HTML SitemapExplore

Phra Nakhon Khiri Historical Park (Khao Wang) — Attraction in Phetchaburi Province

Name
Phra Nakhon Khiri Historical Park (Khao Wang)
Description
Nearby attractions
Sanam Luang Phetchaburi
4W7Q+6Q2, Khlong Kra Saeng, Mueang Phetchaburi District, Phetchaburi 76000, Thailand
Nearby restaurants
āļ„āļīāļ‡āļ„āļ­āļ‡āļŠāđ€āļ•āđ‡āļ āļŠāļēāļ‚āļē 1 āļ§āļąāļ”āļ–āđ‰āļģāđāļāđ‰āļ§
43/āļŦāļĄāļđāđˆ 5 āļ•.āļšāđ‰āļēāļ™āļŦāļĄāđ‰āļ­ āļ–.āđ€āļžāļŠāļĢāđ€āļāļĐāļĄ āļ­.āđ€āļĄāļ·āļ­āļ‡ āđ€āļžāļŠāļĢāļšāļļāļĢāļĩ Phetchaburi, Thailand
āļĢāđ‰āļēāļ™āļ­āļēāļŦāļēāļĢāļžāļ§āļ‡āđ€āļžāļŠāļĢ
389 Rai Som, āđ€āļĄāļ·āļ­āļ‡ Phetchaburi 76000, Thailand
Relax Restaurant
2/61-63 M.1, T.Raisom, Mueang Phetchaburi District, Phetchaburi 76000, Thailand
Uncle Kob's Pizza
303/1 Soi Bandai It 2, Banmoh Mueang Phetchaburi District, Chang Wat Phetchaburi 76000, Thailand
KINGKONG STEAK
4W8P+VMM, Khlong Kra Saeng, Mueang Phetchaburi District, Phetchaburi 76000, Thailand
Nearby hotels
The Royal Diamond
555 āļĄ.1 Phetkasem Frontage Rd, Rai Som, Mueang Phetchaburi District, Phetchaburi 76000, Thailand
The Kiri Resitel
5 5/5 Phetkasem Sai Kao Rd, Rai Som, Mueang Phetchaburi District, Phetchaburi 76000, Thailand
DAAD FAH home and cafe āļ”āļēāļ”-āļŸāđ‰āļē āđ‚āļŪāļĄ āđāļ­āļ™āļ”āđŒ āļ„āļēāđ€āļŸāđˆ
58/1 Kiriratthaya1, Thongchai, Mueang Phetchaburi District, 76000, Thailand
Phetkasem Hotel
Ban Mo, Mueang Phetchaburi District, Phetchaburi 76000, Thailand
Chedi View Hostel & Rooftop Bar
303 Thanon Ban-Dai-It Tambon Khlong-Kra-Saeng Amphoe Mueang-Phetchaburi 76000, Thailand
Thanyachatra Boutique
4W3R+867, Soi Bandai It 4, Khlong Kra Saeng, Mueang Phetchaburi District, Phetchaburi 76000, Thailand
āļĨāļīāļ•āđ€āļ•āļīāđ‰āļĨāđ‚āļŪāļĄ āđ€āļžāļŠāļĢāļšāļļāļĢāļĩ - āđ‚āļĢāļ‡āđāļĢāļĄ āļĢāļĩāļŠāļ­āļĢāđŒāļ— āļ—āļĩāđˆāļžāļąāļāđƒāļ™āđ€āļĄāļ·āļ­āļ‡āđ€āļžāļŠāļĢāļšāļļāļĢāļĩāļĢāļēāļ„āļēāļ–āļđāļ
621, Ban Mo, Mueang Phetchaburi District, Phetchaburi 76000, Thailand
Related posts
Keywords
Phra Nakhon Khiri Historical Park (Khao Wang) tourism.Phra Nakhon Khiri Historical Park (Khao Wang) hotels.Phra Nakhon Khiri Historical Park (Khao Wang) bed and breakfast. flights to Phra Nakhon Khiri Historical Park (Khao Wang).Phra Nakhon Khiri Historical Park (Khao Wang) attractions.Phra Nakhon Khiri Historical Park (Khao Wang) restaurants.Phra Nakhon Khiri Historical Park (Khao Wang) travel.Phra Nakhon Khiri Historical Park (Khao Wang) travel guide.Phra Nakhon Khiri Historical Park (Khao Wang) travel blog.Phra Nakhon Khiri Historical Park (Khao Wang) pictures.Phra Nakhon Khiri Historical Park (Khao Wang) photos.Phra Nakhon Khiri Historical Park (Khao Wang) travel tips.Phra Nakhon Khiri Historical Park (Khao Wang) maps.Phra Nakhon Khiri Historical Park (Khao Wang) things to do.
Phra Nakhon Khiri Historical Park (Khao Wang) things to do, attractions, restaurants, events info and trip planning
Phra Nakhon Khiri Historical Park (Khao Wang)
ThailandPhetchaburi ProvincePhra Nakhon Khiri Historical Park (Khao Wang)

Basic Info

Phra Nakhon Khiri Historical Park (Khao Wang)

97 āļ–āļ™āļ™ āļ„āļĩāļĢāļĩāļĢāļąāļ–āļĒāļē Khlong Kra Saeng, Mueang Phetchaburi District, Phetchaburi 76000, Thailand
4.5(2.4K)
Open 24 hours
Save
spot

Ratings & Description

Info

Cultural
Outdoor
Scenic
Family friendly
attractions: Sanam Luang Phetchaburi, restaurants: āļ„āļīāļ‡āļ„āļ­āļ‡āļŠāđ€āļ•āđ‡āļ āļŠāļēāļ‚āļē 1 āļ§āļąāļ”āļ–āđ‰āļģāđāļāđ‰āļ§, āļĢāđ‰āļēāļ™āļ­āļēāļŦāļēāļĢāļžāļ§āļ‡āđ€āļžāļŠāļĢ, Relax Restaurant, Uncle Kob's Pizza, KINGKONG STEAK
logoLearn more insights from Wanderboat AI.
Phone
+66 32 425 600
Website
finearts.go.th

Plan your stay

hotel
Pet-friendly Hotels in Phetchaburi Province
Find a cozy hotel nearby and make it a full experience.
hotel
Affordable Hotels in Phetchaburi Province
Find a cozy hotel nearby and make it a full experience.
hotel
The Coolest Hotels You Haven't Heard Of (Yet)
Find a cozy hotel nearby and make it a full experience.
hotel
Trending Stays Worth the Hype in Phetchaburi Province
Find a cozy hotel nearby and make it a full experience.

Reviews

Nearby attractions of Phra Nakhon Khiri Historical Park (Khao Wang)

Sanam Luang Phetchaburi

Sanam Luang Phetchaburi

Sanam Luang Phetchaburi

4.6

(188)

Open 24 hours
Click for details

Nearby restaurants of Phra Nakhon Khiri Historical Park (Khao Wang)

āļ„āļīāļ‡āļ„āļ­āļ‡āļŠāđ€āļ•āđ‡āļ āļŠāļēāļ‚āļē 1 āļ§āļąāļ”āļ–āđ‰āļģāđāļāđ‰āļ§

āļĢāđ‰āļēāļ™āļ­āļēāļŦāļēāļĢāļžāļ§āļ‡āđ€āļžāļŠāļĢ

Relax Restaurant

Uncle Kob's Pizza

KINGKONG STEAK

āļ„āļīāļ‡āļ„āļ­āļ‡āļŠāđ€āļ•āđ‡āļ āļŠāļēāļ‚āļē 1 āļ§āļąāļ”āļ–āđ‰āļģāđāļāđ‰āļ§

āļ„āļīāļ‡āļ„āļ­āļ‡āļŠāđ€āļ•āđ‡āļ āļŠāļēāļ‚āļē 1 āļ§āļąāļ”āļ–āđ‰āļģāđāļāđ‰āļ§

4.2

(150)

Click for details
āļĢāđ‰āļēāļ™āļ­āļēāļŦāļēāļĢāļžāļ§āļ‡āđ€āļžāļŠāļĢ

āļĢāđ‰āļēāļ™āļ­āļēāļŦāļēāļĢāļžāļ§āļ‡āđ€āļžāļŠāļĢ

4.3

(908)

$$

Click for details
Relax Restaurant

Relax Restaurant

4.3

(164)

Click for details
Uncle Kob's Pizza

Uncle Kob's Pizza

4.7

(76)

Click for details
Get the Appoverlay
Get the AppOne tap to find yournext favorite spots!
Wanderboat LogoWanderboat

Your everyday Al companion for getaway ideas

CompanyAbout Us
InformationAI Trip PlannerSitemap
SocialXInstagramTiktokLinkedin
LegalTerms of ServicePrivacy Policy

Get the app

ÂĐ 2025 Wanderboat. All rights reserved.

