Peradeniya
Botanical Gardens
Situated
in the Hill capital Kandy. This visit to this garden will provide
spectacles at extraordinary beauty and absorbing interest for any
nature lover and casual visitor. 68 miles off-Colombo, 4 miles off
Kandy this garden dates from 14th century reign of king Vikrama
Bahu III.
Peradeniya
is well know for it's large variety of plants ornaments, useful
machine and other creepers that produce the special spices at Sri
Lanka. The great lawns highlight huge tropical trees and variety
at bamboo can be found in one place.
The
best know attraction of the garden is the orchid House, which houses
more than 300 varieties of exquisite orchids. A spice garden gives
you a first hand introduction to the trees and plants used for the
traditional Ayurvedic medicine. Mahaweli river, Sri Lanka's longest
river surrounding this garden gives an added beauty to this garden.
It wont be wrong to say that this garden is one of it's best kind
in the world and the best in Asia.
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Hakgala
Botanical Gardens
Where plants and trees from around the world seen at home
Hakgala Botanical Gardens, just 10km away from Nuwara Eliya City.
Hakgala is one of the places one visits as an essential part of
a pleasant journey in the famous hill resort of Nuwara Eliya. The
site is legendary. It was once the pleasure garden of Ravana of
the Ramayana epic and according to many, it was one of the places
where the beautiful Sitha was hidden by the demon king. The present
botanic gardens were founded in 1860 by the eminent British botanist
Dr. G.H.K. Thwaites who was superintendent of the more famous gardens
at Peradeniya, near Kandy.
It was the site initially for experiments with cinchona whose bark
yielded quinine, esteemed as a tonic and febrifuge. Quinine at that
time was widely used as a specific for malaria. This was perhaps
the reason for the popularity of and tonic in these parts - quinine
being the principle ingredient of tonic water.
The
cool, equable climate of the hakgala area, whose mean temperature
is around 60 degrees Fahrenheit, encouraged the introduction of
suitable temperate zone plants, both ornamental and useful. These
included conifers and cedars from Australia, Bermuda and Japan,
and cypresses from the Himalayas, china and as far a field as Persia,
Mexico and California. New Caledonia gave Hakgala a special variety
of pines and there are specimens of this genus from the canary Island
as well.
An
English oak, introduced around 1890, commemorates the "hearts
of oak" of Britain's vaunted sea power, and there is a good-looking
specimen of the camphor tree, whose habitat is usually in regions
above 12,000m.If you have left your heart in an English garden,
you will surely find it again in Hakgala's Rose garden. where the
sights and scents of these glorious blooms can be experienced in
their infinite variety. From there it is a quiet stroll from the
sublime to the exotic sophistication of the orchid House. A special
attraction here is the verity of montane orchids, many of them endemic
to Sri Lanka.
It
would be in the worst possible taste to describe the Fernery as
a collection of "vascular cryptograms" But that is how
the dictionary describes the plant whose delicate fronds conjure
up visions of misty grottoes, lichen-covered stones and meandering
streams. The Fernery at Hakgala is a shady harbour of many quiet
walks, in the shad of the Hakgala Rock, shaped like the jawbone
of an elephant, from which the place gets its name. Sri Lanka's
ferns are well represented here, as are those of Australia and New
Zealand.
Hakgala
is a temperate hill-country garden where also the languid low-country
lotus and water lily floats in their serene loveliness. Pinks and
blues emerging from a flat- floating background of lush leaves,
recall the calm of yellow-robed monks, white-clad, devotees and
flickering oil lamps.In time, the highlands bracing breezes dispel
the languor of lotus land and even cause a shiver as a temperature
lowers. The Hakgala Botanical Gardens is one of the lovely contrasts
of Sri Lanka, a home to plants and trees from around the world,
making them seem to be part of the scenic beauty.
How to get to Hakgala: The nearest railway station is at Nanu Oya,
from where there are buses or taxis on the Nuwara Eliya to Badulla
road to Hakgala.
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