Dhamma-primary · Flagship

The Dhamma Path

Duration7 nights, 8 days
FromUSD 2,640 pp
Meditation centres3 working
Best forFree thinkers, secular Buddhists, serious enquirers
The journey

Walking the path the Buddha walked — through 2,330 years of unbroken Theravada.

This is the flagship Dharma Routes journey. Seven nights, eight days, three working meditation centres, two sacred dawns, one forest-monastery silent retreat. The route runs from the hill capital at Kandy, through the rock-temple at Aluvihara where the Pali Canon was first written down, into the ancient sacred geography of Anuradhapura and Mihintale, across to the contemplative colossi at Polonnaruwa's Gal Vihara, and back via the strictest forest monastery on the island, Mitirigala Nissarana Vanaya.

You are not asked to convert anything. You are not asked to take vows. You are not asked to take anything on faith. The dhamma sessions woven through this itinerary — morning meditation, evening talks, monastic audiences — are optional throughout. Skip any of them without explanation. The Buddha's instruction, in the Kalama Sutta, was to verify the teaching against reason and against the welfare of all. We are quoting him.

What you will find is a tradition that has been continuously practised, taught and tested for 2,330 years. The Pali Canon you encounter here is the verbatim source from which every Theravada lineage in the world — Thai, Burmese, Cambodian, Lao — descends. The teachers you meet, lay and monastic, are working teachers. Their students are real students. The Forest Tradition is not a museum here. It is a discipline with a door behind which is a senior bhikkhu.

"Do not believe in anything simply because you have heard it. Do not believe in anything simply because it is found written in your religious books. Do not believe in anything merely on the authority of your teachers and elders. But after observation and analysis, when you find that anything agrees with reason and is conducive to the good and benefit of all, then accept it and live up to it." — The Buddha, to the Kalama people of Kesaputta · Anguttara Nikaya 3.65
Day-by-day

Eight days · from orientation to parinibbana.

The arc is deliberate: settle, study, sit, return. Mornings begin early — the sacred sites are emptiest at first light, the meditation halls are quietest, and the temperature is bearable. Afternoons are paced for context and rest.

01Day one

Arrival · Colombo to Kandy · orientation

Airport transfer · the Kalama Sutta talk · light walking meditation
Drive3h
On arrival

Bandaranaike International Airport → Kandy

We meet you airside. The drive south-east to Kandy climbs out of the coastal lowland through the spice-and-paddy belt and rises into the hill country. Where time allows, a brief stop at a roadside village temple for orientation to Sri Lankan Buddhist vernacular — the white dagoba, the bo tree, the asanaghara, the alms-bowl niche. Light lunch en route.

Late afternoon

Arrive Kandy partner hotel · settle

Check in and rest. Tea on the veranda. Your guide will brief you on the journey ahead — the working monasteries we'll visit, what to expect at each, what to wear, what to bring (loose trousers, covered shoulders, a thin shawl for evenings).

19:00

Opening dhamma talk · "The Kalama Sutta and the proposition of this journey"

A 45-minute orientation talk by your scholar-dhamma guide. We read the Kalama Sutta in full. We discuss what the Buddha actually claimed and what he refused to claim. We discuss ehipassiko — "come and see" — as a methodological stance. Open Q&A. This sets the frame for everything that follows.

20:30

Light walking meditation

A 20-minute guided walking meditation in the hotel garden, weather permitting. Optional. For first-timers, instruction is given in slow stages. Then dinner. Early night.

Kandy Lake at evening
Tonight
Forest Bungalow KandyPartner hotel above Kandy Lake · quiet, garden setting · (placeholder — final hotel confirmed at quotation)
02Day two

Kandy · the dawn puja and a meditation centre

Sri Dalada Maligawa at 05:30 · Nilambe Buddhist Meditation Centre half-day
Localby car
05:30

Sri Dalada Maligawa · the dawn thewava

The Temple of the Tooth Relic opens its inner shrine three times a day for ritual offering — thewava. The dawn ceremony is the most authentic and the least touristed. We arrive before opening, slip in with the regular pilgrims, observe in silence. The Sacred Tooth Relic itself is no longer displayed — only the bejewelled karandua casket — but the drum-and-flute ceremony, the offering of jasmine and lotus, and the chanting of the resident bhikkhus is the same it has been for centuries. Optional throughout: sit it out or sit it through.

08:00

Breakfast and rest

Return to hotel for breakfast and a couple of hours of rest. The morning practice has already been intense.

11:00

Drive to Nilambe Buddhist Meditation Centre

Nilambe sits on a forested ridge at 1,000 m above sea level, an hour south of Kandy. Founded in 1980 by the lay teacher Godwin Samararatne, it is the meditation centre most popular with Western retreatants in Sri Lanka — specifically because the teaching is uncompromisingly secular and methodological. Eight-day, ten-day and longer retreats are run year-round; today we are visiting for a half-day session.