Posts

Ade HoAde Ho
Phra Nakhon Khiri or Khao Wang was originally a palace of King Rama IV. It is located at Klong Krachang Sub-district, Mueang District, Phetchaburi Province. It is situated on top of three consecutive peaks, with the highest peak being 95 meters high. It was originally called “Khao Samon” (Khao Saman). On the eastern shoulder of the mountain is a temple named “Wat Samon”. In 1861, he named it Khao Maha Sawan, which was later changed to Khao Mahaisawan. King Rama IV ordered the construction of a palace on Khao Mahaisawan in 1859. Chao Phraya Si Suriyawong (Chuang Bunnag), who was later granted the title of Somdet Chao Phraya Borom Maha Si Suriyawong, was the supervisor of the construction, and Phra Phetphisai Srisawat (Thuan Bunnag) was the supervisor. When construction was complete, he named it “Phra Nakhon Khiri”. King Rama IV was very fond of the beautiful weather and scenery of Phetchaburi. He had resided at Phra Nakhon Khiri many times throughout his reign. During the reign of King Chulalongkorn, he ordered the renovation of Phra Nakhon Khiri to be used as a place to receive royal guests from Germany. After the reign of King Chulalongkorn, no monarch had resided at Phra Nakhon Khiri again. Until the reign of the present King, he had the idea to restore and renovate. The Fine Arts Department announced the registration of Phra Nakhon Khiri as an important national ancient site, carried out the renovation of various royal buildings, and announced the establishment of the Phra Nakhon Khiri National Museum on August 27, 1979 as a memorial museum. All royal utensils received back from the Bureau of the Royal Household and the Ministry of Interior were registered as antiques, conserved, and displayed inside the Phetphumiphairot Throne Hall and the Pramot Mahaisawan Throne Hall. .......... â€Ē Ticket 200 baht â€Ē Cable Car 50 baht up & 50 baht down(you can choose to walk up or down the hill without cable car) # There're many wild monkeys around the park. Please keep your food inside your bag. # No camera is allowed inside the Museum(Here I've uploaded some of the interior pictures from their official website. You can also buy their book at the information center.) * Overall worthy for a visit because the real beauty of the scenery is what the camera or pictures couldn't capture. You need to see it through your own eyes.
PANUPANT VIROONHAMASPANUPANT VIROONHAMAS
āđ€āļ‚āļēāļ§āļąāļ‡āļĄāļēāļāļĩāđˆāļĢāļ­āļšāļāđ‡āļĒāļąāļ‡āļŠāļ­āļšāļĄāļēāļāđ†āļ„āļĢāļąāļš āđ€āļ‚āļēāļ§āļąāļ‡āļŦāļĢāļ·āļ­āļžāļĢāļ°āļĢāļēāļŠāļ§āļąāļ‡āļžāļĢāļ°āļ™āļ„āļĢāļ„āļĩāļĢāļĩ āļˆāļąāļ‡āļŦāļ§āļąāļ”āđ€āļžāļŠāļĢāļšāļļāļĢāļĩ āļĄāļĩāđ‚āļ­āļāļēāļŠāđ„āļ›āđ€āļ—āļĩāđˆāļĒāļ§āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ™āļĩāđˆāļŦāļĨāļēāļĒāļ„āļĢāļąāđ‰āļ‡ āļ„āļĢāļąāđ‰āļ‡āļ™āļĩāđ‰āļ™āđˆāļēāļˆāļ°āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ„āļĢāļąāđ‰āļ‡āđāļĢāļāļ—āļĩāđˆāđ„āļ”āđ‰āđ€āļ”āļīāļ™āđ„āļ›āļˆāļ™āļ–āļķāļ‡āļ§āļąāļ”āļžāļĢāļ°āđāļāđ‰āļ§āļ™āđ‰āļ­āļĒ āđ„āļ”āđ‰āļĄāļĩāđ‚āļ­āļāļēāļŠāđ„āļ›āļāļĢāļēāļšāđ„āļŦāļ§āđ‰āļžāļĢāļ°āļ˜āļēāļ•āļļāļˆāļ­āļĄāđ€āļžāļŠāļĢ āđāļĨāļ°āļāļĢāļēāļšāđ„āļŦāļ§āđ‰āļžāļĢāļ°āļžāļļāļ—āļ˜āļĢāļđāļ›āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ§āļąāļ”āļžāļĢāļ°āđāļāđ‰āļ§āļ™āđ‰āļ­āļĒāļ‹āļķāđˆāļ‡āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ§āļąāļ”āļ›āļĢāļ°āļˆāļģāļžāļĢāļ°āļ™āļ„āļĢāļ„āļĩāļĢāļĩ āļ„āļĢāļąāļš āļ„āļĢāļąāđ‰āļ‡āļāđˆāļ­āļ™āđ†āļ—āļĩāđˆāļĄāļēāđ„āļĄāđˆāđ€āļ„āļĒāđ€āļ”āļīāļ™āđ„āļ› āđ€āļžāļĢāļēāļ°āļ”āļđāļˆāļēāļāļĢāļ°āļĒāļ°āļ—āļēāļ‡āļ„āđˆāļ­āļ™āļ‚āđ‰āļēāļ‡āđ„āļāļĨ āđāļ•āđˆāļ§āļąāļ™āļ™āļĩāđ‰āđ€āļˆāđ‰āļēāļŦāļ™āđ‰āļēāļ—āļĩāđˆāļšāļ­āļāļ§āđˆāļēāļĢāļ°āļĒāļ°āļ—āļēāļ‡āđāļ„āđˆ 3-400āđ€āļĄāļ•āļĢ āļˆāļķāļ‡āđ„āļ”āđ‰āđ€āļ”āļīāļ™āđ„āļ› āđāļ•āđˆāđ€āļĄāļ·āđˆāļ­āđ€āļ”āļīāļ™āļˆāļĢāļīāļ‡āđ†āļāđ‡āđ„āļ”āđ‰āđ€āļŦāļ‡āļ·āđˆāļ­āļžāļ­āļ„āļ§āļĢāđ€āļĨāļĒāļ—āļĩāđ€āļ”āļĩāļĒāļ§ āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ—āļēāļ‡āđ€āļ”āļīāļ™āļ‚āļķāđ‰āļ™āļĨāļ‡āđ€āļ™āļīāļ™ āđāļĨāļ°āļ‚āļķāđ‰āļ™āļšāļąāļ™āđ„āļ” āļŦāļĨāļēāļĒāļĢāļ­āļšāļ­āļĒāļđāđˆ āļ„āļĢāļąāļš āļŠāļļāļ”āļ—āđ‰āļēāļĒāļ™āđˆāļēāļˆāļ°āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļāļēāļĢāļ•āļąāļ”āļŠāļīāļ™āđƒāļˆāļ–āļđāļāļ—āļĩāđˆāđ„āļ›āđ€āļžāļĢāļēāļ°āļ–āđ‰āļēāļĢāļ­āđ€āļ§āļĨāļēāđ€āļ™āļīāļ™āļ™āļēāļ™āļāļ§āđˆāļēāļ™āļĩāđ‰āļ­āļēāļˆāļˆāļ°āđ€āļ”āļīāļ™āđ„āļ›āđ„āļĄāđˆāđ„āļŦāļ§āļ„āļĢāļąāļš âĪïļâĪïļâĪïļâĪïļâĪïļâĪïļâĪïļâĪïļâĪïļâĪïļâĪïļ âĪïļâĪïļâĪïļâĪïļâĪïļâĪïļ āļ‚āđ‰āļ­āļĄāļđāļĨāļˆāļēāļ āļ—āļ—āļ—. āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āđ‚āļšāļĢāļēāļ“āļŠāļ–āļēāļ™āđ€āļāđˆāļēāđāļāđˆāļ„āļđāđˆāđ€āļĄāļ·āļ­āļ‡āđ€āļžāļŠāļĢāļšāļļāļĢāļĩ āļžāļĢāļ°āļĢāļēāļŠāļ§āļąāļ‡āļĪāļ”āļđāļĢāđ‰āļ­āļ™ āļ—āļĩāđˆāļŠāļĢāđ‰āļēāļ‡āļ‚āļķāđ‰āļ™āđƒāļ™āļŠāļĄāļąāļĒāļžāļĢāļ°āļšāļēāļ—āļŠāļĄāđ€āļ”āđ‡āļˆāļžāļĢāļ°āļˆāļ­āļĄāđ€āļāļĨāđ‰āļēāđ€āļˆāđ‰āļēāļ­āļĒāļđāđˆāļŦāļąāļ§ āļĢāļąāļŠāļāļēāļĨāļ—āļĩāđˆ 4 āļ•āļąāđ‰āļ‡āļ­āļĒāļđāđˆāļšāļ™āļĒāļ­āļ”āđ€āļ‚āļēāđƒāļŦāļāđˆ 3 āļĒāļ­āļ” āđ‚āļšāļĢāļēāļ“āļŠāļ–āļēāļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆāļĄāļĩāļŠāļ·āđˆāļ­āđ€āļŠāļĩāļĒāļ‡āļĄāļēāļāļ—āļĩāđˆāļŠāļļāļ”āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļˆāļąāļ‡āļŦāļ§āļąāļ”āđ€āļžāļŠāļĢāļšāļļāļĢāļĩāđāļĨāļ°āļāļĨāļēāļĒāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļŠāļąāļāļĨāļąāļāļĐāļ“āđŒāļ›āļĢāļ°āļˆāļģāļˆāļąāļ‡āļŦāļ§āļąāļ”āļ™āļĩāđ‰āđ„āļ›āđ‚āļ”āļĒāļ›āļĢāļīāļĒāļēāļĒāļ‹āļķāđˆāļ‡āļ„āļ§āļēāļĄāļ‡āļ”āļ‡āļēāļĄāļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļžāļĢāļ°āļ™āļ„āļĢāļ„āļĩāļĢāļĩāļ™āļąāđ‰āļ™āđ„āļ”āđ‰āđ€āļœāļĒāđ‚āļ‰āļĄāļĄāļēāļ•āļąāđ‰āļ‡āđāļ•āđˆāļŠāļĄāļąāļĒāļĢāļąāļŠāļāļēāļĨāļ—āļĩāđˆ 4 āđƒāļ™āļ„āļĢāļąāđ‰āļ‡āļ—āļĩāđˆāļžāļĢāļ°āļ­āļ‡āļ„āđŒāđ€āļŠāļ”āđ‡āļˆāđāļ›āļĢ āļžāļĢāļ°āļĢāļēāļŠāļāļēāļ™āļ‚āļķāđ‰āļ™āļšāļ™āļĒāļ­āļ”āđ€āļ‚āļēāđāļŦāđˆāļ‡āļ™āļĩāđ‰ āļ—āļĢāļ‡āļžāļ­āļžāļĢāļ°āļĢāļēāļŠāļŦāļĪāļ—āļąāļĒāļĄāļēāļāļ‚āļķāđ‰āļ™ āđ‚āļ›āļĢāļ”āđ€āļāļĨāđ‰āļēāļŊ āđƒāļŦāđ‰āđ€āļˆāđ‰āļēāļžāļĢāļ°āļĒāļēāļĻāļĢāļĩāļŠāļļāļĢāļīāļĒāļ§āļ‡āļĻāđŒ (āļŠāđˆāļ§āļ‡ āļšāļļāļ™āļ™āļēāļ„) āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļŦāļąāļ§āđ€āļĢāļ·āļ­āđƒāļŦāļāđˆāđƒāļ™āļāļēāļĢāļŠāļĢāđ‰āļēāļ‡āļ§āļąāļ‡āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ›āļĢāļ°āļ—āļąāļšāļšāļ™āļĒāļ­āļ”āđ€āļ‚āļēāļˆāļ™āļŠāļģāđ€āļĢāđ‡āļˆāđ€āļĢāļĩāļĒāļšāļĢāđ‰āļ­āļĒāđ€āļĄāļ·āđˆāļ­āļ›āļĩ āļž.