The Gathering at Minneriya National Park is one of the greatest wildlife spectacles on Earth — and one of the least publicised outside Sri Lanka. Between August and October each year, as the dry season reaches its peak and the surrounding forests become parched, hundreds of wild Asian elephants converge on the ancient Minneriya reservoir to graze on the lush grasses exposed by the receding waterline. At the peak of the season, concentrations of 200 to 300 elephants around a single water body have been recorded — the largest temporary gathering of Asian elephants anywhere on the planet.
Jeep safaris enter the park in the afternoon when the elephant activity peaks, often spending three to four hours in the company of herds that move steadily toward the water as the sun drops. Calves play in the shallows, matriarchs lead family groups at a measured pace, and the occasional large tusker stands sentinel at the margins of the herd. The scale of it is simply unlike anything else available in Sri Lanka or, arguably, in Asia. Minneriya shares a corridor with Kaudulla National Park, and safaris sometimes switch between both parks to track the herd movements.
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