# Mae Wang: bamboo rafting and a slower side of Chiang Mai

> Mae Wang, an hour from Chiang Mai: bamboo rafting, waterfalls, ethical elephants and rice terraces in a quiet green valley.

Some of the best days near Chiang Mai happen when you leave the famous circuit behind. An hour southwest of the city, the **Mae Wang** valley unfolds in shades of green — rice terraces, bamboo groves, forested ridges — and at its heart runs a shallow, easy river made for drifting. This is countryside Thailand at its gentlest, and it makes a lovely half- or full-day escape.

## Drifting down the Mae Wang river

The headline here is **bamboo rafting**, and it is nothing like the white-knuckle rafting you might be picturing — if it's a real rush you're after, that lives over in our [adventure activities guide](/blog/adventure-activities-chiang-mai) instead. You stand or sit on a long raft lashed together from whole bamboo poles — an ancient design used on these rivers for centuries — while a local boatman poles you downstream past leaning groves and overhanging jungle.

The **Mae Wang river** is shallow and slow, with only the odd small rapid to splash you and make everyone laugh. A trip usually lasts an hour or two, depending on the water level, which runs fullest in and just after the rainy season. Wear clothes you don't mind soaking, tuck your phone somewhere dry, and let the current do the work.

It's a curiously hypnotic way to travel. Dragonflies skim the surface, the bamboo creaks underfoot, and the loudest sound is water sliding over stones. You'll pass farmers in the fields and children waving from the banks, and somewhere along the way the city you left an hour ago stops crossing your mind at all.

![Mae Wang: bamboo rafting and a slower side of Chiang Mai](/blog/mae-wang-chiang-mai/visual.webp)

## Waterfalls and a greener valley

Mae Wang sits inside a national park of forested mountains, so it pairs beautifully with a **waterfall** stop. **Mae Sapok** falls is the local favourite — a short walk through the trees brings you to tumbling water and natural pools cool enough for a swim. If you love chasing cascades, our wider guide to the [waterfalls around Chiang Mai](/blog/waterfalls-chiang-mai) has more in this direction.

The valley itself is the other reason to come. This is working farmland — Karen and Northern Thai villages, terraced rice fields that glow electric green in the wet months, water buffalo, and porches where someone is always making tea. It feels a world away from the Old City, yet it's barely an hour off. Walkers will find quiet forest trails here too; see our notes on [hiking and trekking near Chiang Mai](/blog/hiking-trekking-chiang-mai) if you'd like to stretch the day.

## A word on elephants

Mae Wang is one of the areas where you'll see **elephant camps**, and not all of them are kind. Please choose carefully. Look for genuinely **ethical sanctuaries** — places with a clear no-riding policy, no bullhooks, no circus tricks, where the day is about observing, walking alongside and feeding the animals rather than performing with them. Several such projects operate in the valley, often combining their visits with the river and the falls.

We feel strongly enough about this to have written a full [guide to ethical elephants near Chiang Mai](/blog/ethical-elephants-chiang-mai) — read it before you book anything, anywhere. A good sanctuary will be proud to explain how it cares for its herd; if riding is on the menu, walk away.

## Staying over, and getting there

You can do Mae Wang as a day trip, but the valley rewards an overnight. Simple **homestays** dot the hills, where you wake to birdsong and mist over the rice and eat whatever the family is cooking. It's the slow countryside at its best.

Getting there is straightforward. By **car or scooter** it's roughly an hour southwest from the city, with the last stretch winding up into the hills — confident riders only, and check our [renting a scooter in Chiang Mai](/blog/renting-a-scooter-chiang-mai) guide first. If you'd rather not drive, an organised day tour will bundle the rafting, a waterfall and an ethical elephant visit with transport and lunch. Either way, for working out your wider options around the region, our overview of [getting around Chiang Mai](/blog/getting-around-chiang-mai) will help you plan.

Go for the bamboo raft, stay for the quiet — and bring a towel.

See you on the river,
The Ada House team
