Conservation & Research Centre

A Meaningful Sea Turtle Experience in Sri Lanka

Visit Ahungalla Sea Turtle Conservation Project

If you are visiting Sri Lanka and looking for a meaningful wildlife experience near Ahungalla, Bentota, Kosgoda, Balapitiya, Hikkaduwa, or Galle, Ahungalla Sea Turtle Conservation Project welcomes visitors to learn about sea turtles, conservation, plastic pollution, and responsible tourism. Whether you are a family, student, traveller, or wildlife lover, your visit helps support our daily conservation work while gaining a deeper understanding of sea turtle protection.

Why

Why Visit Our Sea Turtle Project?

Sri Lanka is home to several sea turtle species, and the coastal areas around Ahungalla, Kosgoda, Bentota, and Galle are strongly connected with sea turtle awareness and marine conservation.

A visit to Ahungalla Sea Turtle Conservation Project gives you the chance to learn in a simple, friendly, and responsible way. You can understand how sea turtles live, why they are threatened, and how conservation projects, volunteers, visitors, and local communities can support their protection.

Your visit also helps us continue important daily work such as turtle care support, beach cleaning, visitor education, conservation awareness, and project maintenance.

This is a good experience for travellers who want more than a normal sightseeing activity. It is for people who want to learn, support, and leave with a better understanding of Sri Lanka’s marine life.

What You Can See and Learn

A visit to Ahungalla Sea Turtle Conservation Project offers different learning experiences depending on the day, season, weather, and turtle activity, as sea turtle conservation depends on nature. Visitors can learn about sea turtle species in Sri Lanka, their importance to the ocean, threats such as plastic pollution, turtle nesting and hatchling journeys, responsible turtle care, why careless handling and flash photography are harmful, how beach cleaning supports marine life, and how volunteering or donations help conservation. Our aim is for every visitor to leave with greater knowledge, respect for sea turtles, and a stronger connection to the ocean.

A Responsible Visitor Experience

At Ahungalla Sea Turtle Conservation Project, we believe wildlife experiences must be responsible and honest. Sea turtles are wild animals that should be treated with care and respect, which is why we do not encourage careless touching, staged releases, unnecessary handling, flash photography, or treating turtles as photo props. We welcome visitors while always placing turtle welfare first, guiding them responsibly, respecting natural turtle behaviour, and creating a meaningful experience for those who value ethical wildlife tourism.

Who

Who Can Visit?

Ahungalla Sea Turtle Conservation Project is suitable for many types of visitors.

Tourists Staying Nearby

If you are staying in Ahungalla, Bentota, Kosgoda, Balapitiya, Hikkaduwa, Galle, or nearby areas, you can contact us to arrange a visit.

European Travellers

Many European travellers are interested in ethical wildlife experiences, sustainability, and responsible tourism. Our project is suitable for visitors who want to support conservation without encouraging harmful animal tourism.

School and University Groups

We welcome student groups by prior arrangement. A visit can include an educational introduction, sea turtle conservation learning, beach cleaning activity, awareness session, and guided project visit.

Wildlife and Nature Lovers

If you love animals, the ocean, beaches, and conservation, this visit can be a meaningful part of your Sri Lanka journey.

Families with Children

Children often love sea turtles, and a project visit can be a beautiful way to teach them about kindness, nature, ocean protection, and responsible travel. We explain conservation in a simple way so children can understand why sea turtles need protection and how small actions, such as reducing plastic waste, can help marine life.

Educational Visits for Students and Schools

Ahungalla Sea Turtle Conservation Project is a great place for educational visits, connecting wildlife, conservation, tourism, sustainability, and community awareness. Student visits can be arranged for schools, universities, environmental clubs, youth groups, and international student groups, offering a meaningful way to learn about marine conservation in Sri Lanka.

Educational activities may include introductions to sea turtle conservation, learning about sea turtle species and threats, responsible visitor guidelines, beach cleaning where suitable, plastic pollution awareness, question and answer sessions, and participation certificates where appropriate. These visits are especially useful for students interested in environment, tourism, sustainability, marine biology, geography, wildlife, or responsible travel.

Visit

Family Friendly Conservation Visit

A visit to Ahungalla Sea Turtle Conservation Project can be a meaningful family activity during a Sri Lanka holiday, offering a chance to go beyond beaches and tourist attractions and learn about wildlife protection and the ocean together. It helps families create a more educational travel experience while supporting marine conservation in a responsible way.

Children can learn why sea turtles come to beaches, why plastic is dangerous for marine animals, why wildlife should not be treated as toys, how people can help protect nature, why responsible travel matters, and how donations and volunteering support conservation, making the visit both educational and memorable.

Things to Do

Things to Do Near Ahungalla

Ahungalla is a beautiful coastal area, and many visitors combine the sea turtle project with other nearby experiences.

Ahungalla Beach

Kosgoda turtle area

Bentota Beach

Madu River boat safari

Balapitiya

Hikkaduwa

Galle Fort

Ambalangoda mask museum

Brief Garden

Water sports in Bentota

Time

Best Time to Visit

You can contact us before visiting so we can guide you on the best available time. Sea turtle activity depends on nature, season, weather, and project conditions, so we do not guarantee specific turtle activity or hatchling releases during every visit, and we recommend booking in advance by WhatsApp or email for the best experience.

Before visiting, please let us know your preferred date, number of visitors, whether you are a family, group, or individual traveller, if your visit is for education, volunteering, donation, or general interest, and any special requirements, so we can prepare a more responsible and meaningful visit for you.

How Your Visit Supports the Project

Your visit helps support the daily work of Ahungalla Sea Turtle Conservation Project, as project visits, donations, volunteer fees, and supporter contributions all help us continue conservation work throughout the year. Your visit can support sea turtle care, beach cleaning and waste removal, conservation education, project maintenance, volunteer support, awareness programs, responsible hatchling release when nature allows, local community awareness, and future conservation improvements, making you part of our mission to protect sea turtles in Sri Lanka through responsible travel.

Birthday Turtle Protection Gift During Your Visit

If you are visiting the project for a birthday, family celebration, student trip, or special occasion, you can also ask about our Birthday Turtle Protection Gift, which is an ethical donation-based gift where your contribution supports conservation work and you receive a digital turtle protection certificate. Please note that this is not a paid turtle release activity, but a conservation donation, and any hatchling release depends on nature and safety conditions. This can be a meaningful gift for children’s birthdays, family celebrations, animal lovers, ocean lovers, students, eco conscious travellers, and special travel memories.

Enquiry

Volunteer Enquiry Form Fields

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes. Tourists, families, students, and responsible travellers can contact us to arrange a project visit.

The project is located in Ahungalla, on Sri Lanka’s south west coast, close to Bentota, Kosgoda, Balapitiya, Hikkaduwa, and Galle.

Yes, we recommend contacting us before visiting so we can guide you with the best available time and project information.

Yes. Children can visit with parents or guardians. It is a good educational experience for children who love animals and nature.

Yes. School and university group visits can be arranged by prior booking.

Turtle activity depends on nature, season, weather, and project conditions. We cannot guarantee hatchlings or releases during every visit.

We do not offer guaranteed or staged turtle releases for entertainment. Hatchling releases happen only when nature allows and when conditions are safe.

Photos may be allowed where appropriate, but flash photography and disturbing turtles are not allowed. Please follow the project team’s guidance.

Yes. Visitors can support the project through donations, birthday gifts, or volunteer program participation.

Yes. The project is suitable for European travellers who are looking for responsible, educational, and ethical wildlife experiences in Sri Lanka.