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PLACES
TO VISIT
I n t r o d u c t i o n
Chiang Mai is Thailand's principal northern city. A largely mountainous
province,it has some 20,000 square kilo-metres in area.
Chiang Mai city is 700 kilometres north of Bangkok, was founded in 1296,
and is located in a fertile valley some 300 metres above sea level.
Chiang Mai was the capital of Lanna Thai (Kingdom of One Million Rice
fields), the first independent Thai kingdom within the fabled Golden
Triangle. Chiang Mai flourished as a major religious, cultural and trading
centre until 1556 when a Burmese invasion reduced it to a vassal state.
The Burmese were expelled in 1785, whereupon Lanna Thai once again became
part of northern Thailand.
Many lowland Thais regard Chiang Mai city and province as being something
of a national Shangri-La, thanks to its beautiful women, distinctive
festivals, historic temples dating from the 1300s, scenic beauty, temperate
fruits such as apples, peaches and strawberries, and a crisp, invigorating
cool season climate.
Local
Culture :
The people of Chiang Mai enjoy one of the most distinctive cultural
identities in the whole of Thailand. Largely farmers and artisans,
they have their own northern dialect, customs, festivals, architectural
traditions, indigenous handicrafts, their own dances and distinctive
cuisine. Hill tribes also lend a great deal of character and colour
to the beautiful mountainous landscape.
City
Attractions :
Wat Phra Singh
Sam Lan Road
This lovely temple dates from 1345 and is one of the focal points
of Songkran festivities from April 13-15 when people bathe the revered
Phra Buddha Sihing image. The temple compound includes the lovely
Lai Kham chapel with its exquisite woodcarvings and northern-style
murals.
Wat Suan Dok
Suthep Road
This temple was built in a 14th century Lanna Thai monarch's pleasure
gardens and is a favorite spot for photographers, particularly for
striking sunsets. Several of the white chedis contain ashes of Chiang
Mai's former royal family. The 500-year-old bronze Buddha image in
a secondary chapel is one of Thailand's largest metal images.
Wat
Chiang Man
Ratchaphakkinai Road
This is Chiang Mai's oldest temple and probably dates from 1296. The
temple was the residence of King Mengrai, who founded Chiang Mai,
and is noteworthy for a chedi supported by rows of elephantine buttresses,
and a small ancient Buddha image, Phra Kaeow .
Wat
Ku Tao
Near Chiang Mai Stadium
This temple is noteworthy for an unusual bulbous pagoda. The structure
is decorated with colourful porcelain chips and is believed to represent
five Buddhist monks' alms bowls which symbolize five Lord Buddhas.
Wat
Chedi Luang
Phrapokklao Road
This temple is the site of an enormous pagoda, originally 280 feet
high, and which was partially destroyed by an earthquake in 1545.
At one time, Wat Chedi Luang housed the revered Emerald Buddha image
now enshrined in Bangkok's Wat Phra Kaeo. A magnificent Naga staircase
adorns the chapel's front porch.
Wat Chet Yot
Super Highway, north of the Huai
Kaew Nimmanhemin Roads intersection
This temple dates from 1458. The seven-spired square chedi was inspired
by designs at Bodhagaya, the site of the Buddha's Enlightenment in
north India over 2,500 years ago, and was built by Lanna Thai architects
after visiting the holy site.
Wat U-Mong
Suthep Road
This delightful meditation temple is completely different from Chiang
Mai's other major temples and enjoys a bucolic forest setting. The
ancient chedi is of particular interest.
Chiang
Mai National Museum
Beside Wat Chet Yot
The museum houses a collection of Lanna Thai works of art, ancient
Buddha images, and war weapons. The museum opens daily, except Mondays,
Tuesdays and official holidays, from 9.00 AM until noon, and 1.00
until 4.00 PM.
Out-of-City
Attractions :
DOI SUTHEP ROUTE (Road 1004)
Tribal Research Institute Chiang Mai University campus This contains
a permanent cultural exhibition of northern hilltribes. The centre
is open, Monday through Friday, from 8.30 AM until noon, and from
1.00 to 4.30 PM.
Chiang Mai Arboreum
next to Chiang Mai University
The attractively landscaped garden contains many kinds of tropical
trees and lovely flowers.
Chiang
Mai Zoo
next to the Chiang Mai Arboreum
This artfully landscaped complex occupies the lower forested slopes
of Suthep mountain, and contains a fascinating collection of Asian
and African mammals and birds.
Huai
Kaew Falls
beside Chiang Mai Zoo
The cascade provides a delightful ambiance for relaxation and picnics.
Kruba
Sriwichai Monument
Foot of Suthep Mountain
This monument honours the man whose followers built the first motor
road to Wat Phra That Doi Suthep in 1935.
