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Showing posts with label Ella. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ella. Show all posts

Saturday, January 10, 2026

Ella (Sri Lanka) - Who are you trying to impress?

Ella (Sri Lanka)

07-10 January 2026

Ella doesn’t set out to impress you, and yet somehow that's exactly what it ends up doing. Tucked into the lush highlands of Sri Lanka, this town feels less like a destination and more like a deep exhale. Sitting in the morning chill of Awesome Place (yes, that’s the actually property name we stayed at), you wake to a morning chill that doesn’t just greet you, it settles into you, crisp and alive, as the mountain air quietly steals your breath in the best possible way. Standing still, you take it in: the surrounding hills unfolding in every direction, while the rising sun begins its slow performance across the landscape. Light spills over the greenery in soft waves, turning the slopes into a shifting tapestry of gold and green, until suddenly everything is touched with an orange-amber glow that cuts cleanly through the low-hanging morning cloud like the world itself is being gently switched on.

Coastlines, beaches, waves and sand, that its own special mix but somehow the mountains for me where I feel at my best—at peace, finding my solace and slipping into an “almost” meditative state. I say almost, because it is never fully that; instead, it is something more grounded, more human—quiet contemplation shaped and softened by appreciation of the landscape. Coastlines, beaches, waves, and sand - of course that’s nice… but somehow, it is in the mountains where everything slows just enough for thoughts to stretch out, to melt into the silence that feels intentional, and where presence becomes effortless rather than something to be sought after.

Awesome Place (hotel) - Ella - Sri Lanka

Awesome Place (hotel) - Ella - Sri Lanka

Bidding farewell to Awesome Place (hotel) - Ella - Sri Lanka

But Ella isn’t just scenery, it’s movement. Hikes like Little Adam’s Peak and Ella Rock reward effort with sweeping views that make the climb worthwhile. The beauty here isn’t curated—it’s raw, slightly unpredictable, and all the better for it. You might start your day in sunshine, walk through drifting cloud, and end up sipping tea while watching rain roll across the valley.

And then there’s the vibe. Ella has quietly mastered the art of being laid-back without feeling sleepy. Cafés serve up strong coffee and even stronger opinions on travel routes, backpackers swap stories like currency, and time becomes something you stop measuring too closely. It’s the kind of place that reminds you travel isn’t about ticking boxes, it’s about finding somewhere that makes you slow down, look around, and think, “Yeah… I could stay a while”. Occasionally you come across places of this elk, some in the same style, and some others are just kindred spirits. I’m looking at you Jericoacoara (Brazil), Hoi An (Vietnam) and Montville (Australia).

Our first day in Ella faded into eternity beneath a misty sheet of drizzle, chill and laziness. The day prior had been an extremely long day, and thankfully, Ella never placed any high demands upon us. Ella gives you that sort of opportunity -  to move without demands, and to settle in wherever it is that you feel is right for you.

Nine Arch Bridge - Ella - Sri Lanka

Nine Arch Bridge - Ella - Sri Lanka

Nine Arch Bridge - Ella - Sri Lanka

Certainly Day 2 in Ella was a more targeted one for us. We transferred from Awesome Place to something more central, at the Oak Ray Gap Hotel,  and then aimed up for the iconic Nine Arch Bridge, a colonial-era structure that has somehow become a social media celebrity without having lost its charm… yet…although, with burgeoning popularity, you just know that there will come a tipping point where the numbers of visitors will drive one of two outcomes;

1.  Either an influx of idiots executing stupid antics that leads to security and safety issues that will certainly restrict the experience, or;

2.    It will inherit such extreme popularity that it will ultimately diminish the experience itself, as seen in places like Sintra (Portugal), Barcelona (Spain), and Cinque Terre (Italy).

Nine Arch Bridge - Ella - Sri Lanka

                                 Nine Arch Bridge - Ella - Sri Lanka


Nine Arch Bridge - Ella - Sri Lanka


                                    Nine Arch Bridge - Ella - Sri Lanka

In an age where social media visibility drives rapid tourism, which in turn creates pressures on infrastructure, ecosystems, and human behaviour alike, even the most innocuous, “off the beaten path” locations can quickly succumb to touristic fervour. It will happen here too, of that I am confident—but thankfully, on this occasion, we were able to experience it without restriction.