āļĻ.2403 āđāļĨāļ°āđ„āļ”āđ‰āļ—āļĢāļ‡āļžāļĢāļ°āļĢāļēāļŠāļ—āļēāļ™āļ™āļēāļĄāđ„āļ§āđ‰āļ§āđˆāļē "āļžāļĢāļ°āļ™āļ„āļĢāļ„āļĩāļĢāļĩ" āđāļ•āđˆāļŠāļēāļ§āļšāđ‰āļēāļ™āļŠāđˆāļ§āļ™āđƒāļŦāļāđˆāļāļĨāļąāļšāļ™āļīāļĒāļĄāđ€āļĢāļĩāļĒāļāļāļąāļ™āļ•āļīāļ”āļ›āļēāļāļ§āđˆāļē "āđ€āļ‚āļēāļ§āļąāļ‡" āļĄāļēāļˆāļ™āļ–āļķāļ‡āļ›āļąāļˆāļˆāļļāļšāļąāļ™ āļ āļēāļĒāđƒāļ™āđ€āļ‚āļēāļ§āļąāļ‡āļ™āļąāđ‰āļ™ āļ›āļĢāļ°āļāļ­āļšāļ”āđ‰āļ§āļĒāļžāļĢāļ°āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ™āļąāđˆāļ‡ āļ§āļąāļ” āđāļĨāļ°āļāļĨāļļāđˆāļĄāļ­āļēāļ„āļēāļĢāļ•āđˆāļēāļ‡ āđ† āļ āļēāļĒāđƒāļ•āđ‰āļŠāļ–āļēāļ›āļąāļ•āļĒāļāļĢāļĢāļĄāļ™āļĩāđ‚āļ­āļ„āļĨāļēāļŠāļŠāļīāļāļœāļŠāļĄāļœāļŠāļēāļ™āļāļąāļšāļāļĨāļīāđˆāļ™āļ­āļēāļĒāļŠāļ–āļēāļ›āļąāļ•āļĒāļāļĢāļĢāļĄāđāļšāļšāļˆāļĩāļ™āļ­āļąāļ™āļŠāļ§āļĒāļ‡āļēāļĄ āđ‚āļ”āļĒāđāļ•āđˆāļĨāļ°āđāļŦāđˆāļ‡āļ•āļąāđ‰āļ‡āļ­āļĒāļđāđˆāļĒāļ­āļ”āđ€āļ‚āļē 3 āļĒāļ­āļ”āļ”āđ‰āļ§āļĒāļāļąāļ™ āļāļĨāđˆāļēāļ§āļ„āļ·āļ­ āļĒāļ­āļ”āđ€āļ‚āļēāļ”āđ‰āļēāļ™āļ—āļīāļĻāļ•āļ°āļ§āļąāļ™āļ­āļ­āļ āđ€āļĢāļīāđˆāļĄāļˆāļēāļāļšāļĢāļīāđ€āļ§āļ“āđ€āļŠāļīāļ‡āđ€āļ‚āļēāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ•āļąāđ‰āļ‡āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļ§āļąāļ”āļĄāļŦāļēāļŠāļĄāļ“āļēāļĢāļēāļĄ āļ§āļąāļ”āđ€āļāđˆāļēāđāļāđˆāļ—āļĩāđˆāļĄāļĩāļĄāļēāļ•āļąāđ‰āļ‡āđāļ•āđˆāļŠāļĄāļąāļĒāļ­āļĒāļļāļ˜āļĒāļē āļ§āļąāļ”āļ™āļĩāđ‰āļ‡āļ”āļ‡āļēāļĄāļ”āđ‰āļ§āļĒāļ āļēāļžāļˆāļīāļ•āļĢāļāļĢāļĢāļĄāļāļēāļœāļ™āļąāļ‡āļˆāļēāļāļāļĩāļĄāļ·āļ­āļ‚āļĢāļąāļ§āļ­āļīāļ™āđ‚āļ‚āđˆāļ‡ āļ›āļĢāļ°āļ”āļąāļšāļ­āļĒāļđāđˆāļ āļēāļĒāđƒāļ™āļžāļĢāļ°āļ­āļļāđ‚āļšāļŠāļ– āļŠāđˆāļ§āļ™āļšāļ™āļĒāļ­āļ”āđ€āļ‚āļēāļ™āļąāđ‰āļ™āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ•āļąāđ‰āļ‡āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļ§āļąāļ”āļžāļĢāļ°āđāļāđ‰āļ§ (āļ™āđ‰āļ­āļĒ)āļ‹āļķāđˆāļ‡āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ§āļąāļ”āļ›āļĢāļ°āļˆāļģāļžāļĢāļ°āļ™āļ„āļĢāļ„āļĩāļĢāļĩ āļ›āļĢāļ°āļāļ­āļšāļ”āđ‰āļ§āļĒāļžāļĢāļ°āļ­āļļāđ‚āļšāļŠāļ–āļ‚āļ™āļēāļ”āđ€āļĨāđ‡āļāļ›āļĢāļ°āļ”āļąāļšāļ”āđ‰āļ§āļĒāļŦāļīāļ™āļ­āđˆāļ­āļ™ āļ”āđ‰āļēāļ™āļŦāļĨāļąāļ‡āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļžāļĢāļ°āļžāļļāļ—āļ˜āđ€āļŠāļĨāđ€āļˆāļ”āļĩāļĒāđŒ āļŠāđˆāļ§āļ™āļ”āđ‰āļēāļ™āļŦāļ™āđ‰āļēāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļŦāļ­āļĢāļ°āļ†āļąāļ‡āļĢāļđāļ›āļŠāļĩāđˆāđ€āļŦāļĨāļĩāđˆāļĒāļĄāļĒāđˆāļ­āļĄāļļāļĄāļ‚āļ™āļēāļ”āđ€āļĨāđ‡āļ āļĒāļ­āļ”āđ€āļ‚āļēāļāļĨāļēāļ‡ āļ›āļĢāļ°āļ”āļīāļĐāļāļēāļ™āļžāļĢāļ°āļ˜āļēāļ•āļļāļˆāļ­āļĄāđ€āļžāļŠāļĢāļ‹āļķāđˆāļ‡āļĄāļĩāļ„āļ§āļēāļĄāļŠāļđāļ‡ 40 āđ€āļĄāļ•āļĢāđāļĨāļ°āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆāļšāļĢāļĢāļˆāļļāļžāļĢāļ°āļšāļĢāļĄāļŠāļēāļĢāļĩāļĢāļīāļāļ˜āļēāļ•āļļāđ„āļ§āđ‰āļ āļēāļĒāđƒāļ™ āļˆāļēāļāļˆāļļāļ”āļ™āļĩāđ‰āļŠāļēāļĄāļēāļĢāļ–āļĄāļ­āļ‡āđ€āļŦāđ‡āļ™āļžāļĢāļ°āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ™āļąāđˆāļ‡āļ•āđˆāļēāļ‡ āđ† āļĢāļ§āļĄāļ—āļąāđ‰āļ‡āļ—āļīāļ§āļ—āļąāļĻāļ™āđŒāļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļ•āļąāļ§āđ€āļĄāļ·āļ­āļ‡āđ€āļžāļŠāļĢāļšāļļāļĢāļĩāđ„āļ”āđ‰āļ­āļĒāđˆāļēāļ‡āļ™āđˆāļēāļ›āļĢāļ°āļ—āļąāļšāđƒāļˆ āļĒāļ­āļ”āđ€āļ‚āļēāļ”āđ‰āļēāļ™āļ—āļīāļĻāļ•āļ°āļ§āļąāļ™āļ•āļ āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ•āļąāđ‰āļ‡āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļžāļĢāļ°āļĢāļēāļŠāļ§āļąāļ‡āļ­āļąāļ™āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ›āļĢāļ°āļ—āļąāļšāđ„āļ”āđ‰āđāļāđˆ āļžāļĢāļ°āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ™āļąāđˆāļ‡āđ€āļžāļŠāļĢāļ āļđāļĄāļīāđ„āļžāđ‚āļĢāļˆāļ™āđŒ āļžāļĢāļ°āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ™āļąāđˆāļ‡āļ›āļĢāļēāđ‚āļĄāļ—āļĒāđŒāļĄāđ„āļŦāļŠāļ§āļĢāļĢāļĒāđŒ āļžāļĢāļ°āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ™āļąāđˆāļ‡āđ€āļ§āļŠāļĒāļąāļ™āļ•āđŒāļ§āļīāđ€āļŠāļĩāļĒāļĢāļ›āļĢāļēāļŠāļēāļ— āļžāļĢāļ°āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ™āļąāđˆāļ‡āļĢāļēāļŠāļ˜āļĢāļĢāļĄāļŠāļ āļē āļŦāļ­āļŠāļąāļŠāļ§āļēāļĨāđ€āļ§āļĩāļĒāļ‡āļŠāļąāļĒ āļŦāļ­āļžāļīāļĄāļēāļ™āđ€āļžāļŠāļĢāļĄāđ€āļŦāļĻāļ§āļĢāđŒ āļžāļĢāļ°āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ™āļąāđˆāļ‡āļŠāļąāļ™āļ–āļēāļ„āļēāļĢāļŠāļ–āļēāļ™ āļŦāļ­āļˆāļ•āļļāđ€āļ§āļ—āļ›āļĢāļīāļ•āļžāļąāļˆāļ™āđŒ āļĻāļēāļĨāļēāļ—āļąāļĻāļ™āļēāļ™āļąāļāļ‚āļąāļ•āļĪāļāļĐāđŒ āļ™āļ­āļāļˆāļēāļāļ™āļĩāđ‰āđāļĨāđ‰āļ§āļĒāļąāļ‡āļĄāļĩāđ‚āļĢāļ‡āļĢāļ– āđ‚āļĢāļ‡āļĄāđ‰āļē āļĻāļēāļĨāļēāļĄāļŦāļēāļ”āđ€āļĨāđ‡āļ āļĻāļēāļĨāļēāļĨāļđāļāļ‚āļļāļ™ āļĻāļēāļĨāļēāļ”āđˆāļēāļ™ āļĻāļēāļĨāļēāđ€āļĒāđ‡āļ™āđƒāļˆ āļ—āļīāļĄāļ”āļēāļšāļ­āļ‡āļ„āļĢāļąāļāļĐāđŒ āđ‚āļĢāļ‡āļ„āļĢāļąāļ§ āļ•āļēāļĄāđāļšāļšāļžāļĢāļ°āļĢāļēāļŠāļ§āļąāļ‡āļ—āļąāđˆāļ§āđ„āļ› āļĢāļ­āļšāļžāļĢāļ°āļĢāļēāļŠāļ§āļąāļ‡āļĄāļĩāļ›āđ‰āļ­āļĄāļĨāđ‰āļ­āļĄāļ­āļĒāļđāđˆāļ—āļąāđ‰āļ‡ 4 āļ—āļīāļĻāļ„āļ·āļ­ āļ›āđ‰āļ­āļĄāļ˜āļ•āļĢāļāļ›āđ‰āļ­āļ‡āļ›āļāļ—āļēāļ‡āļ—āļīāļĻāļ•āļ°āļ§āļąāļ™āļ­āļ­āļ āļ›āđ‰āļ­āļĄāļ§āļīāļĢāļļāļŽāļŦāļāļšāļĢāļīāļĢāļąāļāļĐāđŒāļ—āļēāļ‡āļ—āļīāļĻāđƒāļ•āđ‰ āļ›āđ‰āļ­āļĄāļ§āļīāļĢāļđāļ›āļąāļāļĐāđŒāļ›āđ‰āļ­āļ‡āļāļąāļ™āļ—āļēāļ‡āļ—āļīāļĻāļ•āļ°āļ§āļąāļ™āļ•āļ āđāļĨāļ°āļ›āđ‰āļ­āļĄāđ€āļ§āļŠāļŠāļļāļ§āļĢāļĢāļ“āļĢāļąāļāļĐāļēāļ—āļēāļ‡āļ—āļīāļĻāđ€āļŦāļ™āļ·āļ­ āļāļĢāļĄāļĻāļīāļĨāļ›āļēāļāļĢāđ„āļ”āđ‰āđƒāļŠāđ‰āļšāļēāļ‡āļŠāđˆāļ§āļ™āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļžāļĢāļ°āļĢāļēāļŠāļ§āļąāļ‡āļšāļ™āļĒāļ­āļ”āđ€āļ‚āļēāļ”āđ‰āļēāļ™āļ—āļīāļĻāļ•āļ°āļ§āļąāļ™āļ•āļāļˆāļąāļ”āļ•āļąāđ‰āļ‡āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļžāļīāļžāļīāļ˜āļ āļąāļ“āļ‘āļŠāļ–āļēāļ™āđāļŦāđˆāļ‡āļŠāļēāļ•āļīāļžāļĢāļ°āļ™āļ„āļĢāļ„āļĩāļĢāļĩ āļ āļēāļĒāđƒāļ™āđ€āļāđ‡āļšāļĢāļąāļāļĐāļēāđ‚āļšāļĢāļēāļ“āļ§āļąāļ•āļ–āļļāļ•āđˆāļēāļ‡ āđ† āđ„āļ”āđ‰āđāļāđˆ āđ€āļ„āļĢāļ·āđˆāļ­āļ‡āļĢāļēāļŠāļđāļ›āđ‚āļ āļ„āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļžāļĢāļ°āļšāļēāļ—āļŠāļĄāđ€āļ”āđ‡āļˆāļžāļĢāļ°āļˆāļ­āļĄāđ€āļāļĨāđ‰āļēāđ€āļˆāđ‰āļēāļ­āļĒāļđāđˆāļŦāļąāļ§ āđāļĨāļ°āļžāļĢāļ°āļšāļēāļ—āļŠāļĄāđ€āļ”āđ‡āļˆāļžāļĢāļ°āļˆāļļāļĨāļˆāļ­āļĄāđ€āļāļĨāđ‰āļēāđ€āļˆāđ‰āļēāļ­āļĒāļđāđˆāļŦāļąāļ§ āļĢāļđāļ›āļŦāļĨāđˆāļ­āđ‚āļĨāļŦāļ°āļŠāļģāļĢāļīāļ” āļ—āļ­āļ‡āđ€āļŦāļĨāļ·āļ­āļ‡āļ—āļĩāđˆāđƒāļŠāđ‰āļŠāļģāļŦāļĢāļąāļšāļ•āļāđāļ•āđˆāļ‡āļŦāđ‰āļ­āļ‡āļ•āđˆāļēāļ‡ āđ† āđƒāļ™āļžāļĢāļ°āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ™āļąāđˆāļ‡ āđ€āļ„āļĢāļ·āđˆāļ­āļ‡āļāļĢāļ°āđ€āļšāļ·āđ‰āļ­āļ‡āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļˆāļĩāļ™ āļāļĩāđˆāļ›āļļāđˆāļ™ āđāļĨāļ°āļĒāļļāđ‚āļĢāļ› āļ™āļąāļāļ—āđˆāļ­āļ‡āđ€āļ—āļĩāđˆāļĒāļ§āļŠāļēāļĄāļēāļĢāļ–āļ‚āļķāđ‰āļ™āļŠāļĄāļ­āļļāļ—āļĒāļēāļ™āļ›āļĢāļ°āļ§āļąāļ•āļīāļĻāļēāļŠāļ•āļĢāđŒāļžāļĢāļ°āļ™āļ„āļĢāļ„āļĩāļĢāļĩ (āđ€āļ‚āļēāļ§āļąāļ‡) āđ„āļ”āđ‰āđ‚āļ”āļĒāļāļēāļĢāđ€āļ”āļīāļ™āļ‚āļķāđ‰āļ™āļŦāļĢāļ·āļ­āđ‚āļ”āļĒāļŠāļēāļĢāļĢāļ–āļĢāļēāļ‡āđ„āļŸāļŸāđ‰āļēāļāđ‡āđ„āļ”āđ‰ (āļ•āļąāđ‹āļ§āđ„āļ›-āļāļĨāļąāļš) āļ•āļ­āļ™āļ™āļĩāđ‰āļ„āđˆāļēāļ•āļąāđ‹āļ§āļ›āļĢāļąāļšāļˆāļēāļ 30āļšāļēāļ—āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™ 75 āļšāļēāļ—āđāļĨāđ‰āļ§āļ„āļĢāļąāļš āđ€āļ„āļĢāļ”āļīāļ•: āļ‚āđ‰āļ­āļĄāļđāļĨāļˆāļēāļ āļ—āļ—āļ—.
Bill WeirBill Weir
This historical park offers lovely walks among royal palace buildings, shrines, temples, and viewpoints. The main royal residence is furnished with period antiques as a museum, but no photos allowed inside. Many sweet-smelling frangipani and other flowering trees line the brick-paved paths. Near the start of the climb there's a tollbooth that collects 150 baht from foreigners. Just before the main royal residence an information office gives out free maps of the hill. A couple places sell cold drinks. Only a small number of visitors had come when I visited on 7 June 2021, but everything was open. I climbed up on foot from the east and returned the same way. Beware of vicious dogs at the monastery near the base--Wat Maha Samanaram Ratchaworawihan (Wat Khao Wang)--best to walk on the road and not wander into the monastery (nobody was around to control the dogs). No dogs on the hill, though, but many macaque monkeys. The monkeys didn't bother me, but I was careful not to bring food.
See more posts
See more posts
hotel
Find your stay

