# Bua Tong Sticky Waterfalls: The Cascade You Can Climb

> Bua Tong, Chiang Mai's Sticky Waterfalls, has grippy limestone you can climb barefoot. Free entry, a bubbling spring up top, and how to get there.

Most waterfalls in northern Thailand come with the same quiet warning: those rocks are slick, so watch your footing. Bua Tong breaks that rule entirely. Here the rock grips back. You can kick off your sandals, plant a bare foot on the cascade, and walk straight up the falling water as if it were a staircase. It is one of the strangest and most joyful half-days you can have near the city, and unlike most of the spots in our [round-up of the region's waterfalls](/blog/waterfalls-chiang-mai), this one earns a guide all to itself.

## Why you can walk up a waterfall

The magic is mineral, not myth. The spring that feeds **Bua Tong** rises through limestone, so the water arrives loaded with dissolved calcium bicarbonate. As it tumbles over the falls and meets the air, that calcium crystallises onto the rock, building a pale, porous crust the geologists call **tufa**, a soft cousin of travertine. Run your hand over it and you will feel exactly why it works: the surface is faintly rough, almost like very fine sandpaper, packed with microscopic ridges that catch the soles of your feet. Slippery algae never gets a foothold on it. So where other cascades are treacherous, this one is reassuringly sticky. It really is that simple, and that surreal.

![A Lanna-style illustration of people climbing the tiered limestone Bua Tong Sticky Waterfalls in the forest](/blog/bua-tong-sticky-waterfalls/visual.webp)

## Climbing the three tiers

The falls drop in roughly three tiers down a forested hillside, around 100 metres of climbable rock in total. Some stretches are a gentle, ankle-deep scramble; others tilt steeper, and the national park has bolted **fixed ropes** alongside the trickier sections so you always have something to hold. The trick is to trust the grip, keep your weight over your feet, and go slowly. You will see Thai families doing it in flip-flops and grandparents inching up beside teenagers. It is genuinely one of the better outdoor outings to do [with children](/blog/chiang-mai-with-kids) in the region, equal parts swimming hole and adventure playground, though small ones still want a hand on the steeper steps. Climb up, walk down the shaded staircase beside the falls, and do it all over again.

## The bubbling spring at the top

Follow the path above the highest tier and you reach the source: a quiet, almost otherworldly pool where the **Chok Ka Bin** spring bubbles up out of the ground. This is the head of **Nam Phu Chet Si**, the "spring of seven colours", and the water has a faintly blue-green, mineral cast to it. Stand and watch the surface fizz and churn and you are looking at the very calcium-rich source that makes the whole cascade below climbable. It is a five-minute detour most visitors skip, which is precisely why it is worth doing.

## Getting there

Bua Tong sits inside **Si Lanna National Park** in **Mae Taeng** district, roughly 60 kilometres north of the old town. Realistically that is an hour to an hour and a half of driving, heading up **Highway 107** in the direction of [Chiang Dao](/blog/chiang-dao) before turning off east into the hills. There is no public transport that drops you at the gate, so you have three options: drive yourself, take a tour, or hire a private car for the day. If you are comfortable on two wheels it makes a lovely ride, though the final stretch is winding; our notes on [getting around](/blog/getting-around-chiang-mai) and on [renting a scooter](/blog/renting-a-scooter-chiang-mai) will help you decide whether to self-drive or sit back and let someone else handle the bends.

![A Lanna-style illustration of the forested Bua Tong Sticky Waterfalls and its bubbling spring](/blog/bua-tong-sticky-waterfalls/visual-2.webp)

## What it costs, and what to bring

Here is the happiest part: entry is **free**. The park is generally open daily from around 8am to 5pm, and the facilities are better than you would expect for somewhere this unspoilt, with a car park, toilets, a **sala** and shaded picnic tables, and food vendors near the entrance selling drinks, snacks and simple Thai dishes. You barely need to pack a thing. Wear clothes you do not mind soaking and quick-drying shorts; the rock grips bare feet beautifully, so river shoes are optional rather than essential, though some people like a thin pair for peace of mind. Bring a towel, a dry bag for your phone, sun cream and water, and you are set.

## Best time to go

Bua Tong is a genuine year-round pleasure, but a few things are worth knowing. The **dry season**, roughly November to April, gives you the most predictable footing and the easiest climb, which dovetails neatly with the cooler months we cover in [when to visit](/blog/when-to-visit-chiang-mai). The falls flow harder in and after the rains, which is dramatic but means a touch more care on the steeper tiers. And go on a weekday if you possibly can: weekends draw cheerful crowds of local families, which is lovely for the atmosphere but busy on the rock.

## Make a day of it

Because you are already this far north, it would be a shame to turn straight back. The same corner of the province holds the calm, island-dotted reservoir behind the **Mae Ngat dam**, and our guide to [Mae Ngat and the Sri Lanna lake](/blog/mae-ngat-dam-sri-lanna) pairs perfectly with a sticky-footed morning here. If you set off early and fancy a scenic loop, you can also fold in the cool-climate viewpoints and [strawberry farms of Mon Cham](/blog/mon-cham-strawberry-farms) on the way back down. Climb a waterfall, eat lunch by the water, and roll home grinning. That is a very good day out of Chiang Mai.
