
Hill country
to the south coast.
Down from the tea,
all the way to the sea.
Sri Lanka is small enough to cross in a song and varied enough to take a fortnight over — so we let it unfold from the top down. Tea estates above the cloud line, where the pickers move through the green like a slow tide; the old blue train through the highlands, windows open, hill country sliding past; then down to the south, to a stretch of sand and stilt fishermen and a planter’s bungalow where the fans turn and the day asks nothing of you. A guide carries you between, with a driver who knows which curve hides the best short eats.


Not a schedule.
A set of mornings worth waking for.
The cultural triangle
A dawn climb up Sigiriya before the heat and the crowds, frescoes that have held their colour for fifteen centuries, and a slow afternoon among the old capitals.
Kandy, and the tooth
The lake at first light, the temple at its quietest hour, and a drummer’s blessing you’ll feel in your chest long after.
Up into the tea
The estates above the cloud line — a walk through the green with a planter, a tasting that recalibrates what you thought tea was, and a fire lit against the cool.
The blue train south
The old highland line, windows down, hill country and waterfalls and children waving — the most beautiful three hours you’ll spend sitting still.
The south coast
Down to the sand at last — a planter’s bungalow under the palms, a reef for the snorkelling, and the stilt fishermen dark against the dusk.
Galle, and going slow
The old Dutch fort at golden hour, ramparts and lighthouse and the sea wall, and a last long stretch of doing very little at all.

“We took the old train down through the tea with the windows open,
and not one of us said a word the whole way.”
A little of what you’ll see.