Wat Phra That Doi Suthep
This
temple is Chiang Mai's most important and visible landmark and overlooks
the city from its forested mountain backdrop. Wat Phra That Doi Suthep
is 15 kilometres from town, 3,520 feet above sea level and dates from
1383. The temple is approached by climbing a steep Naga staircase
comprising more than 290 steps the less energetic may ascend by funicular
cars. The temple's golden pagoda contains holy Buddha relics and attracts
Buddhist pilgrims from all over the world throughout the year.The
temple compound offers an exhilarating view of Chiang Mai city and
surrounding countryside.
Phu
Phing Palace
This is located on the same road, beyond Wat Phra That Doi Suthep,
on Doi Buak Ha, 22 kilometres from town. The royal winter palace was
built in 1962. The lavishly landscaped gardens and grounds are open
to the general public on Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays,and official
holidays, when the Thai royal family is not in residence.
Doi
Pui Tribal Village
This Meo tribal village is some 4 kilometres from the Phu Phing Palace,
and offers vignettes of modern tribal life.
Pha
Dam (Black Cliff)
This area near Wat Phra That Doi Suthep comprises a scenic spot ideal
for picnics.
WESTERN
ROUTE :
(Highway 108 & Road 1009)
Old Chiang Mai Cultural Centre
Located on the road to Chom Thong, the centre stages Lanna Thai
cultural performanceswith a Khantoke Dinner. Objets d 'art are displayed.
Earthenware
& Lacquerware Shops
These are clustered together, some 4 kilometres from town, on
the Chiang Mai-Hang Dong Road.
Wat
Phra That Si Chum Thong
This temple is 58 kilometres from Chiang Mai and dates from the
mids1400s. The temple houses a collection of bronze Buddha images,
and the secondary chapel contains a holy Buddha relic.
Mae
Klang Waterfall
Chiang Mai's most photographed waterfall lies some 58 kilometres west
of the city at the foot of Doi Inthanon Mountain, and provides a picturesque
setting for picnics and relaxation.
Borichinda
Cave
Visiting the cave, which provides a pleasant setting for picnics,
entails a 10-minute drive and a walk of some 2 hours from the Mae
Klang Waterfall.
Doi
Inthanon National Park
The 1,005-square-kilometre park covers Thailand's highest mountain
(2,565 metres). The lovely Wachirathan, Siriphum and Mae Pan waterfalls
share the mountain with Meo and Karen hilltribe settlements. Forest
above 1,800 metres is covered with lichens and wild orchids.
Mae
Yae Waterfall
This is located 12 kilometres from Chom Thong market and is best
visited by local mini-bus.
Ob
Luang Gorge
This picturesque gorge is 88 kilometres from Chiang Mai provincial
capital, and is framed by teak forests and mountains..
NORTHERN
ROUTE :
(Highway 107 & Road 1096)
Lanna Golf Course
This public 18-hole golf course is located at Nong Hoi, some 4 kilometres
from town. The course is open daily from 6.00 AM until 7.00 PM. Golf
club rentals and caddy services are available.
Chiang
Mai Green Valley Golf Course
This is located some 16 kilometres from town along thesame road,
and is open to the public.
Orchid
& Butterfly Farms
Major nurseries in the Mae Sa Valley include the Mountain Orchid,
Mae Rim Orchid and Sai Nam Phung Orchid complexes. Each provide opportunities
for visitors to admire these exotic year-round blooms. Certain orchid
farms also have special butterfly enclosures wherein exotic species
can be seen in their natural environment.
Mae
Sa Waterfall
This 8-tiered waterfall is 26 kilometres from town and occupies a
natural setting among gigantic, towering trees.
Elephant Training Centres
Each morning, at Km 10 on the Mae Rim-Samoeng route, trained elephants
demonstrate their formidable and highlyvalued forestry skills from
9.30 until 11.00 AM, at the Mae Sa Elephant Training Centre. The centre
is some 30 kilometres from town. Admission is 80 baht per person.
A jungle tour on elephant back, lasting more than two hours through
adjacent forests, is offered after the show and costs 250 baht per
person. Elephants can also be seen at the Pong Yaeng Elephant Centre
at KM 19 on the same route.
Resorts
Several picturesque resorts, with accommodation and dining facilities,
offer bucolic rural living on the Mae Rim-Samoeng route (1096) and
include Mae Sa Valley Resort and Erawan Resort, and the Samoeng-Hang
Dong route (1239) which includes Lanna Resort, Krisadadoi Resort and
Suan Bua Resort. Some occupy hillsides, others secluded valleys.
Taeng
Dao Elephant Camp
This riverside enclave, at KM 56 on Highway 107, features daily shows
of elephants at work, from 9.00 AM until 10.00 AM, and from 10.00
AM until 11.00 AM, and offers elephant rides, and opportunities for
bucolic river-rafting through largely pristine and tranquil forests,
or jungle treks to neighbouring hilltribe settlements.
