There are Samet Island, Crocodile Pool, Grand Palace, Ancient Taoist Temple, Chedi Luang Temple, etc.
1. Koh Samet Koh Samet is a small island located in the Gulf of Thailand, about 220 kilometers southeast of Bangkok. It is administratively owned by Rayong Province, Thailand.
It is 6.5 kilometers long, 2.3 kilometers wide, and covers an area of ??about 5 square kilometers.
It takes about 40 minutes to take a boat from Thailand's mainland pier to Koh Samet. The island is a national natural park. There are many natural beaches on the east coast of the island, while the west coast is famous for its sunset.
A weekend retreat.
There are simple wooden houses for accommodation on the island.
Ko Samet has a tropical monsoon climate and should have a clear distinction between rainy and dry seasons.
But it is close to the seaside, and the sea breeze is cool and pleasant, so the beautiful scenery can be maintained in front of tourists all year round. The temperature difference is not big, the fluctuation is very small, and the arrival of the rainy season and the dry season is almost invisible.
The temperature here is about the same all year round, with the average temperature around 20 degrees Celsius.
As for the best travel season, I still recommend winter, which is from November to February of the next year, because this period is the warmest and most comfortable time of the year on Samet Island. The weather is relatively dry and there is almost no rainfall.
It will not cause any inconvenience to travel.
And even in winter, the flowers here are still very bright and eye-catching!
2. Crocodile Pool Crocodile Pool is located in Samut Prakan, 30 kilometers east of Bangkok, covering an area of ??about 40,000 square meters. It mainly breeds Thai crocodiles, as well as more than ten kinds of African crocodiles, Australian crocodiles and Chinese alligators.
The world's largest crocodile breeding farm with 10,000 crocodiles.
Former Chinese President Yang Shangkun once visited here.
The design of Crocodile Lake Park is also unique.
There are wooden crocodile viewing towers set up everywhere along the lake, and at the same time, the crocodile viewing towers are connected by an elevated corridor as high as two people, forming a winding aerial crocodile viewing corridor.
Climbing up the corridor, you can see at a glance the wooden crocodile viewing towers set up all along the lake. At the same time, the crocodile viewing towers are connected by an elevated corridor as high as two people, forming a winding aerial crocodile viewing corridor.
Climbing up the corridor, you can have a panoramic view of Crocodile Lake.
After watching the crocodiles, visitors can also watch the thrilling "human-crocodile fight" performance.
3. The Grand Palace The Grand Palace is the palace of the Thai (Siam) royal family.
Close to the Chao Phraya River, it is a large-scale ancient building complex (28 buildings in total) in the center of Bangkok, with a total area of ??218,400 square meters.
The Grand Palace was first built in 1782. After successive renovations and expansions by successive kings, this grand palace complex was finally built, which is still magnificent today.
The Grand Palace is modeled after the old palace in the old capital Ayutthaya. It is one of the many royal palaces in Thailand. It is the most perfectly preserved, largest and most ethnically distinctive palace in the past.
The Royal Palace is open to the public and has become a famous tourist place in Thailand.
There are 22 buildings in the complex. The main buildings are 4 unique palaces, lined up from east to west, with green tile roofs, purple-red glazed tile roofs, and crested eaves.
The roof is a typical Thai "three-top structure", which is the culmination of hundreds of years of Thai architectural art.
Some people call this place the "Thai Art Encyclopedia".
4. Gudao Temple Gudao Temple is located in Chiang Mai. There are various gourd pagodas of various sizes in the temple, with porcelain embedded in them, which is quite weird.
Legend has it that when the Burmese army attacked Chiang Mai, it failed repeatedly.
The Burmese people met with the King of Chiang Mai to compete in building a pagoda. Whoever completed it first would win.
The Chiang Mai army used a clever trick to shape the tower with bamboo, wood and cloth, and painted the appearance with colors, which was very lifelike. The construction speed was faster than that of the Burmese. The Burmese were deceived after seeing it, so they fulfilled their promise and retreated.
Later, the military and civilians of Chiang Mai worked together to build another real pagoda, which is five stories high and each layer is shaped like a watermelon. It is transliterated as an ancient Taoist temple.
5. Wat Chedi Luang Wat Chedi Luang is located in the center of the ancient city of Chiang Mai. It was built in 1411. Its main body is the largest stupa in Chiang Mai, so it is also called the "Big Pagoda Temple".
This mixed Indian and Ceylonese-style pagoda was originally 98 meters high and was once the tallest building in northern Thailand. However, due to the massive earthquake, artillery fire and lightning attacks in the Thai-Burmese War, only the 42-meter-high base of the pagoda remains.
and the ground floor, but for hundreds of years, it is still the tallest building in the ancient city of Chiang Mai.
Although more than half of this stupa has been destroyed, and the remaining parts are in ruins, and the whole body is covered with mottled scars that have been eroded by natural winds, but when you can stand in front of this ancient stupa by chance and take a look at its beauty, you still feel
You can feel its majesty and solemnity, and you can't help but have a deep reverie about the era when it was born.