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Dense, dark, wet and mysterious - Sinharaja is a primeval forest for
meditation, relaxation and for scientific exploration. This relatively
undisturbed expanse of primary forest is a Sri Lankan heritage - the
last patch of sizeable lowland evergreen Rain Forest still remaining
more or intact or undisturbed in our island.
The forest is steeped in deep legend and mystery. The word Sinharaja
means, lion (Sinha) king (Raja) and the popular belief it that the
legendary origin of the Sinhala people in Sri Lanka is form the
descendants of the union the lion king who once lived in the forest and
a princess.
Today, the spirit of the legend remains captured in solitude in the
silent forest and the rising mist of the early dawn. More than time
however separates the modern explorer in the Sinharaja forest from its
legendary inhabitants, man has rapidly penetrated the seemingly
inaccessible wilderness of the Sri Lanka's rainforest which once covered
perhaps over 100,000 ha. of the South Western hills and lowlands. The
present reserve is but a glimpse of its former glory, occuphying a
narrow silver of land 21 km. in length and 3.7 km. in width, covering
11187 ha. of undisturbed and logged forest, scrub and fern land. It was
declared an International Man and Biosphere Reserve by UNESCO in 1978,
then a National Wilderness Area in 1988 under the National Heritage Site
in 1989.
To the casual observer, the forest represents a tropical rain forest
with a dense tall stand of trees, steep and rugged hills etched by
numerous rocky streams and rivulets. The value of forests such as
Sinharaja are well known for their functions as watersheds and store
houses of great biological wealth. It is a rich treasure treasure trove
of nature with a great diversity of habitats and a vast repository of
Sri Lanka's endemic species found no where else in the world. Sinharaja
therefore, represents an irreplaceable genepool, a refugia for all those
rare and endangered forms of life, both fauna and flora.
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