12:00 – 16:00

Half-day meditation instruction with the resident teacher

A working teacher at Nilambe will give a private session: an hour of introductory instruction in anapanasati (breath-awareness meditation), an hour of guided sitting, a vegetarian alms-meal in the dining hall, a walking-meditation session in the forest path, and a question-and-answer period before we leave. Beginners welcome. Returning practitioners can request the teacher to address specific practice questions in advance.

Evening

Return to Kandy · dinner · reflection

Quiet evening at the hotel. Your guide is available to answer questions about the day, or to leave you alone — this is a journey, not a tour, and silence is treated as a real option.

Buddhist temple imagery — Kandy
Tonight
Forest Bungalow KandySame partner hotel as night 1 (placeholder)
03Day three

Aluvihara · the canon in stone · transfer to Anuradhapura

Aluvihara rock cave temple · scholar-guide lecture · evening dhamma talk at Rajarata Hotel
Drive3h 30m
07:30

Kandy → Aluvihara, Matale

An hour's drive north into Matale. Aluvihara is a cluster of small rock caves above the road, easy to miss. It is also, in textual terms, the most important Buddhist site in Sri Lanka. For four centuries after the Buddha's death the Tipitaka — the three baskets of canonical teaching — was carried entirely by oral recitation. In the 1st century BCE, under King Valagamba, fearing the lineage of memorising monks would break under famine and South Indian invasion, the Sangha convened here and finally wrote it down on ola palm leaves. Without that act, the earliest verbatim teachings of the Buddha would be lost.

10:00

On-site lecture · the writing of the canon

A senior scholar-guide will walk you slowly through the caves, explaining: the textual history (which books, in what order, in what dialect of Pali); the monastic politics that made the writing necessary; the lineages that descend from this canon; what we know about the original manuscripts (lost to a colonial-era fire in 1848, but the copying tradition continues); and why the term "the source code of the dhamma" is not hyperbole. The site's small monastic museum lets you watch ola leaf inscription being done by hand.

12:30

Light lunch · drive to Anuradhapura

Lunch in Matale, then a roughly three-hour drive north to Anuradhapura through the dry-zone tank country. The landscape thins, the temperature rises, the paddy spreads to the horizon. You begin to understand why the early Sinhalese state built itself here.

17:00

Arrive Rajarata Hotel

Check in on the bund of Nuwara Wewa, the 1st-century-BCE reservoir built by King Vasabha. Tea on the veranda. Rest.

19:00

Evening dhamma talk · "The Three Marks of Existence"

A second talk from your scholar-dhamma guide, this time grounded in the canonical material we have just visited. The topic is the Buddha's central empirical claim: that all phenomena are impermanent (anicca), unsatisfactory if grasped (dukkha), and not-self (anatta). We discuss what is and is not a metaphysical claim. Open Q&A.

Sandakada pahana moonstone, Sri Lankan Buddhist masonry
Tonight
Rajarata Hotel · Anuradhapura4-star heritage hotel on Nuwara Wewa · pool, lakeside restaurant, Margosa Garden
04Day four

Anuradhapura · dawn at the Sri Maha Bodhi · the Atamasthana

Sri Maha Bodhi at 05:00 · the eight great places of Anuradhapura · evening reflection
Within cityby car & foot
05:00

Sri Maha Bodhi at dawn · the most spiritually intense hour

We arrive at first light, before the pilgrim crowds. The Sri Maha Bodhi is a sapling of the bodhi tree under which the Buddha attained enlightenment at Bodh Gaya, brought to Anuradhapura by the nun Sanghamitta Theri in 288 BCE — the daughter of Emperor Asoka. It has been continuously tended for 2,313 years. The 8th-century iron railing added by King Aggabodhi IV is still there. The very early morning is the only time the tree feels properly itself — just the priests, the lamps, the chanting, and an hour of quiet before the buses arrive. You sit on the parapet. You watch. Nothing is required of you.

07:30

Breakfast · rest

Return to hotel for breakfast. Sleep for an hour if needed. The day is long.

10:00 – 16:00

The Atamasthana — the eight great places

A full but unhurried circuit of the eight sacred sites of Anuradhapura that pilgrims have traditionally visited together: Sri Maha Bodhi (revisit), Ruwanwelisaya dagoba (Dutugemunu, 2nd c. BCE), Thuparamaya (the first stupa on the island, 247 BCE), Jetavanaramaya (Mahasena, 3rd c. CE — the largest brick structure of the ancient world), Abhayagiri Dagoba (the great Mahayana monastery, 1st c. BCE), Mirisaweti, Lankarama, and Lovamahapaya (the Brazen Palace foundation). Throughout, your scholar-dhamma guide weaves the textual side — what the Mahavamsa says about each — with the architectural side — what the masonry actually shows. Vegetarian lunch break at the hotel mid-circuit.