Pet-friendly Hotels in Phetchaburi Province

Find a cozy hotel nearby and make it a full experience.

Phra Nakhon Khiri or Khao Wang was originally a palace of King Rama IV. It is located at Klong Krachang Sub-district, Mueang District, Phetchaburi Province. It is situated on top of three consecutive peaks, with the highest peak being 95 meters high. It was originally called “Khao Samon” (Khao Saman). On the eastern shoulder of the mountain is a temple named “Wat Samon”. In 1861, he named it Khao Maha Sawan, which was later changed to Khao Mahaisawan. King Rama IV ordered the construction of a palace on Khao Mahaisawan in 1859. Chao Phraya Si Suriyawong (Chuang Bunnag), who was later granted the title of Somdet Chao Phraya Borom Maha Si Suriyawong, was the supervisor of the construction, and Phra Phetphisai Srisawat (Thuan Bunnag) was the supervisor. When construction was complete, he named it “Phra Nakhon Khiri”. King Rama IV was very fond of the beautiful weather and scenery of Phetchaburi. He had resided at Phra Nakhon Khiri many times throughout his reign. During the reign of King Chulalongkorn, he ordered the renovation of Phra Nakhon Khiri to be used as a place to receive royal guests from Germany. After the reign of King Chulalongkorn, no monarch had resided at Phra Nakhon Khiri again. Until the reign of the present King, he had the idea to restore and renovate. The Fine Arts Department announced the registration of Phra Nakhon Khiri as an important national ancient site, carried out the renovation of various royal buildings, and announced the establishment of the Phra Nakhon Khiri National Museum on August 27, 1979 as a memorial museum. All royal utensils received back from the Bureau of the Royal Household and the Ministry of Interior were registered as antiques, conserved, and displayed inside the Phetphumiphairot Throne Hall and the Pramot Mahaisawan Throne Hall. .......... â€Ē Ticket 200 baht â€Ē Cable Car 50 baht up & 50 baht down(you can choose to walk up or down the hill without cable car) # There're many wild monkeys around the park. Please keep your food inside your bag. # No camera is allowed inside the Museum(Here I've uploaded some of the interior pictures from their official website. You can also buy their book at the information center.) * Overall worthy for a visit because the real beauty of the scenery is what the camera or pictures couldn't capture. You need to see it through your own eyes.
Ade Ho

Ade Ho

hotel
Find your stay

Affordable Hotels in Phetchaburi Province

Find a cozy hotel nearby and make it a full experience.