Walking from Nine Arch Bridge back into the town of Ella along the train tracks - Ella - Sri Lanka

Ella - Sri Lanka

Ella - Sri Lanka

Surprise pancake attack - Ella - Sri Lanka

Main street of Ella - Sri Lanka

Main street of Ella - Sri Lanka

Walking from Nine Arch Bridge back into the town of Ella along the train tracks was a pleasure. Taking in the hillside environment with every deliberate step on the railway sleepers, Inga & Aiden led the way, with their 50-yr old husband/father in tow. You know, I may have said this before, but at this age I really don’t feel any different about travelling than I did 25 yrs ago. The wanderlust, energy and desire to see more things is still there. Of course I’ve cut down on my stupidity intake as I’ve had to navigate that desire as a trade off for growing my own little human, but the rewards of discovery are still as significant to me now as they ever have been, perhaps more so, because now I get to share all of them with Aiden and Inga….and yes, I know that there’s also a finite time for that, which in the back of my mind makes all moments like these significant.


Thursday, January 8, 2026

Yala National Park (Sri Lanka) - lets go...yalla...or is that yala?

Yala National Park (Sri Lanka)

07 January 2026

It has always been my mother’s dream to go on safari in Africa. Ever since I can remember, it was a recurring theme in those inevitable conversations of inspired optimism which were often typified by questions such as “What’s the number one place on your bucket list?” For my father, it was always somewhere in the “South Seas,” by which he meant any island with a Polynesian heritage that evoked the films of his youth. For my mother, it was the wilds of Africa where her imagination would consistently take her.

Fortunately, I have been lucky enough to help both of them bring those dreams to life. For my father, it was a week in Tahiti in 2000. For my mother, it was when Inga and I took her on a three-day safari in Kruger National Park in 2017.

Why do I say this? Because I can understand the romanticised view my father held of the South Pacific. For many Europeans, the idea of Polynesia was so distant and almost mythical in its allure that it may as well have been like imagining a trip to the moon—particularly when considered through the lens of the 1950s.

That said, Africa may well have been viewed in much the same way at the time, shaped by literature and popular accounts of big game hunting and the romanticism of the so-called “wilds” of the continent.

Why do I lead with this? Because it’s the inevitable prelude.

When I travelled with my parents to Tahiti, it was easy to imagine nothing more than pure indulgence—cocktails by the pool, the sound of ukuleles drifting on a gentle breeze, and waves rolling in across the deep blues of the South Pacific. In contrast, a safari in Africa never held the same appeal for me. It seemed, at the time, like a rather unremarkable proposition: how much could one really get out of driving through scrubland in the back of a Jeep?

How wrong I was.

A safari in Kruger National Park has since become one of the highlights of my life to date. To be within a few steps of some of the most iconic creatures on the planet, to hear the rustle of branches and immediately register the immense presence of whatever was moving through them, to experience the smells and textures of the bush—these things left a lasting impression. Most of all, there was a clear and humbling understanding that I was only ever a visitor in that landscape.

Although the Jeep we were travelling in offered a measure of safety within a human-made framework, it was impossible to ignore the reality that stepping just a few paces into the scrub would place you entirely at the mercy of the environment which enveloped us.

Which thus brings me to Yala National Park, on the southern coast of Sri Lanka. When I saw that we had the the opportunity to share a similar experience with Aiden, I didn’t hesitate to make the decision to book the excursion. It felt like a chance to introduce him to something that has left an indelible mark on our own memories, and in some way, would resonate within him as a 

A wonderful Sri Lankan breakfast at the Mirissa Beach Hotel - Mirissa - Sri Lanka


We left Mirissa mid-morning on 7 April, en route to the hill town of Ella, with a planned half-day safari through the park along the way.

