Chiang Mai (General)

alan_nesbit
alan_nesbit
First Reviewer
5 out of 5
Avg. Member Rating
4
Reviews
6
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Flight of the Gibbon

  • August 31, 2009
  • Rated 5 of 5 by duggie3 from Los Angeles, California
Had a wonderful time. Although a bit pricey for Thailand, the money goes to a good cause so you don't feel so bad.

Although our entire Thailand trip was a great experience, The Flight of the Gibbon stands out as a highlight.

The guides were professional, friendly and fun-loving.

Check out the video on their website to get yourself pumped up before you go... this will definitely be one part of your Thailand trip you will remember for the rest of your life.

Highly recommend this to anyone.

Flight of the Gibbon

  • February 14, 2009
  • Rated 5 of 5 by ChrisMoTravel from Melton Mowbray, United Kingdom
My husband and I are the wrong side of 50 and had a fantastic afternoon. Safety and equipment was the best as were the thrills, it had a "WOW" factor flying through the rain forest. The meal afterwards was a great time to exchange thrill ratings and degrees of bravery. A must in Chiang Mai - Highly recommended.
Editor Pick

Chiang Mai’s City Walls

  • March 7, 2008
  • Rated 5 of 5 by SeenThat from Tel Aviv, Israel
Chiang Mai’s City Walls

Chiang Mai displays the best preserved walls and mote in Thailand and thus offers an opportunity to look back into medieval Thailand. Nowadays, only the corners are complete and original, though their bricks structure is collapsing under the weight of age and the bricks are nowadays arranged in heavily slanted lines.

History

In 1296, King Mengrai founded Chiang Mai (New City) as capital of the Lanna Thai Kingdom; it succeeded Chiang Rai in the role. The original moat and wall around the city was constructed then as a protection against the Burmese.

Following the power transfer to the Sukhothai Kingdom and later to the Ayuthaya Kingdom, Chiang Mai lost importance. Following Ayuthaya’s Kingdom fall in 1767 the city was practically abandoned.

King Taksin annexed Chiang Mai to the Kingdom of Siam in 1774; in 1800 new city walls were constructed as a defensive line. The wall remains still standing today date back to this wall and not to the original one.

The Wall, the Moat and Tha Pae Gate

Old Chiang Mai is a square surrounded by the ruined Old Wall and a moat; the only original parts of the wall preserved are on the corners. The corners usually feature colorful works of art – like occasional giant floating flowers - and are cheerfully illuminated during the evenings.

The Tha Pae Gate is a restored part of the wall on the very center of its western side; the gates allowed entry to the city during the 19th century. On the gate there is a scripture featuring the beautiful ancient Thai letters; those are rounder than the modern ones and resemble very much Burmese scripture.

Walking around the walls at an easy pace takes less than two hours and is a wonderful opportunity to watch some classical Thai architecture. The main tourists’ area in town – featuring restaurants, hotels, English bookstores and travel agencies – is located around the Tha Pae Gate.

Shopping

On the wall’s kitty corner – at 99/4 Huay Kaew Road – is the Kad Suan Kaew Shopping Centre, the largest shopping mall in Chiang Mai. Its façade is coated with red bricks, like the Old City Wall and thus wonderfully blends with its surrounding.

Its cavernous interior includes restaurants, shops and cinema theaters. The Central Department Store and Tops Supermarket allow replenishing the backpack with Western products. Pizza Hut, Sizzler and Swensens allow taking a Western break in the Asian diet of the traveler.

Attractions near the Wall

Despite Chiang Mai having expanded beyond the walls, most of its attractions and historic relics are within the walls. The city is one of the oldest Thai cities and has accumulated vast treasures along the centuries; most of them are conveniently placed close to the old walls.

Wat Chedi Luang

Almost at the geographical center of Chiang Mai’s Old City is Wat Chedi Luang, where the Emerald Buddha - a power-talisman of the Thai and Lao cultures - found a residence between 1468 and 1553AC. It was built in 1401 and contains the ruins of a huge chedi. Lanna’s Kingdom founder, King Mengrai, is said to have survived being struck by a lightening here.

The Emerald Buddha was brought here from Lampang, after a long and unpredicted delay there in its way from Chiang Rai. From here, the Laotians took it, and kept it first in Luang Prabang, their northern principality, and later in Vientiane, the central one. A couple of centuries later, the last paid a dear price for the statue – it was burned to the ground - when it was brought back to Thailand.

Every one of the historical locations of the Emerald Buddha is special in some way; usually there are worshipping signs long after the image was taken away. This is where Chiang Mai is different; Wat Chedi Luang shows presently only a fraction of its original splendor; it was never completely restored from the damage caused by the disastrous 1545’s earthquake. Some speculate that the weakened city after the natural disaster facilitated the task of the Laotian invaders eight years later.

