Thailand is more than just the beaches or big cities like Krung Thep Maha Nakhon (Bangkok) and Chiang Mai, and one of the country’s best-kept tourism secrets is its national parks. We recommend visiting Phu Laen Kha National Park in Chaiyaphum to escape and discover Thailand.
Phu Laen Kha National Park in Chaiyaphum is easy to find, clean, safe, accessible, and has first-class facilities. These national parks are the best destination if you want to go out on the road to see more of the country.
Make a journey from the tourist areas into the heartland and experience Thai people's culture and real life.
Phu Laen Kha is one of the premier national park locations to visit. You will enjoy every moment here, so come with us and let’s explore it together.
Phu Laen Kha is the 180th National Park in Thailand, covering an area of 200 sq km.
Phu Laen Kha is a national park in the Chaiyaphum province of Thailand. This park has some of the best day and night views of the Chi River valley and Isaan countryside. It is a forest park featuring the main Chaiyaphum attractions of camping, hiking, unique geology, and nature trails. Two large, new, multi-level air-conditioned buildings with meeting rooms available for classes, corporate retreats, or organization gatherings.
The park has an open-air party pavilion, picnic grounds, the new visitors center, Wi-Fi, toilet facilities, and paved parking lots. The park roads are also paved and in excellent condition. Maps of the park and the Chaiyaphum national park region are at the visitor’s center.
Phu Laen Kha's elevated cliffs offer some of the best views around. Visitors can go on hiking and trekking adventures in the Park. Visitors can also party in the open pavilion and stay the night in the park, renting a tent.
Phu Laen Kha National Park is in the heart of the Isaan region. Farming is the primary industry in Isaan, and this land is famous for the unique cooking style of the farm families. Som Tam papaya salad originated here from locally grown ingredients and is now famous worldwide. You can discover and enjoy these local Isaan dishes at the many small restaurants along the way to the park. Isaan is also very scenic, with its green year-round almost everywhere. It has thick forests, orchards, tree-covered mountainsides, and farm fields of all sizes.
The Phu Laen Kha National Park in Chaiyaphum is simple to find from any direction. It is on Route 512, about halfway between Chaiyaphum and Nong Bua Daeng. A large sign and a tall communications tower at the entrance can be seen on approach from far away. The entrance fee is cheap by Western standards at 100 Thai Baht for foreigners, 20 Thai Baht for Thais, and 30 Thai Baht to park. Tent rental is only 200 Thai Baht per night, and the campsite sites are free.
Phu Laen Kha is a series of plateaus. Elevations rise roughly 50 meters between them, from around 500 meters to a peak of about 720 meters. The visitor’s center area buildings and parking lots are on a large plain after the first rise from the entrance. Then the road goes up through forested hills to the camping areas and overlooks. There the scenery is almost surreal. The nature trails weave between large boulders and towering rock formations weathered by eons of windblown rock particles and rain. The trees thin out and open up to small fields in between them covered with flowers during the summer. The canopies of the trees provide lovely shady comfort over the hard grassy ground.
A few overlook platforms made of rustic wood are along the rock ledge of the highest campground. A couple of them have small open-air wooden shelters at the base with a table and two benches inside. The platforms look a little dangerous, but they are pretty solid. The view from these platforms is a fantastic panorama of the valley below and the surrounding mountains. On a clear day, you can see more than 30 kilometers in any direction. Using binoculars, the Nong Bua Deang buildings can be easily identified. From this viewpoint, the village below the mountain looks much more extensive than when you pass through it on the road. From high up, the patchwork of the fields is spectacular, and the large-scale farming finally becomes apparent.
Tourists come to Thailand to relax and get away from it all. One can not be further away from the rat race of life than a mountaintop in the middle of Thailand. The air is clean, and the trees have a light fragrance. There is no sound except the wind, birds, and insects. People lessen their solitude on the weekends. But the park is big enough to find your own space. Between periods of contemplation on one of the rocks, one can relax in the fellowship of those other visitors. But the park is not a monastery (there is one nearby), and people come there to have fun. However, you can separate from them and the outside world at this park. Time like this for yourself or alone with your partner is priceless.
The best thing about camping at Phu Laen Kha National Park in Chaiyaphum is that it's safe and secure, and you don’t need your tent. The park office closes at 4, but the rangers are there 24 hours daily. You can leave if you have to. The ranger will let you back in. But this is an exception, and going on a beer run is not a good reason. Alcohol is not allowed inside.
Tents are cheap but have limited availability: camp chairs, ground cloths (tarps), sleeping pads, and blankets for rent. The park shop has everything you need to make your stay comfortable.
