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Ella

Ella, the once sleepy town in the Uva province of Sri Lanka is now bustling with foreign tourists. So what's so great about Ella? Firstly, Ella has been blessed with one of the best climates in the world. That's probably a very subjective statement but let's face it, the weather is great. You can enjoy mild temperatures throughout the year and the level of humidity is very pleasant.

Ella lies at an altitude of 1,000 meters above sea level and surrounded by tea plantations, green mountains and impressive rocks. The view from Ella is breathtaking! Some even claim that the view of the Ella Gap is one of the best views in Sri Lanka.

Then you have the Ella rock – a three to four hour trek up and down and well worth the effort. There again, spectacular views from the top. There's Little Adams Peak – another short trek to capture some beautiful hills and beyond. The beautiful Ravana Ella falls is a few minutes drive from Ella and is known to be one of the widest falls of Sri Lanka. The grandeur of the Ravana fall is its wild look amidst wilderness. Ravana Ella pours itself down to the Ella gorge. The water finds it course down in three stages for 9 meters and then curves itself in a stream. The Ravana Ella has its roots connected to the times of the famous eastern epic, Ramayana. It is said that after kidnapping Sita, Ravana had hidden her at the caves behind this waterfall when Shri Rama was drawing close to Lanka with his army to rescue her. The cave came to be known as the Ravana Ella Cave. The place was then a thick afforested region in the midst of wilderness. Rama’s queen is believed to have wandered around here while she was confined. She is also believed to have bathed in one of the natural pools from these Ravana Falls.

British Colonial Secretary of Ceylon (1845-1850), Sir James Emerson Tennent narrates of Ella: Perhaps there is not a scene in the world which combines sublimity and beauty in a more extraordinary degree than that which is presented at the Pass of Ella, where, through an opening in the chain of mountains, the road from Badulla descends rapidly to the lowlands, over which it is carried for upwards of seventy miles, to Hambantota, on the south coast of the island. The ride to Ella passes for ten or twelve miles along the base of the hills thickly wooded, except in those where the forest has been cleared for planting coffee. The view therefore obstructed, and at one point appears to terminate in an impassable glen; but on reaching this the traveler is startled on discovering a ravine through which a torrent has forced its way, disclosing a passage to the plains below, over which, for than sixty miles, the prospect extends, unbroken by a single eminence, till, far in the distance, the eye discerns a line of light, which marks where the sunbeams are flashing on the waters of the Indian Ocean.

Ella is also centrally placed for some great getaways such as the Horton Plains,Udawalawe National Park and Yala National Park.