Get the Appoverlay
Get the AppOne tap to find yournext favorite spots!
āđ€āļ‚āļēāļ§āļąāļ‡āļĄāļēāļāļĩāđˆāļĢāļ­āļšāļāđ‡āļĒāļąāļ‡āļŠāļ­āļšāļĄāļēāļāđ†āļ„āļĢāļąāļš āđ€āļ‚āļēāļ§āļąāļ‡āļŦāļĢāļ·āļ­āļžāļĢāļ°āļĢāļēāļŠāļ§āļąāļ‡āļžāļĢāļ°āļ™āļ„āļĢāļ„āļĩāļĢāļĩ āļˆāļąāļ‡āļŦāļ§āļąāļ”āđ€āļžāļŠāļĢāļšāļļāļĢāļĩ āļĄāļĩāđ‚āļ­āļāļēāļŠāđ„āļ›āđ€āļ—āļĩāđˆāļĒāļ§āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ™āļĩāđˆāļŦāļĨāļēāļĒāļ„āļĢāļąāđ‰āļ‡ āļ„āļĢāļąāđ‰āļ‡āļ™āļĩāđ‰āļ™āđˆāļēāļˆāļ°āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ„āļĢāļąāđ‰āļ‡āđāļĢāļāļ—āļĩāđˆāđ„āļ”āđ‰āđ€āļ”āļīāļ™āđ„āļ›āļˆāļ™āļ–āļķāļ‡āļ§āļąāļ”āļžāļĢāļ°āđāļāđ‰āļ§āļ™āđ‰āļ­āļĒ āđ„āļ”āđ‰āļĄāļĩāđ‚āļ­āļāļēāļŠāđ„āļ›āļāļĢāļēāļšāđ„āļŦāļ§āđ‰āļžāļĢāļ°āļ˜āļēāļ•āļļāļˆāļ­āļĄāđ€āļžāļŠāļĢ āđāļĨāļ°āļāļĢāļēāļšāđ„āļŦāļ§āđ‰āļžāļĢāļ°āļžāļļāļ—āļ˜āļĢāļđāļ›āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ§āļąāļ”āļžāļĢāļ°āđāļāđ‰āļ§āļ™āđ‰āļ­āļĒāļ‹āļķāđˆāļ‡āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ§āļąāļ”āļ›āļĢāļ°āļˆāļģāļžāļĢāļ°āļ™āļ„āļĢāļ„āļĩāļĢāļĩ āļ„āļĢāļąāļš āļ„āļĢāļąāđ‰āļ‡āļāđˆāļ­āļ™āđ†āļ—āļĩāđˆāļĄāļēāđ„āļĄāđˆāđ€āļ„āļĒāđ€āļ”āļīāļ™āđ„āļ› āđ€āļžāļĢāļēāļ°āļ”āļđāļˆāļēāļāļĢāļ°āļĒāļ°āļ—āļēāļ‡āļ„āđˆāļ­āļ™āļ‚āđ‰āļēāļ‡āđ„āļāļĨ āđāļ•āđˆāļ§āļąāļ™āļ™āļĩāđ‰āđ€āļˆāđ‰āļēāļŦāļ™āđ‰āļēāļ—āļĩāđˆāļšāļ­āļāļ§āđˆāļēāļĢāļ°āļĒāļ°āļ—āļēāļ‡āđāļ„āđˆ 3-400āđ€āļĄāļ•āļĢ āļˆāļķāļ‡āđ„āļ”āđ‰āđ€āļ”āļīāļ™āđ„āļ› āđāļ•āđˆāđ€āļĄāļ·āđˆāļ­āđ€āļ”āļīāļ™āļˆāļĢāļīāļ‡āđ†āļāđ‡āđ„āļ”āđ‰āđ€āļŦāļ‡āļ·āđˆāļ­āļžāļ­āļ„āļ§āļĢāđ€āļĨāļĒāļ—āļĩāđ€āļ”āļĩāļĒāļ§ āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ—āļēāļ‡āđ€āļ”āļīāļ™āļ‚āļķāđ‰āļ™āļĨāļ‡āđ€āļ™āļīāļ™ āđāļĨāļ°āļ‚āļķāđ‰āļ™āļšāļąāļ™āđ„āļ” āļŦāļĨāļēāļĒāļĢāļ­āļšāļ­āļĒāļđāđˆ āļ„āļĢāļąāļš āļŠāļļāļ”āļ—āđ‰āļēāļĒāļ™āđˆāļēāļˆāļ°āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļāļēāļĢāļ•āļąāļ”āļŠāļīāļ™āđƒāļˆāļ–āļđāļāļ—āļĩāđˆāđ„āļ›āđ€āļžāļĢāļēāļ°āļ–āđ‰āļēāļĢāļ­āđ€āļ§āļĨāļēāđ€āļ™āļīāļ™āļ™āļēāļ™āļāļ§āđˆāļēāļ™āļĩāđ‰āļ­āļēāļˆāļˆāļ°āđ€āļ”āļīāļ™āđ„āļ›āđ„āļĄāđˆāđ„āļŦāļ§āļ„āļĢāļąāļš âĪïļâĪïļâĪïļâĪïļâĪïļâĪïļâĪïļâĪïļâĪïļâĪïļâĪïļ âĪïļâĪïļâĪïļâĪïļâĪïļâĪïļ āļ‚āđ‰āļ­āļĄāļđāļĨāļˆāļēāļ āļ—āļ—āļ—. āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āđ‚āļšāļĢāļēāļ“āļŠāļ–āļēāļ™āđ€āļāđˆāļēāđāļāđˆāļ„āļđāđˆāđ€āļĄāļ·āļ­āļ‡āđ€āļžāļŠāļĢāļšāļļāļĢāļĩ āļžāļĢāļ°āļĢāļēāļŠāļ§āļąāļ‡āļĪāļ”āļđāļĢāđ‰āļ­āļ™ āļ—āļĩāđˆāļŠāļĢāđ‰āļēāļ‡āļ‚āļķāđ‰āļ™āđƒāļ™āļŠāļĄāļąāļĒāļžāļĢāļ°āļšāļēāļ—āļŠāļĄāđ€āļ”āđ‡āļˆāļžāļĢāļ°āļˆāļ­āļĄāđ€āļāļĨāđ‰āļēāđ€āļˆāđ‰āļēāļ­āļĒāļđāđˆāļŦāļąāļ§ āļĢāļąāļŠāļāļēāļĨāļ—āļĩāđˆ 4 āļ•āļąāđ‰āļ‡āļ­āļĒāļđāđˆāļšāļ™āļĒāļ­āļ”āđ€āļ‚āļēāđƒāļŦāļāđˆ 3 āļĒāļ­āļ” āđ‚āļšāļĢāļēāļ“āļŠāļ–āļēāļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆāļĄāļĩāļŠāļ·āđˆāļ­āđ€āļŠāļĩāļĒāļ‡āļĄāļēāļāļ—āļĩāđˆāļŠāļļāļ”āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļˆāļąāļ‡āļŦāļ§āļąāļ”āđ€āļžāļŠāļĢāļšāļļāļĢāļĩāđāļĨāļ°āļāļĨāļēāļĒāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļŠāļąāļāļĨāļąāļāļĐāļ“āđŒāļ›āļĢāļ°āļˆāļģāļˆāļąāļ‡āļŦāļ§āļąāļ”āļ™āļĩāđ‰āđ„āļ›āđ‚āļ”āļĒāļ›āļĢāļīāļĒāļēāļĒāļ‹āļķāđˆāļ‡āļ„āļ§āļēāļĄāļ‡āļ”āļ‡āļēāļĄāļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļžāļĢāļ°āļ™āļ„āļĢāļ„āļĩāļĢāļĩāļ™āļąāđ‰āļ™āđ„āļ”āđ‰āđ€āļœāļĒāđ‚āļ‰āļĄāļĄāļēāļ•āļąāđ‰āļ‡āđāļ•āđˆāļŠāļĄāļąāļĒāļĢāļąāļŠāļāļēāļĨāļ—āļĩāđˆ 4 āđƒāļ™āļ„āļĢāļąāđ‰āļ‡āļ—āļĩāđˆāļžāļĢāļ°āļ­āļ‡āļ„āđŒāđ€āļŠāļ”āđ‡āļˆāđāļ›āļĢ āļžāļĢāļ°āļĢāļēāļŠāļāļēāļ™āļ‚āļķāđ‰āļ™āļšāļ™āļĒāļ­āļ”āđ€āļ‚āļēāđāļŦāđˆāļ‡āļ™āļĩāđ‰ āļ—āļĢāļ‡āļžāļ­āļžāļĢāļ°āļĢāļēāļŠāļŦāļĪāļ—āļąāļĒāļĄāļēāļāļ‚āļķāđ‰āļ™ āđ‚āļ›āļĢāļ”āđ€āļāļĨāđ‰āļēāļŊ āđƒāļŦāđ‰āđ€āļˆāđ‰āļēāļžāļĢāļ°āļĒāļēāļĻāļĢāļĩāļŠāļļāļĢāļīāļĒāļ§āļ‡āļĻāđŒ (āļŠāđˆāļ§āļ‡ āļšāļļāļ™āļ™āļēāļ„) āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļŦāļąāļ§āđ€āļĢāļ·āļ­āđƒāļŦāļāđˆāđƒāļ™āļāļēāļĢāļŠāļĢāđ‰āļēāļ‡āļ§āļąāļ‡āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ›āļĢāļ°āļ—āļąāļšāļšāļ™āļĒāļ­āļ”āđ€āļ‚āļēāļˆāļ™āļŠāļģāđ€āļĢāđ‡āļˆāđ€āļĢāļĩāļĒāļšāļĢāđ‰āļ­āļĒāđ€āļĄāļ·āđˆāļ­āļ›āļĩ āļž.āļĻ.2403 āđāļĨāļ°āđ„āļ”āđ‰āļ—āļĢāļ‡āļžāļĢāļ°āļĢāļēāļŠāļ—āļēāļ™āļ™āļēāļĄāđ„āļ§āđ‰āļ§āđˆāļē "āļžāļĢāļ°āļ™āļ„āļĢāļ„āļĩāļĢāļĩ" āđāļ•āđˆāļŠāļēāļ§āļšāđ‰āļēāļ™āļŠāđˆāļ§āļ™āđƒāļŦāļāđˆāļāļĨāļąāļšāļ™āļīāļĒāļĄāđ€āļĢāļĩāļĒāļāļāļąāļ™āļ•āļīāļ”āļ›āļēāļāļ§āđˆāļē "āđ€āļ‚āļēāļ§āļąāļ‡" āļĄāļēāļˆāļ™āļ–āļķāļ‡āļ›āļąāļˆāļˆāļļāļšāļąāļ™ āļ āļēāļĒāđƒāļ™āđ€āļ‚āļēāļ§āļąāļ‡āļ™āļąāđ‰āļ™ āļ›āļĢāļ°āļāļ­āļšāļ”āđ‰āļ§āļĒāļžāļĢāļ°āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ™āļąāđˆāļ‡ āļ§āļąāļ” āđāļĨāļ°āļāļĨāļļāđˆāļĄāļ­āļēāļ„āļēāļĢāļ•āđˆāļēāļ‡ āđ† āļ āļēāļĒāđƒāļ•āđ‰āļŠāļ–āļēāļ›āļąāļ•āļĒāļāļĢāļĢāļĄāļ™āļĩāđ‚āļ­āļ„āļĨāļēāļŠāļŠāļīāļāļœāļŠāļĄāļœāļŠāļēāļ™āļāļąāļšāļāļĨāļīāđˆāļ™āļ­āļēāļĒāļŠāļ–āļēāļ›āļąāļ•āļĒāļāļĢāļĢāļĄāđāļšāļšāļˆāļĩāļ™āļ­āļąāļ™āļŠāļ§āļĒāļ‡āļēāļĄ āđ‚āļ”āļĒāđāļ•āđˆāļĨāļ°āđāļŦāđˆāļ‡āļ•āļąāđ‰āļ‡āļ­āļĒāļđāđˆāļĒāļ­āļ”āđ€āļ‚āļē 3 āļĒāļ­āļ”āļ”āđ‰āļ§āļĒāļāļąāļ™ āļāļĨāđˆāļēāļ§āļ„āļ·āļ­ āļĒāļ­āļ”āđ€āļ‚āļēāļ”āđ‰āļēāļ™āļ—āļīāļĻāļ•āļ°āļ§āļąāļ™āļ­āļ­āļ āđ€āļĢāļīāđˆāļĄāļˆāļēāļāļšāļĢāļīāđ€āļ§āļ“āđ€āļŠāļīāļ‡āđ€āļ‚āļēāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ•āļąāđ‰āļ‡āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļ§āļąāļ”āļĄāļŦāļēāļŠāļĄāļ“āļēāļĢāļēāļĄ āļ§āļąāļ”āđ€āļāđˆāļēāđāļāđˆāļ—āļĩāđˆāļĄāļĩāļĄāļēāļ•āļąāđ‰āļ‡āđāļ•āđˆāļŠāļĄāļąāļĒāļ­āļĒāļļāļ˜āļĒāļē āļ§āļąāļ”āļ™āļĩāđ‰āļ‡āļ”āļ‡āļēāļĄāļ”āđ‰āļ§āļĒāļ āļēāļžāļˆāļīāļ•āļĢāļāļĢāļĢāļĄāļāļēāļœāļ™āļąāļ‡āļˆāļēāļāļāļĩāļĄāļ·āļ­āļ‚āļĢāļąāļ§āļ­āļīāļ™āđ‚āļ‚āđˆāļ‡ āļ›āļĢāļ°āļ”āļąāļšāļ­āļĒāļđāđˆāļ āļēāļĒāđƒāļ™āļžāļĢāļ°āļ­āļļāđ‚āļšāļŠāļ– āļŠāđˆāļ§āļ™āļšāļ™āļĒāļ­āļ”āđ€āļ‚āļēāļ™āļąāđ‰āļ™āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ•āļąāđ‰āļ‡āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļ§āļąāļ”āļžāļĢāļ°āđāļāđ‰āļ§ (āļ™āđ‰āļ­āļĒ)āļ‹āļķāđˆāļ‡āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ§āļąāļ”āļ›āļĢāļ°āļˆāļģāļžāļĢāļ°āļ™āļ„āļĢāļ„āļĩāļĢāļĩ āļ›āļĢāļ°āļāļ­āļšāļ”āđ‰āļ§āļĒāļžāļĢāļ°āļ­āļļāđ‚āļšāļŠāļ–āļ‚āļ™āļēāļ”āđ€āļĨāđ‡āļāļ›āļĢāļ°āļ”āļąāļšāļ”āđ‰āļ§āļĒāļŦāļīāļ™āļ­āđˆāļ­āļ™ āļ”āđ‰āļēāļ™āļŦāļĨāļąāļ‡āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļžāļĢāļ°āļžāļļāļ—āļ˜āđ€āļŠāļĨāđ€āļˆāļ”āļĩāļĒāđŒ āļŠāđˆāļ§āļ™āļ”āđ‰āļēāļ™āļŦāļ™āđ‰āļēāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļŦāļ­āļĢāļ°āļ†āļąāļ‡āļĢāļđāļ›āļŠāļĩāđˆāđ€āļŦāļĨāļĩāđˆāļĒāļĄāļĒāđˆāļ­āļĄāļļāļĄāļ‚āļ™āļēāļ”āđ€āļĨāđ‡āļ āļĒāļ­āļ”āđ€āļ‚āļēāļāļĨāļēāļ‡ āļ›āļĢāļ°āļ”āļīāļĐāļāļēāļ™āļžāļĢāļ°āļ˜āļēāļ•āļļāļˆāļ­āļĄāđ€āļžāļŠāļĢāļ‹āļķāđˆāļ‡āļĄāļĩāļ„āļ§āļēāļĄāļŠāļđāļ‡ 40 āđ€āļĄāļ•āļĢāđāļĨāļ°āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆāļšāļĢāļĢāļˆāļļāļžāļĢāļ°āļšāļĢāļĄāļŠāļēāļĢāļĩāļĢāļīāļāļ˜āļēāļ•āļļāđ„āļ§āđ‰āļ āļēāļĒāđƒāļ™ āļˆāļēāļāļˆāļļāļ”āļ™āļĩāđ‰āļŠāļēāļĄāļēāļĢāļ–āļĄāļ­āļ‡āđ€āļŦāđ‡āļ™āļžāļĢāļ°āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ™āļąāđˆāļ‡āļ•āđˆāļēāļ‡ āđ† āļĢāļ§āļĄāļ—āļąāđ‰āļ‡āļ—āļīāļ§āļ—āļąāļĻāļ™āđŒāļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļ•āļąāļ§āđ€āļĄāļ·āļ­āļ‡āđ€āļžāļŠāļĢāļšāļļāļĢāļĩāđ„āļ”āđ‰āļ­āļĒāđˆāļēāļ‡āļ™āđˆāļēāļ›āļĢāļ°āļ—āļąāļšāđƒāļˆ āļĒāļ­āļ”āđ€āļ‚āļēāļ”āđ‰āļēāļ™āļ—āļīāļĻāļ•āļ°āļ§āļąāļ™āļ•āļ āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ•āļąāđ‰āļ‡āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļžāļĢāļ°āļĢāļēāļŠāļ§āļąāļ‡āļ­āļąāļ™āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ›āļĢāļ°āļ—āļąāļšāđ„āļ”āđ‰āđāļāđˆ āļžāļĢāļ°āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ™āļąāđˆāļ‡āđ€āļžāļŠāļĢāļ āļđāļĄāļīāđ„āļžāđ‚āļĢāļˆāļ™āđŒ āļžāļĢāļ°āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ™āļąāđˆāļ‡āļ›āļĢāļēāđ‚āļĄāļ—āļĒāđŒāļĄāđ„āļŦāļŠāļ§āļĢāļĢāļĒāđŒ āļžāļĢāļ°āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ™āļąāđˆāļ‡āđ€āļ§āļŠāļĒāļąāļ™āļ•āđŒāļ§āļīāđ€āļŠāļĩāļĒāļĢāļ›āļĢāļēāļŠāļēāļ— āļžāļĢāļ°āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ™āļąāđˆāļ‡āļĢāļēāļŠāļ˜āļĢāļĢāļĄāļŠāļ āļē āļŦāļ­āļŠāļąāļŠāļ§āļēāļĨāđ€āļ§āļĩāļĒāļ‡āļŠāļąāļĒ āļŦāļ­āļžāļīāļĄāļēāļ™āđ€āļžāļŠāļĢāļĄāđ€āļŦāļĻāļ§āļĢāđŒ āļžāļĢāļ°āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ™āļąāđˆāļ‡āļŠāļąāļ™āļ–āļēāļ„āļēāļĢāļŠāļ–āļēāļ™ āļŦāļ­āļˆāļ•āļļāđ€āļ§āļ—āļ›āļĢāļīāļ•āļžāļąāļˆāļ™āđŒ āļĻāļēāļĨāļēāļ—āļąāļĻāļ™āļēāļ™āļąāļāļ‚āļąāļ•āļĪāļāļĐāđŒ āļ™āļ­āļāļˆāļēāļāļ™āļĩāđ‰āđāļĨāđ‰āļ§āļĒāļąāļ‡āļĄāļĩāđ‚āļĢāļ‡āļĢāļ– āđ‚āļĢāļ‡āļĄāđ‰āļē āļĻāļēāļĨāļēāļĄāļŦāļēāļ”āđ€āļĨāđ‡āļ āļĻāļēāļĨāļēāļĨāļđāļāļ‚āļļāļ™ āļĻāļēāļĨāļēāļ”āđˆāļēāļ™ āļĻāļēāļĨāļēāđ€āļĒāđ‡āļ™āđƒāļˆ āļ—āļīāļĄāļ”āļēāļšāļ­āļ‡āļ„āļĢāļąāļāļĐāđŒ āđ‚āļĢāļ‡āļ„āļĢāļąāļ§ āļ•āļēāļĄāđāļšāļšāļžāļĢāļ°āļĢāļēāļŠāļ§āļąāļ‡āļ—āļąāđˆāļ§āđ„āļ› āļĢāļ­āļšāļžāļĢāļ°āļĢāļēāļŠāļ§āļąāļ‡āļĄāļĩāļ›āđ‰āļ­āļĄāļĨāđ‰āļ­āļĄāļ­āļĒāļđāđˆāļ—āļąāđ‰āļ‡ 4 āļ—āļīāļĻāļ„āļ·āļ­ āļ›āđ‰āļ­āļĄāļ˜āļ•āļĢāļāļ›āđ‰āļ­āļ‡āļ›āļāļ—āļēāļ‡āļ—āļīāļĻāļ•āļ°āļ§āļąāļ™āļ­āļ­āļ āļ›āđ‰āļ­āļĄāļ§āļīāļĢāļļāļŽāļŦāļāļšāļĢāļīāļĢāļąāļāļĐāđŒāļ—āļēāļ‡āļ—āļīāļĻāđƒāļ•āđ‰ āļ›āđ‰āļ­āļĄāļ§āļīāļĢāļđāļ›āļąāļāļĐāđŒāļ›āđ‰āļ­āļ‡āļāļąāļ™āļ—āļēāļ‡āļ—āļīāļĻāļ•āļ°āļ§āļąāļ™āļ•āļ āđāļĨāļ°āļ›āđ‰āļ­āļĄāđ€āļ§āļŠāļŠāļļāļ§āļĢāļĢāļ“āļĢāļąāļāļĐāļēāļ—āļēāļ‡āļ—āļīāļĻāđ€āļŦāļ™āļ·āļ­ āļāļĢāļĄāļĻāļīāļĨāļ›āļēāļāļĢāđ„āļ”āđ‰āđƒāļŠāđ‰āļšāļēāļ‡āļŠāđˆāļ§āļ™āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļžāļĢāļ°āļĢāļēāļŠāļ§āļąāļ‡āļšāļ™āļĒāļ­āļ”āđ€āļ‚āļēāļ”āđ‰āļēāļ™āļ—āļīāļĻāļ•āļ°āļ§āļąāļ™āļ•āļāļˆāļąāļ”āļ•āļąāđ‰āļ‡āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļžāļīāļžāļīāļ˜āļ āļąāļ“āļ‘āļŠāļ–āļēāļ™āđāļŦāđˆāļ‡āļŠāļēāļ•āļīāļžāļĢāļ°āļ™āļ„āļĢāļ„āļĩāļĢāļĩ āļ āļēāļĒāđƒāļ™āđ€āļāđ‡āļšāļĢāļąāļāļĐāļēāđ‚āļšāļĢāļēāļ“āļ§āļąāļ•āļ–āļļāļ•āđˆāļēāļ‡ āđ† āđ„āļ”āđ‰āđāļāđˆ āđ€āļ„āļĢāļ·āđˆāļ­āļ‡āļĢāļēāļŠāļđāļ›āđ‚āļ āļ„āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļžāļĢāļ°āļšāļēāļ—āļŠāļĄāđ€āļ”āđ‡āļˆāļžāļĢāļ°āļˆāļ­āļĄāđ€āļāļĨāđ‰āļēāđ€āļˆāđ‰āļēāļ­āļĒāļđāđˆāļŦāļąāļ§ āđāļĨāļ°āļžāļĢāļ°āļšāļēāļ—āļŠāļĄāđ€āļ”āđ‡āļˆāļžāļĢāļ°āļˆāļļāļĨāļˆāļ­āļĄāđ€āļāļĨāđ‰āļēāđ€āļˆāđ‰āļēāļ­āļĒāļđāđˆāļŦāļąāļ§ āļĢāļđāļ›āļŦāļĨāđˆāļ­āđ‚āļĨāļŦāļ°āļŠāļģāļĢāļīāļ” āļ—āļ­āļ‡āđ€āļŦāļĨāļ·āļ­āļ‡āļ—āļĩāđˆāđƒāļŠāđ‰āļŠāļģāļŦāļĢāļąāļšāļ•āļāđāļ•āđˆāļ‡āļŦāđ‰āļ­āļ‡āļ•āđˆāļēāļ‡ āđ† āđƒāļ™āļžāļĢāļ°āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ™āļąāđˆāļ‡ āđ€āļ„āļĢāļ·āđˆāļ­āļ‡āļāļĢāļ°āđ€āļšāļ·āđ‰āļ­āļ‡āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļˆāļĩāļ™ āļāļĩāđˆāļ›āļļāđˆāļ™ āđāļĨāļ°āļĒāļļāđ‚āļĢāļ› āļ™āļąāļāļ—āđˆāļ­āļ‡āđ€āļ—āļĩāđˆāļĒāļ§āļŠāļēāļĄāļēāļĢāļ–āļ‚āļķāđ‰āļ™āļŠāļĄāļ­āļļāļ—āļĒāļēāļ™āļ›āļĢāļ°āļ§āļąāļ•āļīāļĻāļēāļŠāļ•āļĢāđŒāļžāļĢāļ°āļ™āļ„āļĢāļ„āļĩāļĢāļĩ (āđ€āļ‚āļēāļ§āļąāļ‡) āđ„āļ”āđ‰āđ‚āļ”āļĒāļāļēāļĢāđ€āļ”āļīāļ™āļ‚āļķāđ‰āļ™āļŦāļĢāļ·āļ­āđ‚āļ”āļĒāļŠāļēāļĢāļĢāļ–āļĢāļēāļ‡āđ„āļŸāļŸāđ‰āļēāļāđ‡āđ„āļ”āđ‰ (āļ•āļąāđ‹āļ§āđ„āļ›-āļāļĨāļąāļš) āļ•āļ­āļ™āļ™āļĩāđ‰āļ„āđˆāļēāļ•āļąāđ‹āļ§āļ›āļĢāļąāļšāļˆāļēāļ 30āļšāļēāļ—āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™ 75 āļšāļēāļ—āđāļĨāđ‰āļ§āļ„āļĢāļąāļš āđ€āļ„āļĢāļ”āļīāļ•: āļ‚āđ‰āļ­āļĄāļđāļĨāļˆāļēāļ āļ—āļ—āļ—.
PANUPANT VIROONHAMAS