Campfire pits at the campgrounds and lots of dead wood around to make fires. There is also water from storage tanks that run to a faucet on a concrete pad at each site area. This is for washing dishes and other such uses only. You will need to bring your drinking and cooking water. There is no electricity at the campgrounds, and generators are not permitted. So, bring battery-operated lights with spare batteries, and make sure you charge your cell phone beforehand. You can charge devices like this at the visitor’s center during operating hours.
The toilets at the main campground look almost new and immaculate. They have hot water for showers at the toilet station near the visitor’s center but none at the remote campgrounds.
Everybody is safe in these parks because of the security at the gates. The main force for safety, however, is the ranger staff. They are not armed but directly communicate with police, fire, and rescue services. The park is also safe because the people that stay overnight are there to commune amongst themselves. This is not a party camp.
Loud music is not tolerated; folks keep to themselves in small groups. The boy and girl scouts come there for group campouts but are always closely supervised. People overnighting for organization or company activities are under self-supervision. None want to get crazy and lose their job or respect within the group.
One of the campground caretakers gave some excellent advice to everybody. Don’t come on weekends or holidays because it gets very crowded. Don’t draw attention to yourself or your group if you bring things you are not supposed to. There are no inspections on entry, and the rangers don’t come around to check. Keep quiet. Do not play loud music or talk in a loud voice. Stay close to the campsite at night and use flashlights at all times. The rocks can be treacherous even during the day, so always use caution when walking around.
She said the best thing to do is enjoy the view from the top. “The lights below are just gorgeous at night. The stars are incredible, and you can’t see them in the towns and villages as you can up here.” Come for peace and relaxation. If you want to party hard, stay in Krung Thep Maha Nakhon (Bangkok) or on the beach.
Phu Laen Kha has some of the most diverse landscapes, ranging from mountain cliffs to rock formations such as Mo Hin Khao, also known as Thailand Stonehenge. The cliffs offer some stunning views of the valley below. The park roads are paved, and access to the park is very easy.
If you are tired from hiking in the park and want to get around a bit, go to Nong Bua Daeng.
Nong Bua Daeng is the district capital. There are many shops with all kinds of things like electronics, hardware, and camping supplies. You can take the opportunity to fix any mechanical troubles at one of the many repair shops and tire places. There are a few good sit-down restaurants in town too. There are places all over for Isaan food, traditional Thai dishes, and Shibu tabletop barbeque. Next to the Makro, one place even has Farang (western) food!
The best reason to go is usually to shop at the market. You can find everything there to cook back at camp. Small vendors sell meat, fruit, and vegetables from their farms. Local Isaan specialties like edible insects and rare herbs for soups are also available. Nong Bua Daeng has a Tesco supermarket. This is the place for Farang items like bacon and eggs or mundane necessities like Toilet paper and soap.
Alternatively, a Wat (temple) just about 2 kilometers from the park is worth visiting. It is one of the oldest Wats in the area and has many interesting buildings and ornate shrines. Outside the entrance to this is a giant Banyan tree that locals revere. The spirits of long-dead monks and nearby village residents are believed to inhabit it. Drivers passing the tree honk their horns out of respect, and sometimes you can hear them from the park.
Phu Laen Kha National Park in Chaiyaphum is more than just the park. You can visit three more parks stretching for more than 80 kilometers. To encourage visitors to stay and explore the park more, the ticket you buy once is valid at the others. Even the parking fee carries over so you can park at the other ones too.
Hiking and camping in the forest parks of Chaiyaphum are some of the best ways to see the natural beauty of Thailand. Isaan is out of the way and not as glamorous as the better-known places in the tourist brochures. It is off the beaten track and takes a relatively long time. But traveling in Thailand is the thing to do if you are a tourist. And the reward for coming to these National Parks is worth it.
Phu Laen Kha National Park is one of the breathtaking national parks with various terrain in Chaiyaphum, Thailand. It has nearly 37,000 acres of land covering 4 districts: Mueang, Ban Khwao, Nong Bua Daeng, and Kaset Sombun.
Fees |
Thai Citizens: 20 Thai Baht for Adults | 10 Thai Baht for Children Foreigners: 100 Thai Baht for Adults | 50 Thai Baht for Children |
Business Hours |
08.30 – 16.30 hrs | Monday – Sunday |
Business Address |
Huai Ton, Nong Bua Daeng District, Chaiyaphum 36000 |
Contact Number |
+66 (0) 93 093 9193 | +66 (0) 4 481 0902 |
Email Address |
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Website |
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Facebook Page |
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อุทยานแห่งชาติภูแลนคา | #phulaenkhanationalpark |
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GPS |
15.9994203, 101.8934187 |
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