18:30

Evening reflection

Optional 30-minute silent sit on the hotel veranda overlooking Nuwara Wewa. Then dinner. Open evening — your guide is available for questions, or for nothing.

Ruwanwelisaya Stupa, Anuradhapura
Tonight
Rajarata Hotel · AnuradhapuraSecond night on the Nuwara Wewa bund
05Day five

Mihintale at sunrise · Na Uyana Aranya forest monastery

1,840 steps at first light · where Buddhism entered Sri Lanka · afternoon at a working forest monastery
Drive3h total
04:30

Anuradhapura → Mihintale

Twelve kilometres east of Anuradhapura. We start the climb in the dark; the eastern sky lightens as we go. There are 1,840 granite steps, cut in stages between the 1st century BCE and the 12th century CE. Take them slowly. The light arriving over the dry-zone plain as you reach the Ambasthala Dagoba — the small platform where, on a Poson full-moon day in 247 BCE, the missionary monk Mahinda Thero intercepted King Devanampiyatissa during a deer hunt — is, by common reputation among Sri Lankan Buddhists, the single most important historical moment on the island. The king's logical test about the mango tree, his subsequent conversion, the establishment of the Theravada lineage that has endured 2,330 years — all of it begins here.

07:30

Mihintale half-day · Kantaka Cetiya, Lion Bath, hospital ruins

After dawn at the Ambasthala, we walk the wider site at our own pace: the Kantaka Cetiya with its 2nd-c. BCE carved vahalkadas (the oldest surviving on the island); the Lion Bath; and the carved hospital ruins, which are arguably the earliest surviving institutional hospital in the world. Light breakfast on the way down. Return to Anuradhapura, check out.

12:00

Transfer to Na Uyana Aranya forest monastery

A two-hour drive south-west into Pansiyagama, near Kurunegala. Na Uyana Aranya is one of the leading international forest-tradition monasteries in Sri Lanka. Senior monks from Burma, Thailand, the United States, Australia and continental Europe have trained here. The community lives under the full vinaya (the original monastic discipline), eats only what is offered, and devotes its days to meditation and study. Foreign retreatants are accepted for stays of seven to ninety days.

14:00 – 17:00

Silent walking, alms-bowl offering, bhikkhu interaction

We make a formal offering to the Sangha. A senior bhikkhu receives the offering and, where his time permits, sits with us for a discussion (the language will be English; the bhikkhu in question may be Sri Lankan, may be Western). We then walk the forest paths in silence — the monastery has well-maintained cankamana (walking meditation) tracks under the canopy. This is the deepest dhamma immersion of the journey so far. Treat it with the seriousness it deserves; phones off.

Evening

Drive to a quiet hotel near Kurunegala

The day has been long — you started at 04:30 — and we deliberately do not push further. Quiet dinner. Early night.

Mihintale rock, where Buddhism arrived in Sri Lanka
Tonight
Quiet partner hotel near KurunegalaSmall heritage-style property · (placeholder — final hotel confirmed at quotation)
06Day six

Polonnaruwa · Gal Vihara · contemplating the three postures

Transfer to Polonnaruwa · the colossal Buddhas · Vatadage · reflective evening
Drive2h
08:00

Transfer to Polonnaruwa

A two-hour drive east. Polonnaruwa was the medieval capital of Sri Lanka (11th–13th c. CE), after the Chola sack of Anuradhapura in 993 forced the centre of the Sinhalese state to move. The city was the high water mark of Parakramabahu I's reign — the same king who built the 24-square-kilometre "Sea of Parakrama" reservoir we touch on the Irrigation Marvels tour.

10:30

Gal Vihara · the four images, the three postures

Gal Vihara is, by widespread agreement, the single greatest piece of sculpture on the island and one of the great pieces of Buddhist art anywhere. Four colossal images, carved from a single granite face under Parakramabahu I in the 12th century: a seated meditating Buddha; a standing figure (sometimes read as the disciple Ananda, sometimes as the Buddha himself in parinama mudra); the reclining Buddha 14 metres long; and a smaller seated figure inside a cave shrine. Your scholar-dhamma guide will lead a forty-five-minute contemplative session here, sitting on the parapet opposite the images, walking you slowly through the iconography: the seated image as meditation, the standing as teaching, the reclining as parinibbana — the Buddha's final extinguishing. Phones away.

13:00

Lunch · rest

Lunch at the partner hotel, then a couple of hours of rest. The Gal Vihara session is harder to absorb than it looks.