Before researching Sri Lanka, I had been largely unaware of the country’s national parks. While they may not be as widely known or as celebrated as those in Africa, they nonetheless offer an extraordinary opportunity to observe native wildlife in its natural habitat. That was exactly the experience I wanted Aiden to have. At six years old, I knew the memories would likely be fragmented—just a handful of vivid snapshots—but those are often the most important ones, the kind that spark questions, curiosity, and a lasting sense of discovery.

Yala National Park - Sri Lanka

Yala National Park - Sri Lanka

The setup for Yala National Park was similar to Kruger in that we were travelling in an open safari vehicle, with tiered seating that rose slightly from front to back. Inga, Aiden, and I sat in the rear, settling in as we arrived at the Yala Reserve entrance gates for what would be a four-hour adventure.

From our first experience in Kruger, Inga and I had learned that much of a safari experience is dependent on luck—where you happen to be at any given moment, the skill and instinct of your driver, and your own level of attentiveness. While there are clear similarities between both reserves—a sense of openness, and the feeling of being a guest in a shared space—there is also a curious psychological effect at play. You begin to convince yourself that you are somehow enclosed within a protective bubble, as though the vehicle creates an invisible and universally respected boundary. It has always struck me how persistent that illusion of safety can be, no matter where I travel.

Yala National Park - Sri Lanka

Yala National Park - Sri Lanka

Yala National Park - Sri Lanka

Yala National Park - Sri Lanka

Yala National Park - Sri Lanka

From my perspective, the experience in Yala didn’t quite reach the heights of what we encountered in South Africa, particularly in terms of wildlife diversity and the sense of serendipity that Kruger delivered. That said, we still saw elephants, monkeys, crocodiles, and an impressive range of birdlife, all set against the raw and untouched beauty of Sri Lanka’s southern reaches. On its own terms, it was absolutely worthwhile—especially as an experience we hope will stay with Aiden.

For anyone unsure whether to include Yala in their itinerary, I would say it is absolutely worth doing, particularly if you have not experienced a safari before. In that case, it will likely stand out as one of the highlights of a trip to Sri Lanka.

Yala National Park - Sri Lanka

Yala National Park - Sri Lanka

Yala National Park - Sri Lanka

However, if you have spent time on more extensive or immersive safaris elsewhere and are expecting something comparable, it may be wise to moderate expectations. Yala is still a very rewarding experience, but my perspective is inevitably shaped by comparison. Had we spent more time fully immersed in the park, our impression might well have been different.

We wrapped up in the late afternoon, exiting the reserve around 6:00pm as the sun dipped toward the western horizon. From there, we continued on to our next destination—the hill town of Ella, roughly 2.5 to 3 hours away.

We drifted through scattered towns that briefly punctuated the otherwise unbroken darkness of the night. In the final hour, we began our ascent toward Ella, navigating relentless winding turns, with ever-steeper drops edging the roadside and a noticeable chill settling into the air as we climbed higher.

Our real challenge came in the final hour of the journey. The place we had booked—aptly named “Awesome Place”—was about 10 km outside Ella. At first, that didn’t concern me in the slightest, but I quickly realised my mistake when that short distance turned into a 45-minute ordeal, winding through nerve-wracking mountain roads in complete darkness. Only to feel a larger onset of dread when our transfer came to the ‘end of the line’ on a desolate mountain trail and said in no uncertain terms, ‘this is as far as I can go’….what? What does that mean?

What that meant, as we were soon to discover, was that the hotel had to send its own transfer vehicle for the final 2 km of the journey. Why? Because no reasonably sane driver would attempt that stretch without risking serious damage to their vehicle.

What followed shortly after—bouncing around in the back of a van with virtually no suspension—was a track so rough and boulder-strewn that it felt less like a road and more like being tossed around on a jumping castle, only without any of the fun or comfort.

Awesome Place (hotel) - Ella - Sri Lanka

Awesome Place (hotel) - Ella - Sri Lanka

Awesome Place (hotel) - Ella - Sri Lanka

After a further 30 minutes of what can only be described as Sri Lankan trail torture, we finally arrived at our hillside oasis. Wrapped in cool mountain air and a light drizzle, it felt both special and entirely removed from anything we had experienced so far. Welcome to Ella—there was clearly much more to discover here.