Yala’s most famous residents are its leopards – the park boasts a higher concentration of these elusive felines than anywhere else in the world (block 1 of the park, the main section open to visitors, is thought to be home to around fifty animals) and sightings are reasonably common, though you’ll stand a much better chance if you spend a full day in the park, which allows you to reach less touristic areas and evade the crowds. Leopards can be seen year round, though they might be slightly easier to spot during the latter part of the dry season when the ground vegetation dies back. Adult leopards are mainly active from dusk until dawn. Most daytime leopard sightings are of cubs and sub-adults, who are dependent on their mother for food These confident and carefree young animals can provide hours of viewing, often showing themselves to visitors in the same spot for several days running.
Much more visible than leopards are the resident elephants, which can be seen on most trips, though they can be a bit easier to spot during the dry season (May-Aug), when they congregate around the park’s waterholes. Other resident mammals include samba and spotted deer, wild boar, wild buffaloes, macaque and langur monkeys, sloth bears, jackals, mongooses, pangolins, porcupines, rabbits, and (rare) wild cats, as well as crocodiles.
Yala also offers outstanding bird watching year round, while from October to March visitors have the added bonus Of seeing thousands of migratory species arrive to escape the northern winter. Around 130 species have been recorded here including the endemic jungle fowl, a singularly inelegant, waddling creature, like a feral hen, which has been adopted as the national bird of Sri Lanka.
Yala National Park Day tour
Pick from Colombo @ 6.00 am
Drive for Yala (approx. 51/2 hr. drive)
Yala Afternoon Safari (2 – 6 pm)
Drive back to Colombo Expected return time 11.30 pm
Genuine Lanka Holiday & Tours PVT (LTD)
165/F Kekulngoda,
Gampaha, Sri Lanka.