PANUPANT VIROONHAMAS

hotel
Find your stay

The Coolest Hotels You Haven't Heard Of (Yet)

Find a cozy hotel nearby and make it a full experience.

hotel
Find your stay

Trending Stays Worth the Hype in Phetchaburi Province

Find a cozy hotel nearby and make it a full experience.

This historical park offers lovely walks among royal palace buildings, shrines, temples, and viewpoints. The main royal residence is furnished with period antiques as a museum, but no photos allowed inside. Many sweet-smelling frangipani and other flowering trees line the brick-paved paths. Near the start of the climb there's a tollbooth that collects 150 baht from foreigners. Just before the main royal residence an information office gives out free maps of the hill. A couple places sell cold drinks. Only a small number of visitors had come when I visited on 7 June 2021, but everything was open. I climbed up on foot from the east and returned the same way. Beware of vicious dogs at the monastery near the base--Wat Maha Samanaram Ratchaworawihan (Wat Khao Wang)--best to walk on the road and not wander into the monastery (nobody was around to control the dogs). No dogs on the hill, though, but many macaque monkeys. The monkeys didn't bother me, but I was careful not to bring food.
Bill Weir

Bill Weir

See more posts
See more posts

Reviews of Phra Nakhon Khiri Historical Park (Khao Wang)

4.5
(2,351)
avatar
5.0
26w

Phra Nakhon Khiri or Khao Wang was originally a palace of King Rama IV. It is located at Klong Krachang Sub-district, Mueang District, Phetchaburi Province. It is situated on top of three consecutive peaks, with the highest peak being 95 meters high. It was originally called “Khao Samon” (Khao Saman). On the eastern shoulder of the mountain is a temple named “Wat Samon”. In 1861, he named it Khao Maha Sawan, which was later changed to Khao Mahaisawan. King Rama IV ordered the construction of a palace on Khao Mahaisawan in 1859. Chao Phraya Si Suriyawong (Chuang Bunnag), who was later granted the title of Somdet Chao Phraya Borom Maha Si Suriyawong, was the supervisor of the construction, and Phra Phetphisai Srisawat (Thuan Bunnag) was the supervisor. When construction was complete, he named it “Phra Nakhon Khiri”. King Rama IV was very fond of the beautiful weather and scenery of Phetchaburi. He had resided at Phra Nakhon Khiri many times throughout his reign. During the reign of King Chulalongkorn, he ordered the renovation of Phra Nakhon Khiri to be used as a place to receive royal guests from Germany. After the reign of King Chulalongkorn, no monarch had resided at Phra Nakhon Khiri again. Until the reign of the present King, he had the idea to restore and renovate. The Fine Arts Department announced the registration of Phra Nakhon Khiri as an important national ancient site, carried out the renovation of various royal buildings, and announced the establishment of the Phra Nakhon Khiri National Museum on August 27, 1979 as a memorial museum. All royal utensils received back from the Bureau of the Royal Household and the Ministry of Interior were registered as antiques, conserved, and displayed inside the Phetphumiphairot Throne Hall and the Pramot Mahaisawan Throne Hall. ..........

â€Ē Ticket 200 baht â€Ē Cable Car 50 baht up & 50 baht down(you can choose to walk up or down the hill without cable car) There're many wild monkeys around the park. Please keep your food inside your bag. No camera is allowed inside the Museum(Here I've uploaded some of the interior pictures from their official website. You can also buy their book at the information center.) Overall worthy for a visit because the real beauty of the scenery is what the camera or pictures couldn't capture. You need to see it through...

   Read more
avatar
4.0
36w

Phra Nakhon Khiri Historical Park, affectionately known as Khao Wang, is a captivating destination perched atop a 92-meter hill in Phetchaburi, Thailand. This historical complex, constructed in 1860 by King Rama IV, served as a royal summer residence and observatory. The park’s architecture is a harmonious blend of Thai, Chinese, and European styles, reflecting the cosmopolitan vision of the king.ïŋžïŋžïŋž

The park encompasses three main peaks:ïŋž â€Ē Western Peak: Home to the royal palace and associated structures, offering panoramic views of Phetchaburi. â€Ē Central Peak: Features the prominent Phra That Chom Phet chedi, believed to enshrine Buddha relics.ïŋž â€Ē Eastern Peak: Hosts Wat Phra Kaew, a royal temple reminiscent of Bangkok’s Temple of the Emerald Buddha.ïŋž

Tips for Visitors: â€Ē Access: You can ascend the hill via a funicular cable car from the west side or opt for a hike. Note that the paths can be steep and slippery, so wear appropriate footwear. ïŋž â€Ē Monkeys: The area is inhabited by numerous monkeys. Secure your belongings and avoid feeding them to prevent unwanted attention. ïŋž â€Ē Attire: Dress modestly, covering shoulders and knees, especially when entering temple areas. ïŋž â€Ē Photography: Be mindful of no-photography signs, particularly inside the museum sections. ïŋž â€Ē Exploration: Allocate sufficient time to explore the entire complex, as each peak offers unique structures and views.