15:30

Polonnaruwa Vatadage & the Quadrangle

The afternoon at the Quadrangle (Dalada Maluwa) — the cluster of monuments in the city centre where the Tooth Relic was housed during the Polonnaruwa period. The Vatadage here is the most complete surviving example of the uniquely Sri Lankan circular relic-shrine type — a two-tier stone platform, four entrance porches each guarded by paired nagaraja figures, four Buddha images at the cardinal points. Lankathilake image-house and Hatadage adjacent. Slow walk, lots of context.

Evening

Optional sit · dinner

Optional 30-minute silent sit before dinner. Quiet evening.

Polonnaruwa Gal Vihara
Tonight
Polonnaruwa partner hotelHeritage-style lodging close to the archaeological park · (placeholder)
07Day seven

Mitirigala Nissarana Vanaya · the strict forest retreat

Long transfer south · half-day silent retreat at the strictest forest monastery on the island
Drive5h with stops
07:30

Polonnaruwa → Mitirigala Nissarana Vanaya

A long but unhurried drive south, broken by tea and an early lunch. Mitirigala Nissarana Vanaya sits in lowland forest about forty kilometres east of Colombo. It is the strictest of the forest monasteries on this journey — a working aranya in the lineage tradition revived in the 20th century by senior bhikkhus including the late Venerable Matara Sri Nanarama, who taught Vipassana to generations of practitioners. Foreign retreatants are accepted for serious stays only.

14:00

Half-day silent retreat

We arrive in the early afternoon. After a brief orientation with the duty bhikkhu, we offer alms and enter the forest in silence. The afternoon has four parts: an hour of guided sitting meditation in the meditation hall; an hour of walking meditation on the cankamana path; a forty-five-minute private discussion with a senior bhikkhu (if his time permits — not guaranteed, never demanded); and a closing thirty-minute sit. Phones off. No photography. Light loose clothing, covered shoulders, no shoes inside the meditation hall.

Evening

Drive to a quiet hotel nearby

We do not stay overnight inside the monastery — that requires a separate booking and a longer commitment. Instead we move thirty minutes away to a quiet partner hotel for the final night. Light dinner. Early sleep. Reflection.

Forest monastery imagery — meditation paths under canopy
Tonight
Quiet partner hotel near MitirigalaSmall heritage-style property · (placeholder)
08Day eight

Closing · sitting, walking, departure

Morning practice · closing dhamma session · transfer to airport
Drive1h to airport
06:30

Morning sitting & walking meditation

A final 60-minute session in the hotel garden: 30 minutes sitting, 20 minutes walking, 10 minutes closing reflection. By this point in the journey, most travellers find this session feels noticeably different from day one's instruction. That difference is the point.

08:30

Breakfast · closing dhamma session

Final breakfast. Then a 45-minute closing talk by your scholar-dhamma guide: a return to the Kalama Sutta, this time read against the experience of the journey. What did you observe? What did reason confirm? What did you find conducive to the welfare of all? The Buddha gave you the questions 2,500 years ago. We close the loop.

Late morning

Transfer to Bandaranaike International Airport

A one-hour drive to the airport. Your guide accompanies you to the terminal. Where flights permit, we add a final stop at a tea hut or a quiet roadside temple. Goodbye where the journey began — airside, the way it started.

Samadhi Buddha, Anuradhapura — meditative seated image
Centres & monasteries visited

Three working centres, each in a different lineage.

Each of the meditation centres included in The Dhamma Path is a real working institution that has accepted foreign retreatants for decades. We arrange the visits in advance through standing relationships. Where individual teacher availability allows, we will name your specific instructor in your final itinerary.

What's included

  • 7 nights' accommodation in named partner hotels (final names at quotation)
  • 2 nights at Rajarata Hotel, Anuradhapura
  • English-speaking scholar-dhamma guide throughout
  • All meditation-centre visits and donations
  • Daily morning meditation, evening dhamma talks
  • Senior bhikkhu audiences where teacher time permits
  • All site entry fees & archaeological park tickets
  • Private air-conditioned transfers throughout
  • Breakfast daily · 4 vegetarian dinners · 5 lunches
  • Bottled water, hot tea on transfers, alms offerings to monasteries
  • 24-hour ground-handler line

What's not included

  • ×International flights to and from Colombo
  • ×Sri Lanka entry visa (ETA online, USD 50 standard)
  • ×Travel and medical insurance (we recommend — mandatory)
  • ×Personal alcohol (not served at most stops by request)
  • ×Additional restaurant meals beyond the inclusions
  • ×Personal donations to monasteries beyond the included alms offering
  • ×Tipping (guideline given at briefing — never demanded)
Best season
December – April · July – September
Group size
2 – 8 guests · private departures
Recommended for
Secular Buddhists, mindfulness graduates, intellectually serious enquirers
Ready to walk?

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