Travel Lovers Club Sri Lanka: 14 Great Tips

Travel Tip 1: Water: You shouldn’t really drink the water in Sri Lanka, so bring a reusable water bottle with a purifier. It’s really hot, so to keep hydrated, you’d probably spend 300 rupees ($2) per day on plastic bottles of water at 60 rupees ($0.40) each. But a water bottle with a purifier costs just $20 (though my preferred brand Lifestraw is slightly more). Over the course of a two-week trip, that’s an $8 savings (and you help the environment too)!



Travel 2: Food: Outside of the major cities of Colombo and Kandy, you won’t find many non-Sri Lankan or non-Indian food options. What you do find is a poor excuse for Western food that is overpriced and often a chain. Stick to the local food! It’s super delicious. I never knew much about Sri Lankan food beforehand but now I’m hooked! Just eat it all! Balaji Dosai in Kandy; Ahinsa in Sigiriya; Upali’s in Colombo; Hot Hut in Nuwara Eliya; and the restaurants across from the bus station in Anuradhapura were some of my favourite.



Travel Tip 3: More about food: Food, besides being crazy good, is also really cheap in Sri Lanka! Local food costs about $1-3  per meal for simple dishes of dosasai (a kind of pancake), kottu (a dish made of roti (flatbread), vegetables, egg and/or meat, and spices), rice, chicken, and everything in between. At restaurants with table service, you’ll pay closer to $5.



Travel Tip 4: Alcohol: Don’t expect too many chances to drink alcohol. Outside the coastal tourist towns and the capital of Colombo, there isn’t much nightlife or opportunities to drink. While you can always crack a beer at your guesthouse, Sri Lanka isn’t home to a big drinking/nightlife culture. Expect your nights to be tame.



Travel Tip 5: Tuk-tuks: You can hire drivers cheaply. Any tuk-tuk driver will let you hire them for the day. Expect to pay around $20 USD for the day. Moreover, tuk-tuk drivers are pretty honest, except in Colombo, where they will try to scam and overcharge you. Elsewhere in the country, you’ll get a fair deal. There’s no need to try to bargain hard.



Travel Tip 6: Airport transfer: There is a train to the airport you can take from Colombo Fort. It’s the cheapest way to get there, at 30 rupees ($0.20). A tuk-tuk ride is about 2,500 rupees ($17), and buses to the airport cost 110 rupees ($0.75) and leave about every 30 minutes from Colombo Central Bus Station or Mawatha Bus Station.



Travel Tip 7: Trains: Train travel, while often slower, are the cheapest way to get around. Some typical routes: Colombo to Jaffna is 150-445 rupees ($1-3), Jaffna to Anuradhapura is 150-295 rupees ($1-2), Kandy to Nuwara Eliya is 85-280 rupees ($0.60-1.90), and Colombo to Galle is 150-295 rupees ($1-2).



Travel Tip 8: Booking trains: If you are taking the scenic train from Kandy to Nuwara Eliya or Ella (or vice versa) and want a seat, book it in advance through a travel agency, as tickets can’t be booked in person at the station unless it’s done four days before departure. You can always (and only) get a cramped second-class ticket (where you’ll learn the new meaning of a tight squeeze) on the day of departure. Many people will tell you to get to the station at 7am to buy a train ticket, but they don’t start selling them until 8am, so don’t listen to those people. Also, the concept of “sold out” doesn’t apply to “cattle class.”



Travel Tip 9: Sigiriya: If you are visiting Sigiriya, get there when it opens at 8am to avoid huge lines and crowds at the site. If you are there after 10am, the crowds are so overwhelming it’s not worth visiting. It takes an hour to walk up as it’s single-file all the way!



Travel Tip 10: Anuradhapura: If you are visiting Anuradhapura, tickets are $25 but are never checked unless you are entering the museum. (I also noticed Western tourists were the only ones ever asked to show a ticket at the museum.) Enter the site without paying by using the tiny road just southeast of the museum.



Travel Tip 11: Visiting temples: You’ll have to take your socks and shoes off before visiting temples, even if they are outdoors, so bring flip-flops to keep your socks clean!

Travel Tip 12: Hostels: Hostels are really basic (fan, mosquito net, electric shower) but at $4-6 per dorm bed, you can’t go wrong.



Travel Tip 13: Galle: Galle is only worth a day trip. Don’t stay over in the town. There is not much to do there at all.

Travel Tip 14: Accommodation: There is a lot of cheap accommodation throughout the country. You’ll usually get breakfast with your room too. Private rooms with your own bathroom start at $10 per night. Add $5 if you want air conditioning.

This Blog Getting From https://www.nomadicmatt.com

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  1. UnPlan Trip says:

    Reblogged this on Trip Idea.

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