Chiang Dao caves
The sacred, Buddha-image-filled caves of Wat Tham Chiang Dao are 72
kilometres from town. The caves
are illuminated by electric lights, while deepest recesses can be
explored with local guides who carry oil lanterns.
Doi
Ang Khang
This royal agricultural station, 163 kilometres north of Chiang
Mai provincial capital, is a demonstration site for planting and researching
flowering plants, temperate fruit trees, vegetables and other crops,
and enjoys the patronage of His Majesty King Bhumibol Adulyadej.
Fang
Hot Springs
Located at Ban Pin, also 163 kilometres north of Chiang Mai provincial
capital, 50 hot springs occupy a 10-acre forest setting. Three boil
contin- usually with a string smell of sulphur. Water temperatures
at the springs range from 90 to 100 degrees Celsius.
EASTERN
ROUTE (Road 101) :
Bor Sang Umbrella/Parasol Village
The world-famous village is 9 kilometres from town, along a road lined
with handicraft-producing factories. In genuine cottage industries,
young women manufacture silk and cotton umbrellas and paper parasols
which are subsequently hand painted in various animal and floral designs.
Generations of Bor Sang families have been engaged in umbrella and
parasol making for more than 200 years.
San
Kamphaeng
Cotton & Silk Weaving Village
This equally famous village is located 13 kilometres from town.
The village is the major source of all Thai silk and cotton produced
in Chiang Mai. The fabrics are woven by local folk on traditional
wooden looms, and are sold in a wide variety of plain lengths, plaids,
brocades, stripes, prints and checks.
San
Kamphaeng Hot Springs
This is located 36 kilometres from town amid natural surroundings
of trees and verdant hills. The water has a high sulphur content and
possesses curative and restorative properties. Accommodation, a swimming
pool, dining facilities and segregated mineral water bathing rooms
are available. Accommodation can be booked by contacting the Sam Kamphaeng
Hot Spring Co-operative Village, Chiang Mai 50130 or Tel: 01-510-0418.
TREKKING
TOURS
Meo, Lisu, Yao, Akha, Lawa and Karen hilltribes live throughout
northern Thailand's mountains.They share animist beliefs and honour
numerous forest and guardian spirits. Each tribe has distinctive ceremonial
attire, courtship rituals, games, dances, agricultural customs, puberty
rites, languages or dialects, aesthetic values and hygienic habits.
Popular 'Jungle Treks', lasting from 2 to 7 days, take visitors through
forested mountains and high valleys andmeadows, and indude visits
to remoter high-altitude hilltribe settlements for overnight stays.
The best guides are hilltribe youths who customarily speak English,
Thai and at least three tribal dialects.
Treks commonly feature travel by foot, sometimes by boat, elephant-back,
horse-back or jeep, frequently a combination of two or three modes
of transportation. Prospective trekkers are advised to shop around
companies offering such tours for the best conditions. All treks must
be registered with the Tourist Police. This is done for trekkers'
protection. Avoid companies that do not abide by this law. Visitors
are welcome to enquire from the Tourism Police to confirm which tour
companies have negative or bad reputations.
Also, avoid narcotics, essentially everything from 'soft drugs' such
as marijuana to 'hard drugs' such as opium and heroin, both during
travel and at hilltribe villages. There are severe penalties for such
usage.
Valuables, such as passport, jewllery and money, should be deposited
in the safe of your hotel or guest house whileyou are trekking upcountry.
Wear sensible clothing to protect your limbs and sleep under a mosquito
net at night. Malaria is a real threat, and sensible precautions should
be taken to avoid it.
Visitors should remember to
a) Respect hilltribe beliefs and religious symbols and structures
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b) Dress modestly. Hilltribe people are generally modest. Inappropriate
attire may offend them.
c) Ask permission before photographing someone. Some villages do not
permit photography.
d) Avoid trading western medicines and articles of clothing. Contributions
to their welfare, items such as pens, paper, needles, thread, cloth
and material used for embroidery are perfectly acceptable.
Trek prices are determined by the duration of the trip, transportation
modes, meals available and the size of the trekking party.
Check directly with the Chiang Mai TAT office for current information.
Thai Etiquette
What is considered polite in your country is probably considered
polite in Thailand, too.
However, there are a few cultural pitfalls, mainly social and religious
taboos, the breaking of which can cause offence.
For example, Thais revere their royal family. Even social malcontents,
who ignore legal and community standards, refuse to tolerate a faintly
implied slur on the monarchy.
Outward expressions of anger are regarded as crude and boorish. Visitors
who remain calm and smile will Emd all sorts of doors opened to them.
