sand Plover, Little Ringed Plover, Little Stint, Kentish Plover, Red-necked Phalarope, Small Pratincole, Western Reef Heron, Striated Heron, Little Egret, Black-headed Ibis, Glossy Ibis, Eurasian Spoonbill, Black-necked Stork, Little Cormorant, Indian Cormorant, Oriental Darter, Spot-billed Pelican, Yellow-wattled Lapwing, Black-tailed Godwit, Garganey, Northern Pintail, Northern Shoveler, Caspian Tern, White-winged Tern, Whiskered Tern, Common Tern, Greater Crested Tern, Lesser Crested Tern, Little Tern, Brown-headed Gull, and Greater Flamingo. Other species possible in the area may include Clamorous (Indian) Reed Warbler, Eurasian Hoopoe, Ashy-crowned Sparrow-Lark, Brown Fish Owl, Yellow-crowned Woodpecker, and Ashy Drongo. Further species we will look for include Barred Buttonquail, Painted Stork, White-bellied Sea Eagle, Grey-headed Fish Eagle, Greater Painted-snipe, Common Ringed Plover, Broad-billed Sandpiper, Curlew Sandpiper, Ruff, Terek Sandpiper, Orange-breasted Green Pigeon, Grey-bellied Cuckoo, Blue-faced Malkoha, Sirkeer Malkoha, Chestnut-headed Bee-eater, Indian Pitta, Forest Wagtail, Oriental Skylark, Yellow-eyed Babbler, Rosy Starling, Streaked and Baya Weavers, and Indian Silverbill. There really is a huge list of potential species here, and we’re bound to have a great time.
Return back to the hotel for lunch.
In the afternoon head to Yala National Park for a game drive where the main focus is to find the apex predator of the Sri Lankan wilds the Leopard as well as glimpses of the elusive Sloth Bear, Asian Elephant, Wild Boar, Axis Deer, and much other faunas. Here we will also likely come across some of the birds found at Bundala.
Return back to your hotel for Dinner and overnight stay.
Accommodation: Elephant Trails
Room Category: Standard Room
Meal Plan: Full Board Basis (Lunch, Dinner, and Breakfast)
In the morning we drive to the dry lowlands of Udawalawe National Park. After checking in at the accommodation Elephant Trails for Lunch, we will hop on a safari jeep and explore the fantastic Udawalawe National Park in search of dry-zone birds, which abound here. The birds on offer here include Sri Lanka Woodshrike, White-bellied Sea Eagle, Green Bee-eater, Blue-faced Malkoha, Coppersmith Barbet, Yellow-eyed Babbler, Rosy Starling, Jacobin Cuckoo, Grey-bellied Cuckoo, Jerdon’s Bush Lark, Ashy-crowned Sparrow-Lark, Indian Pitta, White-browed Fantail, Little Swift, Brahminy Starling, Paddyfield Pipit, Blyth’s Pipit, Orange-breasted Green Pigeon, Spot-billed Pelican, Yellow-wattled Lapwing, Painted Stork, Woolly-necked Stork, Indian Peafowl, Indian Robin, Black-winged Kite, and Indian Stone-curlew. Migrant forms of Red-rumped Swallow (with paler red belly and rump). Western Yellow Wagtail, White Wagtail, and Citrine Wagtail may show up too. Other birds we will be on the lookout for at Udawalawe National Park include dry-zone specials such as Malabar Pied Hornbill, Sirkeer Malkoha, Indian Silverbill, Barred Buttonquail, Lesser Adjutant, and if lucky Brown Fish Owl. With its vast open expanses, the park also harbors a rich diversity of exciting raptors, such as Changeable Hawk-Eagle, Crested Serpent Eagle, Grey-headed Fish Eagle, Western Osprey – a local rarity, Pallid Harrier, Montagu’s Harrier – another rarity, Booted Eagle, Shaheen – the resident race of Peregrine Falcon, Common Kestrel, Crested Honey Buzzard, and Shikra. In addition to excellent birds, a visit to Udawalawe also presents a good opportunity to observe the Asian Elephant and the elusive Jungle Cat, both of which are found in good numbers in the park. At dusk falls we will look for Indian Nightjar and Jerdon’s Nightjar in the scrub near our accommodation, likely serenaded by a chorus of Indian Pittas as the sunsets.
Overnight stay.
