Ubon Ratchathani ProvinceSights

Sights in Ubon Ratchathani Province

  1. Kaeng Tana National Park

    Five kilometres before Khong Jiam you can cross the Pak Mun dam to little Kaeng Tana National Park. After circling thickly forested Don Tana (Tana Island), linked to the mainland by a small suspension bridge, the Mun River roils through its beautiful namesake rapids, which lie underwater during the rainy season. The 1.5km clifftop trail to Lan Pha Phueng viewpoint is serene and there are canoes for hire (per hour 100B). Five kilometres south of the visitor centre is Nam Tok Tad Ton, a wide waterfall just a 300m walk from the road. There’s a campsite and four bungalows. The simple restaurant opens during the day only.

    reviewed

  2. Pha Taem National Park

    Up the Mekong from Khong Jiam is a long cliff named Pha Taem, the centrepiece of Pha Taem National Park. From the top you get an amazing bird’s-eye view of Laos, and can see the first sunset in Thailand. Down below, reached via a trail, the cliff features prehistoric rock paintings that are at least 3000 years old. Mural subjects include fish traps, Ъlah bèuk (giant Mekong catfish), elephants, human hands and geometric designs. The second viewing platform fronts the most impressive pictographs. A clifftop visitor centre contains exhibits pertaining to the paintings and local geology.

    Pha Taem has campsites, cabins (4 people 300B) and five bungalows.

    reviewed

  3. Ubon Ratchathani National Museum

    Occupying the former city hall, this is a very informative museum with plenty on show, from Dvaravati-era Buddhist ordination-precinct stones and a 2500-year-old Dong Son bronze drum to Ubon textiles and betel-nut sets. The museum's most prized possession is a 9th-century Ardhanarisvara, a composite statue combining Shiva and his consort Uma into one being; one of just two ever found in Thailand.

    reviewed

  4. Wat Nong Pa Phong

    Peaceful Wat Nong Pa Phong is known for its quiet discipline and daily routine of work and meditation. Dozens of Westerners have lived here over recent decades, and several still do. The wát features the golden chedi where Luang Pu Cha’s relics are interred and a three-storey museum displaying an odd assortment of items, from Luang Pu Ajahn Cha’s worldly possessions to world currencies to a foetus in a jar. The temple is about 10km past the river. Sŏrng·tăa·ou 3 gets you within 2km; a motorcycle taxi (if one is available) should cost 20B.

    reviewed

  5. Wat Thung Si Meuang

    Wat Thung Si Meuang was built during the reign of Rama III (1824–51) and has a classic hŏr đrai (Tripitaka hall) in excellent shape. Like many hŏr đrai, it rests on tall, angled stilts in the middle of a pond to protect the precious scriptures (written on palm-leaf paper) from termites. It's kept open so you can look around inside. The 200-year-old murals in the little bòht beside the hŏr đrai show life in that era.

    reviewed

  6. Wat Ban Na Meuang

    Wat Sa Prasan Suk, as it's also known, stands out from other temples in many ways. Most famously, the bòht sits on a boat: a ceramic-encrusted replica of King Rama IX's royal barge Suphannahong, complete with a sculpted crew. The wí·hăhn also has a boat-shaped base, this one resembling the second-most important royal barge, Anantanagaraj; and it's surrounded by an actual pond. These were not just artistic endeavours: the water represents our desires and the boats represent staying above them.

    The commissioner of these creations, Luang Pu Boon Mi, died in 2001 and his body is on display (they're waiting to finish building a museum before cremating him) in the săh·lah

    reviewed

  7. Wat Si Ubon Rattanaram

    The bòht at this important temple resembles Bangkok's Wat Benchamabophit, but it's the 7cm-tall topaz Buddha inside that most visitors come to see. Phra Kaew Butsarakham, as it's known, was reportedly brought here from Vientiane at Ubon's founding and is one of the city's holiest possessions. It sits behind glass high up the back wall, all but out of sight; bring binoculars if you have them. The image directly in front of the largest Buddha is a copy.

    The temple has turned a beautiful old wooden săh·lah into a museum of religious items. The highlight is the collection of 18th-century đoô prá đraiЪìdòk, gorgeous boxes used for storing sacred palm-leaf texts. If yo…

    reviewed

  8. Phu Chong Nayoi National Park

    Sitting at the heart of the ‘Emerald Triangle’ is the little-known Phu Chong Nayoi National Park, one of Thailand’s wildest parks and healthiest forests. Resident fauna includes Malayan sun bears, barking deer, gibbons, black hornbills and endangered white-winged ducks. Elephants and tigers spend most of their time in Laos, but often make their way over the border into the park.

    reviewed

  9. Wat Phra That Nong Bua

    The richly adorned 55m chedi at this temple loosely resembles the Mahabodhi stupa in Bodhgaya, India. It's the only square stupa in Ubon Province unless you count the older one it was built over (you can enter to see the original between 8am and 6pm) or the four similar but smaller ones at the corners. Some of the jataka reliefs covering its exterior are quite expressive and two groups of four niches on each side of the chedi contain Buddhas standing in stylised Gupta or Dvaravati closed-robe poses. The temple is on the outskirts of town; to get there, take sŏrng·tăa·ou 10.

    reviewed

  10. Wat Supatanaram

    Called Wat Supat for short, the unique bòht at this riverside temple, built between 1920 and 1936, features a Thai roof, European arches and a Khmer base. And, in contrast to other temple structures of the region, it's made entirely of stone. In front is a wooden bell, reputed to be the largest in the world.

    reviewed

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  12. Golden Jubilee Art & Cultural Centre

    There is a museum in the lower level of this striking contemporary Isan-design tower at Rajabhat University. There are some interesting cultural displays, particularly of houses and handicrafts. There’s also a whole lot of wax sculpture.

    reviewed

  13. Wat Jaeng

    Found436around the same time as the city, Wat Jaeng has an adorable Lan Xang–style bòht (built in 1887) with large naga eave brackets on the sides, crocodiles on the railings and Airavata along with two mythical lions atop the carved wooden facade. A travelling market fills up the wàt grounds every Wednesday.

    reviewed

  14. Ubon Ratchathani Art & Culture Centre

    The museum in the lower level of this striking contemporary Isan-design tower at Rajabhat University is more scattershot than the National Museum, but there are some interesting cultural displays, particularly of houses and handicrafts. There's also a whole lot of wax sculpture.

    reviewed

  15. Thung Si Meuang

    The centrepiece of this city-centre park is a huge concrete replica of a Candle Parade float. The humble brick obelisk in the northeast corner is the Monument of Merit, erected by former allied forces POWs (brought here for forced labour by the Japanese, who occupied Thailand during WWII) in gratitude for the secret assistance they received from ordinary Thai citizens while in the prison camps. The City Pillar Shrine (San Lak Meuang) is in the south.

    reviewed