The last segment of the loop takes us from Mae Hong Son through Mae Sariang and then back to Chiang Mai, but that makes for yet another long drive so we will break the last leg of the trip into two with an overnight in Mae Sariang.
The trip out of Mae Hong Son is mostly due south, but we have a bit of time so the plan is to take a couple of side trips off the main road to see some viewpoints, waterfalls, etc.
One of the stops is marked on the map as a viewpoint and a microwave station, but the maps says ‘steep road’ so I am immediately drawn in. The road starts off fairly good, nice hardtop and not too steep, so I am feeling bold, but it quickly evolves to something narrower and quite a bit more steep! Thankfully our trusty tin-can is powered by 2 gophers (vs just the one in Mrs. Columbus’ car back home) and the slope is no problem. A little more of a problem is the sharp, blind corners and the occasional oncoming truck or motorbike, and we often have to squeeze off the basically single lane road to both sides to pass one another. The Thai department of transportation has carefully marked all that on about 10% of the corners! 😉
The reward is at the end of the road though, and at the very top as advertised is a microwave station – that is not the reward however, because just past the station are panoramic views of the whole area and all the crops that the hill tribe people have planted on the hillsides. From the top you can see for miles across the ridges and valleys!


On the way back down we stop at a small village that we passed through on the way up. The people farming the steep hillsides live in this or one of the surrounding villages, but this one seems to be a focal point as there is a school here along with the typical houses of the hill tribe people. This village is the real deal though and not one of the touristy places we have seen before – there are no people putting on a show, or wearing costumes for people to take a picture, just very hard working people going about their normal routine and looking at the foreigners oddly as I am sure not many come past here on a regular basis.

The children running around are a bit leery of the foreigners, and my questionable Thai does not seem to help much as the hill tribe people typically speak a different language than official Thai, but the kids start to warm up to us a bit after we show them some photos, and a bribe of a bag of popcorn we bought in a market seems to go a long way to bridging the language barrier.


The village and viewpoint were great finds well off the beaten path, but time moves forward and we make our way down the winding road and back to the main highway. Mae Sariang is a few more hours of twisty road away, and I want to make it there in time to unwind and before dark.
Mae Sariang used to be a gateway stop for people going clockwise on the loop and had quite a busy tourist trade, but Pai has now become the popular spot, and most people just go there direct from Chiang Mai (counter-clockwise on the loop) and don’t even bother with the rest of the journey, just returning directly to Chiang Mai. The result is that the town is a little sleepy from a tourism perspective, but that is not always a bad thing 😉

We have a nice dinner along the river that goes through the town and watch the sunset before heading off to our hotel. The hotel is different from most places we have stayed and it is sort of built into the woods giving it a bit of a tree house effect. The owners must have had some plan for future development as there are doors that are well labeled as going to nowhere, and open to a direct drop off two stories down! The quirkiness makes it unique, and the room is nice and comfortable so we have a nice sleep before heading off for the last leg tomorrow.

As we are having our breakfast in the morning our friends Bruce and Jackie from Australia that we have been traveling with for the last several days have decided that they want to stay a little longer in this area, so as we are packing up the car they are getting ready to find another room for the night and a guide that will take them up into the hills for a homestay with a hill tribe family. It sounds like an interesting adventure, but we are not really well packed or prepared for that sort of thing this trip, so we jump in the car and begin our trip back to Chiang Mai.
Like the day before we have a bit of time in the schedule for a stop or two along the way, and opportunity knocks about half an hour outside of the city. On the side of the road we see a blue sign written in Thai, but with a picture of a flower and a waterfall – looks good to us, so off the highway we go!

The road is a little more questionable than the road we took yesterday, but all along the way we see signs still indicating that we are on the right way to the waterfall so we press on. Finally after passing through another village, and past lots of rice and vegetable fields, we come to the end of the passable road and we stop the car. Again there is another sign pointing to the waterfall, so we decide that we are far enough in that we should keep going on foot. I am prepared for a walk of a few kilometers through the rice fields, but we are pleasantly surprised when we round a bend in the path a few hundred meters in and see a sign announcing the park / waterfall.

The spot must have been a going concern at one point as there are park grounds with benches and a concession stand but they have clearly been abandoned for a long time now. We are at the top of the falls, and the trail goes down alongside the falls, and even though the rest of the area has been let go, the trail is still in pretty good shape – it was once a set of concrete and stone steps but now has a full layer of decaying vegetation on top but is still passable for about the top half.

We make it down to the 6th pool (out of apparently 12) before the path gets too overgrown and decide to make our way back up to the top and where we left the car. We make our way back through the hills and the villages to the main road and then it is back to Chiang Mai to find a room for the night and reconnect with the rest of our local friends there.
