# Lampang day trip: horse carts, teak temples and chicken bowls

> A Lampang day trip from Chiang Mai — horse-drawn carriages, a wooden Lanna temple and the chicken bowls that made it Thailand's pottery capital.

Some days you want to leave the city without really leaving the north. **Lampang** sits about 100 km south-east of Chiang Mai, close enough for a long day out, calm enough to feel like a different decade. It is the rare place in Thailand where a horse cart might still pass you on the street, and almost nobody seems to be in a hurry.

## The city of horse carts

Lampang's nickname is **mueang rot ma** — "the horse-carriage city" — and it earned it honestly. The first carriages arrived in **1916**, brought by teak merchants from neighbouring Burma at the same moment the railway reached town. Most northern cities eventually let them go; Lampang never quite did, and it remains the last place in Thailand where **horse carts (rot ma)** still clip-clop along as part of everyday life.

Today around a hundred of them work the streets, the drivers in cowboy hats, the harnesses jingling. A loop along the **Wang River** and past the old temples is touristy in the gentlest way — more local ritual than theme-park ride. Hear the hooves on the tarmac and you understand why people call Lampang unhurried; the whole town seems to keep that pace. It's a different rhythm entirely from the scooters and songthaews you get used to when [getting around Chiang Mai](/blog/getting-around-chiang-mai).

![Lampang day trip: horse carts, teak temples and chicken bowls](/blog/lampang-day-trip/visual.webp)

## Wat Phra That Lampang Luang

If you do only one thing here, make it this. **Wat Phra That Lampang Luang** stands about 15 km outside town, a **fortified hilltop compound** ringed by thick brick walls — a *wiang*, built for defence as much as worship. Climb the central staircase and you step into one of the most beautiful and best-preserved **wooden Lanna temples** in the north.

The open-sided **Viharn Luang**, with its triple-tiered roof, dates to the fifteenth century and shelters timber that has darkened to honey and char over the centuries. Behind it, a gilded **chedi** rises some 45 metres. There's history in the brickwork too: in the early 1700s the temple was held by Burmese occupiers before local fighters retook it. To stand here is to feel the weight of the **Lanna kingdom** in a way few sites manage — well worth reading up on the [Lanna kingdom history](/blog/lanna-kingdom-history) before you go, and a fine companion to the [old city temples of Chiang Mai](/blog/old-city-temples-chiang-mai).

## Old teak houses and the chicken bowl

Back in town, wander **Talat Gao** (the Old Market street, also called Kad Kong Ta) along the riverbank. A century ago Thai, Burmese, Chinese and British traders raised shophouses here in a happy muddle of styles, and many of the old teak homes still stand — lacy "gingerbread" fretwork, shuttered windows, slow afternoons. Come on a weekend evening and the lane fills with a relaxed walking-street market.

Then there's the clay. Lampang is **Thailand's pottery capital**, home to more than two thousand ceramic workshops, and its emblem is the humble **chicken bowl (gai chon)** — a white bowl hand-painted with a rooster, a peony and a banana leaf. Chinese artisans brought the craft north in the late 1950s, drawn by the local kaolin clay, and you'll spot the design in noodle shops across the country once you know it. Factory outlets and the small **Dhanabadee Ceramic Museum** make a satisfying stop; a stack of bowls is the kind of souvenir you'll actually use, and a natural extension of the **Lanna handicrafts** you'll have admired closer to home — see our guide to [Lanna handicrafts in Chiang Mai](/blog/lanna-handicrafts-chiang-mai).

## Getting there, and whether to stay the night

The loveliest way in is the **train**. Lampang is a scenic stop on the northern line, the morning express covering the run in around two hours through hills and rice fields — book a seat at the [Chiang Mai train station](/blog/train-station-chiang-mai) and let the scenery do the work. Buses and minivans leave roughly every couple of hours and take about ninety minutes; driving yourself is straightforward too.

You *can* do Lampang as a long day. But the town rewards lingering — an evening on a quiet teak balcony, a slow morning before the heat — so consider an overnight. Either way, you'll come home a little calmer than you left.

Safe travels, and say hello to the horses for us.

— The Ada House team