Visitors should dress neatly in all religious shrines. They should
never go shirtless, or in shorts, hot pants or other unsuitable attire.
Shoes should be removed when entering a private Thai home, a Buddhist
temple chapel, any of the Islamic community's mosques.
Each Buddha image, large or small, is regarded as a sacred object.
Never climb onto one to take a photograph or do anything which might
indicate a lack of respect.
Public displays of affection between men and women are frowned upon.
Westernised Thai couples may hold hands, but that's as far as it goes
in public.
It is considered rude to point your foot at a person or object.
Thais regard the head as the highest part of the body, literally and
figuratively. Therefore, they do not appreciate anyone patting them
there, even as a friendly gesture.
Thais customarily ask questions which are regarded elsewhere as being
personal. If the visitor is asked, 'Where are you going?' or 'How
much do you earn?' such questions are asked in a friendly manner and
signify genuine interest. Joking answers such as, 'I'm not sure' or
"Never enough!' are perfectly acceptable.
Shopping
Chiang Mai is, quite simply, Thailand's major centre for quality handicrafts.
The visitor need merely visit the nearest city emporium or night market
to purchase an extraordinary variety of antiques, silver jewelry,
hilltribe opium pipes and embroidery, Thai silks and cottons, basketry,
celadon, silverware, furniture, lacquerware, woodcarvings and parasols.
A major advantage of shopping in Chiang Mai is that the visitor may
watch artisans working within the city and in several outlying villages,
particularly along the Bor SangSan Kamphaeng road where, in genuine
cottage industries, parasols, silk and cotton weaving, jewelry, woodcarving,
silverware, celadon and lacquer ware are manufactured, and number
among popular purchases.
Major Chiang Mai products include:
Cottons & Silks
First-class Chiang Mai cottons and silks are of incomparable quality.
Cottons and silks have innumerable fashion and furnishing applications.
The largest possible selection is available in San Kamphaneg.
Umbrellas/Parasols
These are inextricably associated with Bor Sang where villagers
have been engaged in their manufacture for at least 200 years. All
materials, silks, cottons, sa paper (manufactured from the bark of
the mulberry tree), and bamboo are produced or found locally. MIsitors
to Bor Sang will see literally hundreds of designs and sizes ranging
from the miniature to the gigantic.
Silverware
The finest Thai silverware is exquisite, and is made in Chiang Mai,
where certain families have prectised their art for several generations.
Traditional skills and a guaranted content of at least 92.5% pure silver
invest bowls, receptacles and decorative items with authentic value.
Silver shops are concentrated on Wualu Road, where silverware artisans
and their families live.
Lacquerware
Striking black and gold designs give lacquerware its visual appeal and
sheen. This decorative art enhances items made of wood, bamboo, metal,
paper and baked clay, in the form of receptacles, ornaments and various
souvenirs.
Fumiture/Woodcarving
Chiang Mai is a major centre of furniture making. Major woods and
materials include teak, rose wood and rattan. Items may be unadorned
or, especially with teak and rose wood, artfully carved in traditional
or modern designs. Woodcarving is a traditional northern Thai art featured
in numerous temples. In recent years, wood carving has increasingly
embellished furniture, gracing screens, chairs, tables, beds, indeed
anything bearing a wooden surface large enough to be carved. Carved
elephants, figurines and tableware number among other popular purchases.
Hill tribe Products
These include silver ornaments, such as bracelets, necklaces, pendants,
hairpins and pipes of intricate design, and embroidered items including
tunics, jackets,bags, purses, caps and dress lengths.
Gold Plated Orchids & Butterflies
Orchids and butterflies are preserved and plated with 24carat gold
to create unusual gift items such as necklace pendants, hairpins and
earrings.
Pottery
Chiang Mai is the major centre of Thailand's pOnery industry. Prized
items include high-fired celadon which is produced in many forms, including
dinner sets, lamp bases and decorative items.
Major Events & Festivals
Chiang Mai celebrates many annual festivals. Three are particularly
lively and lovely. They are theFlowerFestival, the first Friday and
weekend of every February, Songkran, 13-15 April each year, and Loi
Krathong on the full-moon night of the twelfth lunar month, generally
in November.
Flower Festival
The 3-day event occurs during the period when Chiang Mai's temperate
and tropical flowers are in full bloom and at their colourful best.
Festivities include colourful floral floats, parades, music and dancing,
and beauty pageants.
Songkran
This festival celebrates the traditional Thai New Year with religious
merit-making, pilgrimages, beauty parades, dancing, merriment and uninhibited,
good-natured water throwing.
Loi Krathong
People float away under the full moon, onto rivers, canals and lakes,
banana-leaf boats bearing a lighted candle, incense, flower and small
coin to honour the water spirits and wash away the previous year's misfortunes.

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