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PLACE:
Bang Pu Seaside Resort
LOCATION: Near the 37 kms marker on Sukhumwit
Road
OPENING HOURS: 10 a.m. - 8 p.m.
ADMISSION: free
Click for map
and satellite pictures |
Just beyond the 37 k.m.
marker on Sukhumwit Road is the entrance way to Bang Poo Seaside Resort.
It is the army's rahabilitation and relaxation center but members
of the public can also enter and enjoy its beautiful scenery. On the
site are some gardens, a restaurant and a pier. Between the end of
the year and April, large numbers of seagulls flock to the area and
the pier is a popular place to watch and feed them. There is also
a nature walk which you can go on. Early evening is the best time
to visit when it is cooler and you also get a beautiful sunset as
you look out across the Gulf of Thailand.
** Running south-east of
the pier is a nature walk which runs alongside the sea for about 3
kilometres. This is an ideal place for bird spotters. It is about
a 45 minute walk along the path to a small inlet where there is a
fishing village. To save making the return trip back along the same
path, walk through the small village to Sukhumwit Road and catch a
songtaew bus back to the Seaside Resort.
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(Above
left): The entrance way to Sukta Pier. To the right of the picture
is a spirit house which is for the guardian spirits of the land.
Offerings are made to it every day. (Above right): People having
a picnic in the gardens at the entrance to the pier. In the
background is a restaurant. |
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(Above
left and right): Between October and February, large flocks
of seagulls migrate to this area. The pier is a popular place
to watch and feed the birds.
More photos: Restaurant at the end of the pier | Seagulls
at sunset
The pier is also a historical landmark. On December 8th at
2:00 a.m., less than two hours after the attack on Pearl Harbour,
Japanese forces began landing in Thailand. The 5th Division,
25th Army, landed at the cities of Pattani and Songkhla and
on the island of Ko Samui in southern Thailand. The Guards
Division, 25th Army, landed small elements at Samut Prakarn
at the mouth of the Chao Phraya River south of Bangkok. The
bulk of the Guards Division entered the country overland from
Cambodia at the town of Aranyaprathet.
A small group of brave local forces rushed to form a defensive
position just two kilometres north-west of this landmark.
This group consisted of police, the army youth corps and civilian
volunteers all from Samut Prakarn. Just before the two sides
clashed, a last minute accord was reached between the Thai
government and Japanese which permitted Japanese military
forces to pass through Thai territory unmolested.
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Samut Prakan Province in Thailand: a Virtual Tour of a Thai City