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Tham Lod Cave
🌲 Nature

Tham Lod Cave

📍 Mae Hong Son, Pang Mapha

A vast river cave you float through on a bamboo raft by lantern light, past stalactite chambers, ancient teak coffins on high ledges, and a dusk sky that fills with hundreds of thousands of swifts pouring in to roost.

Deep in the limestone hills of Pang Mapha, a stream called the Nam Lang vanishes straight into a mountain and re-emerges 1.5 km later. To follow it, you climb aboard a bamboo raft and drift into Tham Lod, one of northern Thailand’s great river caves.

Why It’s Interesting

A local guide leads you through soaring chambers — Column Cavern, Doll Cavern — by gas lantern, the only light there is. On high ledges sit ancient carved teak coffins, some over 2,000 years old, left by a people archaeologists call the “spirit-coffin” culture. At dusk the cave mouth becomes a spectacle: an estimated quarter-million swifts funnel inside to roost in a swirling black ribbon, while bats stream out to hunt.

Best Time to Visit

The cool, dry season (November–February) is best. During the heaviest monsoon rains the river can rise and suspend the raft trips, so check locally before the long drive.

Getting There

It’s genuinely remote, near Soppong between Pai and Mae Hong Son. Almost everyone arrives by rented car or motorbike. Hire a guide and lantern at the entrance — solo entry isn’t allowed.

📸 Mon-chan's camera roll

Snapshots from our very good boy on the road.

Mon-chan visiting Tham Lod Cave
It's dark, it's echoey, I barked once for science.
Cinnamon at Tham Lod Cave
Cinnamon found a stalactite he swears is an acorn.

Where it is

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