Accommodation: Galway Heights
Room Category: Deluxe Room
Meal Plan: Full Board Basis (Lunch, Dinner, and Breakfast)
After an early breakfast, we will commence our ascent to reach the cooler interiors of Nuwara Eliya (1,890m) (6 hours drive). We will stop for any ‘good’ birds noted along the way, but principally the morning is for driving today. Nuwara Eliya is the most famous hill station in Sri Lanka, named by some “Little England”, as it still bears evidence of its colonial past with its English-style holiday homes, a racecourse, vegetable gardens, shooting ranges, an urban park, a few pubs, flower gardens, and a fine 18-hole golf course.
As we ascend vast stretches of tea gardens dominate the landscape, a cash crop introduced by the British, which is currently the country’s third-highest revenue earner.
Reach your lodging Hotel Heaven Seven for lunch.
A serious drop in temperature (around 10-15 degrees Centigrade) at Nuwara Eliya will necessitate sweaters! After lunch explore Victoria Park. Established in 1897 to commemorate the 60th coronation jubilee of Queen Victoria, this urban park is the prime location for Western Himalayan migrants, including Kashmir Flycatcher and Pied Thrush, which winter almost exclusively in Sri Lanka. Indian Pitta, Indian Blue Robin, Forest Wagtail, Sri Lanka Scimitar Babbler, Indian Blackbird, and Sykes’s Warbler are some of the other good birds to be found in this park.
Finally, we will reach our highland lodging Galway Heights, for dinner and overnight stay.
Accommodation: Galway Heights
Room Category: Deluxe Room
Meal Plan: Full Board Basis (Lunch, Dinner, and Breakfast)
We will have an early start with a picnic breakfast to get to the high elevation Horton Plains National Park, where we will spend time in the forest looking for high-value montane targets: Sri Lanka Whistling Thrush, Sri Lanka Bush Warbler, Yellow-eared Bulbul, Dull-blue Flycatcher, Sri Lanka White-eye, and Sri Lanka Wood Pigeon. Mixed-species bird flocks are to be found in this forest, comprised of both white-eye species, Orange Minivet, Velvet-fronted Nuthatch, Grey-headed Canary-flycatcher, and Bar-winged Flycatcher-shrike.
In the afternoon we will descend back to near Nuwara Eliya, where we will reach a patch of habitat in time to anticipate the arrival of the ultra-secretive, montane endemic, Sri Lanka Whistling Thrush, which is one of two Endangered (IUCN) Sri Lankan endemics. The further remainder of the daylight hours will be spent on covering any species which you would have missed in the surrounding outskirts of Nuwara Eliya.
Return to your hotel for Dinner and overnight stay.
Accommodation: Hotel Tree of Life
Room Category: Superior Room
Meal Plan: Full Board Basis (Lunch, Dinner, and Breakfast)
After an early breakfast in the morning, we will be birding for any missing montane specials before driving to Kandy (2.5 hours’ drive) the last Sinhalese kingdom in Sri Lanka, which was ceded to the British in 1815.
En route, we will pause at a tea factory to see the recently-split Hill Swallow, which nests inside the factory. After a cuppa, we will reach our accommodation Hotel Tree of Life.
In the late afternoon, we will go birding within our ample hotel grounds close to Kandy to look for any missing targets. We will also look for several special birds here, namely Crimson-fronted Barbet, Sri Lanka Hill Myna, and Common Hawk-Cuckoo. As dusk falls, keep an eye out for the ultra-secretive and rare Lesser Flying Squirrel.
Overnight stay.
Meals: Breakfast, Lunch
will finish the tour with some optional pre-breakfast birding around the wonderful gardens of the hotel area. After our final breakfast of the tour we will travel back to Katunayake near Colombo (4 hours drive)
Lunch will be served at a select restaurant en route.
Thereafter you will be dropped off at the airport for your flight back home.
Highlights
Included
- Accommodation in the mentioned properties on Full Board Basis All entrance fees of the reserves and parks mentioned
- All safari jeep costs of the reserves and parks mentioned Mirissa boat tour
- Guidance by a professional birding guide/naturalist Transport in a comfortable mini coach
- Drinking water during the tour All relevant taxes
Video
Location
Stories
Ladakh
North India, the land of Ladakh, looks as though it was made for birdwatching and photography.
Gir National Park Gujarat
Sometimes it is not just the species spotted but also the amazing moments. Some of our guests had the unique opportunity to witness the mating of Asiatic Lions in the Gir Forest, truly a special moment.
Delhi
Surajpur is an amazing wetland close to the nation’s capital. Apart from being one of the monsoon homes for the Bristled Grassbird, it is also home to another sought-after species: the Bengal Bush Lark.
Rajasthan
One advantage of living near the birding hotspot of Bharatpur is that you can see some amazing birds, like the graceful Sarus Crane, in your backyard during this lockdown