Your calls always answered within 5 rings.
Lauren was excellent and knowledgeable. She was able to coordinate my partner and I allowing us to meet with friends and travel on the same flights. Our package via Mauritius to the Seychelles worked perfectly.
Mauritius now expect you to fill out an arrival form prior to departure. Does not appear on any instructions on any websites as far as I know.
Excellent communication and assistance.
If only you could pay for the trip as well as organise it I would be in heaven!
Will book my next trip through DialAFlight. Very friendly service. Thank you for all your help.
Everything worked well. The DialAFlight team are very helpful and can be relied upon for every contingency.
Very good service from Lloyd.
I recommend your excellent services to everyone who needs flights. Wouldn't use anyone else!
Paige was excellent arranging our flight so efficiently at short notice. Very polite and professional.
It went like clockwork
The trip was exceptional - absolutely exceeded expectations and we are most grateful to Guy for his service, support and commitment to making it happen.
Many thanks to Tom for your help.
Thomas helped us put our holiday together. He was very knowledgable and kept us up to date with everything. Nothing was too much trouble
Mason and team are amazing at organising and knowing exactly what we need. After so many years I would not use anyone else to arrange my travel.
Karl Patel, goes above and beyond, which is really appreciated!
Huge thank you for your advice. Absolutely loved our holiday and would highly recommend DialAFlight as it’s so reassuring to have support over the phone should you need it.
We really liked the hotel. But we will never fly on Air Mauritius again. We were delayed by 90 min on the tarmac with no explanation then when we landed in Mauritius we realised all baggage except business class had been removed from the plane at Gatwick. Bags eventually delivered at midnight the following day!
My second set of holidays sorted by Mr Orton this year. He was superb handling changes because of the war. Made some fantastic suggestions for both Sri Lanka AND the Maldives.
I would say stand out factors of the service I received would be: Professional, excellent communication and knowledgeable staff. I would like to thank Dale for his patience and excellent customer skills.
Thank you Samuel for another incredible and memorable holiday!
Neil was so helpful as our flights were via Doha and the war had begun. When the flight was cancelled by the airline and we thought our holiday was gone - he shocked me by finding alternative flights to Sri Lanka. Without using DialAFlight we would never have travelled.
Great trip despite flight issues.
Great service and excellent communication throughout the process.
Ivor consistently delivers great customer service and information about the destinations I am interested in. He will ensure he delivers what is required and to the set budget. Our multi trip holiday to Sri Lanka was amazing - so thanks once again Ivor for nailing our brief
I have used DialAFlight and Dale several times. Always helpful and reliable. Wouldn’t use anyone else
The airport lounge was great.
The airline told us that special assistance was only booked for the outbound flights, so when we got back to Heathrow they refused to take us! I highly doubt this as Leah always books it ...
All excellent and Curtis exceptional
Teddy was very helpful
Extremely helpful. Many thanks
Sri Lanka is a destination of glorious, shimmering sandy beaches, enthralling wildlife and relics of ancient civilisations.
Serendip is the island's ancient name, so it can claim to be the spiritual home of serendipity - lucky discoveries by accident - and this is the feeling you get all the time here.
Hoteliers and the rest of the tourist industry on this beautiful teardrop-shaped island are keenly looking forward to welcoming holidaymakers back following the relaxation of Foreign Office warnings about travel to Sri Lanka after the tragic terror attacks at Easter.
On one of my early starts for an excursion, serendipity was seeing dozens of candles flickering in the dense dark outside a Buddhist temple. Then a schoolgirl in brilliant white uniform striding through the dawn mists along a levee between paddy fields, while an equally white egret paced daintily in the water.
Or an old lady, knee-deep in a swamp picking blue water lilies, the national flower. And everywhere, games of impromptu cricket, with a stick for a bat and a plastic drum for a wicket, on bare mud patches, in gardens, on roads.
The island’s unique subspecies of elephants are a vestige of ancient Sri Lanka. You can’t miss them.
My most memorable jumbo encounter was at the Uda Walawe nature reserve.
We watched in awe as an extended family ambled across our track. One juvenile pushed over a tree, just for fun, it seemed. Last across was a harassed young mother, sheltering a three-week-old baby.
You might see 200 elephants at the lake in Minneriya National Park, while the distinguished star in Yala National Park is the ‘prince of the night’ – the leopard.
The nearest thing to cool in Sri Lanka is its green and hilly heart, where tea plantations are a fascinating sight. Kandy, where the British beat the last king of Ceylon in 1815, still feels like a charming, antique outpost of empire.
It is dotted with guesthouses that recall Tunbridge Wells. The colonial throwbacks include a bus station clock that chimes like Big Ben. There are red King George V post boxes and immaculate old Morris Minors, Hillman Minxes and Ford Anglias.
I stayed at the Queen’s Hotel, all echoing wooden corridors and polished staircases. In the Botanical Gardens I found the tree that Queen Elizabeth planted.
In the serenity of the Temple of the Tooth, what is said to be the Buddha’s tooth is kept safe within the innermost of seven caskets.
Sigiriya is a quarter the size of Ayers Rock, topped with the 1,500-year-old fortress of the playboy King Kasyapa. He killed his father and surrounded himself with a crocodile-filled moat to exclude his vengeful brother.
I decided against the one-hour, 900ft climb to the top for the ancient frescoes and spicy graffiti.
Instead I strolled into the jungle that smothers the massive defensive stones at the rock’s base.
Huge, golden-green butterflies fluttered past. A strange symphony of birds burbled out of the trees – Sri Lanka has many wonderful avian species.
In a gap in the canopy I caught a flash of orange at the top of the rock. It was a Buddhist monk in his vivid garb. Yet more serendipity.
Most visitors stay on the west and south coasts where there's a growing choice of chic boutique hotels. You can book trips by coach or car (with your own private driver) to most parts of Sri Lanka. For short distances the ubiquitous motorised tuk-tuks are fun.
My advice is not to even consider hiring a car. Roads are an all-day adrenaline rush. You need an expert at the wheel to dodge the massive Ashok Leyland Tusker lorries painted with idealised landscapes, jam-packed buses and wobbling bikes with impossible loads.
The little station on the Colombo to Galle line close by my hotel felt like a slumbering country halt from 1950s Britain. Behind the ticket office’s narrow arched window, a clerk consulted his tomes and solemnly outlined my choices – I opted for a 90-minute trip in second class for about 50p.
On the platform I joined goats and men there just for a chat. We lurched off down the beautiful coast to Galle. Another epic rail journey is Colombo to Trincomalee, a city on the east coast.
First published in the Mail on Sunday - August 2019
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