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Erawan National Park

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Erawan National Park is located in Kanchanaburi Province in western Thailand and is best known for its tiered waterfalls, limestone hills, and dense forest. The park covers a large area of mixed deciduous and evergreen woodland near the Tenasserim Hills close to the border with Myanmar. Its name comes from the Erawan Waterfall, whose upper tier is said to resemble the three-headed white elephant from Hindu mythology. Visitors travel to the park for hiking, swimming, cave exploration, and wildlife observation, while the surrounding rivers and forested valleys create a cooler environment than the nearby plains.

The park reflects the close relationship between local communities and the forest landscape of western Thailand. Villages around the area are connected to farming, fishing, and small-scale tourism, and many guides share knowledge about medicinal plants, caves, and regional wildlife. Buddhist traditions are visible throughout Kanchanaburi Province, where temples and shrines often stand alongside rivers and mountain roads. Local identity is also shaped by the area’s river systems and long-standing transport routes through the hills. Tourism within the park is carefully managed to reduce environmental damage, especially around the waterfalls and swimming areas.

Erawan Waterfall is the park’s main attraction and stretches across seven tiers, each with pale turquoise pools formed by mineral-rich water flowing over limestone rock. Trails connect the levels through forest filled with bamboo, fig trees, and hanging vines. The park also contains caves such as Phra That Cave, known for stalactites and stalagmites, and smaller streams that feed into the Khwae Yai River. Wildlife in the park includes macaques, monitor lizards, kingfishers, hornbills, and occasionally wild elephants deeper in the forest. During the rainy season, water levels rise quickly, changing the appearance and flow of the falls.

Food near Erawan National Park centers on regional Thai cooking commonly served in roadside restaurants and market stalls around Kanchanaburi. Meals often include grilled river fish, spicy papaya salad, tom yum soup, sticky rice, and dishes flavored with local herbs. Fresh tropical fruit such as mango, rambutan, and pineapple is widely available in the area. One detail many visitors notice is the small fish that gather in the waterfall pools and gently nibble at swimmers’ feet. Early mornings in the park are often marked by mist moving through the trees and the sound of flowing water echoing through the limestone valleys.

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(800) 468-2359 or 908-879-6773

106 East Springtown Rd., Long Valley, NJ 07853

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