Its partially refurbished Chedi is very unlike the Thai customs, especially considering that the same temple keeps the Inthakin, the City Pillar.

The temple is close to the Tha Pae Gate; cross the gate and advance along the main avenue Thanon Ratchadamnoen until reaching the junction with Thanon Phra Pokklao - the main north-south avenue within the old city - go one block south (left) and turn west (right) to Thanon Ratchamanka. The temple is half a block later at the right side.

Wat Pan Tao: a few meters from Wat Chedi Luang, this tiny shrine is constructed entirely from wood and exhibits exquisite, well preserved craftsmanship.

Wat Suan Dok: just off Suthep Road - west of the old city-wall - this spacious temple has a large bell shaped stupa built in the late 14th century and a complex of tombs and cenotaphs of the city’s old royal family. Next to the temple is a school of Thai Massage, specializing in the softer Northern version of the art.

The temple was built by the King of Lanna for a revered monk visiting from Sukhothai to spend the rains retreat. The name translates as "the Flowers Field Temple." There are several unique aspects to this temple; one is its large ubosot (ordination hall). This is unusual not only for its size, but also since it features open walls. Second, it hosts a large number of chedis housing the ashes of past Chiang Mai rulers. The temple is also the site of Mahachulalongkorn Rajavidyalaya Buddhist University.

Wat Phra Singh: located within the city walls and founded in 1345 the temple is located at the junction of Phra Singh and Singh Harat roads and is built in classical Lanna style. The Buddha image in the main shrine is a famous Lanna bronze brought from Chiang Rai centuries ago. Visitors can also take part in meditation classes here at set times.

Wat Saen Fang at the Tha Phae and Kam Phaeng Din junction, it is built in a mix of Burmese (the chedi) and Lanna styles.

Wat Bupparam: across and up the street from Wat Saen Fang, it displays a hybrid blend of Burmese and Lanna styles. The main shrine hosts three Buddhas.

Old Chiang Mai Cultural Center: placed in traditional styled northern-Thai houses on Wualai Road, it contains traditional Northern artifacts and offers Kantoke – the northern style dining style. Diners sit on the floor around small tables and enjoy a dance show while eating.

The Chiang Mai National Museum hosts exquisite specimens of northern Thai art as well as a fine collection of Hilltribes art and crafts.

Wat Chiang Man: the oldest temple in Chiang Mai. King Mengrai lived here while overseeing the construction of the city. This temple houses two very important and venerated Buddha figures - Phra Sila (a marble Buddha) and Phra Satang Man (a crystal Buddha).

From journal Chiang Mai: City of the Million Guesthouses

Editor Pick

Trekking in Northern Thailand

  • June 9, 2006
  • Rated 4 of 5 by alan_nesbit from Singapore, Singapore
Trekking in Northern Thailand

Day 2 of our trip to Chiang Mai saw us join a group of twelve people for a 3-day trek. Heading west, stopping for an elephant ride, and a visit to a cave on the way, we were finally dropped on a wet track surrounded by jungle.

Our target for the first night was a village of Karen people, 3 hours away through jungle and rice fields. It’s the start of the rainy season, so the rice was growing in the small fields, waiting to be transplanted into the paddies. In 3 months time, the crop will be harvested to provide the local people with the supply for a year.

Day 2 started with some time in one of the houses in the village. As we arrived, a woman was preparing to grind a supply of rice for the day, dressed in local woven cotton clothes, 78 years old, toothless but with a wiry strength and agility that would put many younger Westerners to shame. We watched the grain being separated from the husk to provide food for people, pigs and chickens.

It was clear that life in the village required a high level of self-sufficiency, resourcefulness, and physical hard work. Food and building materials come from the land around the village, clothing is woven by hand. Bamboo is used for many things—floors and fences, rattraps, mugs, and baskets. There were a few signs that things were changing: some tin roofs, some T-shirts. Perhaps it will be unrecognisable in another generation, traditional skills swept away as modern amenities become more readily available.

We passed through another village later that day, but otherwise we saw virtually no one. The rainy season meant an abundance of leeches on one stretch of the walk. It can be disconcerting to see one (or even worse, several) climbing up your boot, resisting all efforts to dislodge it. Concerned cries from one or another member of the party increased in volume and urgency as the offending creature approached its target—to slip inside a boot or attach itself to an ankle.

We woke on day 3 to the sounds of bamboo rafts being constructed on the edge of the river below our cabin. We realised soon after setting out that this was going to be no gentle drift down the stream, and were swept down the river, swollen with rain, avoiding (mostly) the rocks. The rafts creaked beneath our feet, and flexed as we ran over a submerged obstacle. This was a highlight of the trip for many of the party.

In due course, the day turned wet, so the visit to the top of Doi Inthanon was aborted, and to the nearby waterfall was a damp affair. Never mind, we were a very satisfied group of travellers when we finally arrived back in Chiang Mai.

From journal Trekking in Northern Thailand

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