Phra Nakhon Khiri Historical Park is not only a testament to Thailand’s rich history but also offers a serene environment with lush gardens and birdwatching opportunities. It’s an ideal spot for those interested in history, architecture, or simply seeking a peaceful retreat with...

   Read more
avatar
5.0
3y

āđ€āļ‚āļēāļ§āļąāļ‡āļĄāļēāļāļĩāđˆāļĢāļ­āļšāļāđ‡āļĒāļąāļ‡āļŠāļ­āļšāļĄāļēāļāđ†āļ„āļĢāļąāļš

āđ€āļ‚āļēāļ§āļąāļ‡āļŦāļĢāļ·āļ­āļžāļĢāļ°āļĢāļēāļŠāļ§āļąāļ‡āļžāļĢāļ°āļ™āļ„āļĢāļ„āļĩāļĢāļĩ āļˆāļąāļ‡āļŦāļ§āļąāļ”āđ€āļžāļŠāļĢāļšāļļāļĢāļĩ āļĄāļĩāđ‚āļ­āļāļēāļŠāđ„āļ›āđ€āļ—āļĩāđˆāļĒāļ§āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ™āļĩāđˆāļŦāļĨāļēāļĒāļ„āļĢāļąāđ‰āļ‡ āļ„āļĢāļąāđ‰āļ‡āļ™āļĩāđ‰āļ™āđˆāļēāļˆāļ°āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ„āļĢāļąāđ‰āļ‡āđāļĢāļāļ—āļĩāđˆāđ„āļ”āđ‰āđ€āļ”āļīāļ™āđ„āļ›āļˆāļ™āļ–āļķāļ‡āļ§āļąāļ”āļžāļĢāļ°āđāļāđ‰āļ§āļ™āđ‰āļ­āļĒ āđ„āļ”āđ‰āļĄāļĩāđ‚āļ­āļāļēāļŠāđ„āļ›āļāļĢāļēāļšāđ„āļŦāļ§āđ‰āļžāļĢāļ°āļ˜āļēāļ•āļļāļˆāļ­āļĄāđ€āļžāļŠāļĢ āđāļĨāļ°āļāļĢāļēāļšāđ„āļŦāļ§āđ‰āļžāļĢāļ°āļžāļļāļ—āļ˜āļĢāļđāļ›āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ§āļąāļ”āļžāļĢāļ°āđāļāđ‰āļ§āļ™āđ‰āļ­āļĒāļ‹āļķāđˆāļ‡āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ§āļąāļ”āļ›āļĢāļ°āļˆāļģāļžāļĢāļ°āļ™āļ„āļĢāļ„āļĩāļĢāļĩ āļ„āļĢāļąāļš

āļ„āļĢāļąāđ‰āļ‡āļāđˆāļ­āļ™āđ†āļ—āļĩāđˆāļĄāļēāđ„āļĄāđˆāđ€āļ„āļĒāđ€āļ”āļīāļ™āđ„āļ› āđ€āļžāļĢāļēāļ°āļ”āļđāļˆāļēāļāļĢāļ°āļĒāļ°āļ—āļēāļ‡āļ„āđˆāļ­āļ™āļ‚āđ‰āļēāļ‡āđ„āļāļĨ āđāļ•āđˆāļ§āļąāļ™āļ™āļĩāđ‰āđ€āļˆāđ‰āļēāļŦāļ™āđ‰āļēāļ—āļĩāđˆāļšāļ­āļāļ§āđˆāļēāļĢāļ°āļĒāļ°āļ—āļēāļ‡āđāļ„āđˆ 3-400āđ€āļĄāļ•āļĢ āļˆāļķāļ‡āđ„āļ”āđ‰āđ€āļ”āļīāļ™āđ„āļ› āđāļ•āđˆāđ€āļĄāļ·āđˆāļ­āđ€āļ”āļīāļ™āļˆāļĢāļīāļ‡āđ†āļāđ‡āđ„āļ”āđ‰āđ€āļŦāļ‡āļ·āđˆāļ­āļžāļ­āļ„āļ§āļĢāđ€āļĨāļĒāļ—āļĩāđ€āļ”āļĩāļĒāļ§ āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ—āļēāļ‡āđ€āļ”āļīāļ™āļ‚āļķāđ‰āļ™āļĨāļ‡āđ€āļ™āļīāļ™ āđāļĨāļ°āļ‚āļķāđ‰āļ™āļšāļąāļ™āđ„āļ” āļŦāļĨāļēāļĒāļĢāļ­āļšāļ­āļĒāļđāđˆ āļ„āļĢāļąāļš

āļŠāļļāļ”āļ—āđ‰āļēāļĒāļ™āđˆāļēāļˆāļ°āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļāļēāļĢāļ•āļąāļ”āļŠāļīāļ™āđƒāļˆāļ–āļđāļāļ—āļĩāđˆāđ„āļ›āđ€āļžāļĢāļēāļ°āļ–āđ‰āļēāļĢāļ­āđ€āļ§āļĨāļēāđ€āļ™āļīāļ™āļ™āļēāļ™āļāļ§āđˆāļēāļ™āļĩāđ‰āļ­āļēāļˆāļˆāļ°āđ€āļ”āļīāļ™āđ„āļ›āđ„āļĄāđˆāđ„āļŦāļ§āļ„āļĢāļąāļš

âĪïļâĪïļâĪïļâĪïļâĪïļâĪïļâĪïļâĪïļâĪïļâĪïļâĪïļ âĪïļâĪïļâĪïļâĪïļâĪïļâĪïļ

āļ‚āđ‰āļ­āļĄāļđāļĨāļˆāļēāļ āļ—āļ—āļ—.

āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āđ‚āļšāļĢāļēāļ“āļŠāļ–āļēāļ™āđ€āļāđˆāļēāđāļāđˆāļ„āļđāđˆāđ€āļĄāļ·āļ­āļ‡āđ€āļžāļŠāļĢāļšāļļāļĢāļĩ āļžāļĢāļ°āļĢāļēāļŠāļ§āļąāļ‡āļĪāļ”āļđāļĢāđ‰āļ­āļ™ āļ—āļĩāđˆāļŠāļĢāđ‰āļēāļ‡āļ‚āļķāđ‰āļ™āđƒāļ™āļŠāļĄāļąāļĒāļžāļĢāļ°āļšāļēāļ—āļŠāļĄāđ€āļ”āđ‡āļˆāļžāļĢāļ°āļˆāļ­āļĄāđ€āļāļĨāđ‰āļēāđ€āļˆāđ‰āļēāļ­āļĒāļđāđˆāļŦāļąāļ§ āļĢāļąāļŠāļāļēāļĨāļ—āļĩāđˆ 4 āļ•āļąāđ‰āļ‡āļ­āļĒāļđāđˆāļšāļ™āļĒāļ­āļ”āđ€āļ‚āļēāđƒāļŦāļāđˆ 3 āļĒāļ­āļ”

āđ‚āļšāļĢāļēāļ“āļŠāļ–āļēāļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆāļĄāļĩāļŠāļ·āđˆāļ­āđ€āļŠāļĩāļĒāļ‡āļĄāļēāļāļ—āļĩāđˆāļŠāļļāļ”āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļˆāļąāļ‡āļŦāļ§āļąāļ”āđ€āļžāļŠāļĢāļšāļļāļĢāļĩāđāļĨāļ°āļāļĨāļēāļĒāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļŠāļąāļāļĨāļąāļāļĐāļ“āđŒāļ›āļĢāļ°āļˆāļģāļˆāļąāļ‡āļŦāļ§āļąāļ”āļ™āļĩāđ‰āđ„āļ›āđ‚āļ”āļĒāļ›āļĢāļīāļĒāļēāļĒāļ‹āļķāđˆāļ‡āļ„āļ§āļēāļĄāļ‡āļ”āļ‡āļēāļĄāļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļžāļĢāļ°āļ™āļ„āļĢāļ„āļĩāļĢāļĩāļ™āļąāđ‰āļ™āđ„āļ”āđ‰āđ€āļœāļĒāđ‚āļ‰āļĄāļĄāļēāļ•āļąāđ‰āļ‡āđāļ•āđˆāļŠāļĄāļąāļĒāļĢāļąāļŠāļāļēāļĨāļ—āļĩāđˆ 4 āđƒāļ™āļ„āļĢāļąāđ‰āļ‡āļ—āļĩāđˆāļžāļĢāļ°āļ­āļ‡āļ„āđŒāđ€āļŠāļ”āđ‡āļˆāđāļ›āļĢ āļžāļĢāļ°āļĢāļēāļŠāļāļēāļ™āļ‚āļķāđ‰āļ™āļšāļ™āļĒāļ­āļ”āđ€āļ‚āļēāđāļŦāđˆāļ‡āļ™āļĩāđ‰ āļ—āļĢāļ‡āļžāļ­āļžāļĢāļ°āļĢāļēāļŠāļŦāļĪāļ—āļąāļĒāļĄāļēāļāļ‚āļķāđ‰āļ™ āđ‚āļ›āļĢāļ”āđ€āļāļĨāđ‰āļēāļŊ āđƒāļŦāđ‰āđ€āļˆāđ‰āļēāļžāļĢāļ°āļĒāļēāļĻāļĢāļĩāļŠāļļāļĢāļīāļĒāļ§āļ‡āļĻāđŒ (āļŠāđˆāļ§āļ‡ āļšāļļāļ™āļ™āļēāļ„) āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļŦāļąāļ§āđ€āļĢāļ·āļ­āđƒāļŦāļāđˆāđƒāļ™āļāļēāļĢāļŠāļĢāđ‰āļēāļ‡āļ§āļąāļ‡āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ›āļĢāļ°āļ—āļąāļšāļšāļ™āļĒāļ­āļ”āđ€āļ‚āļēāļˆāļ™āļŠāļģāđ€āļĢāđ‡āļˆāđ€āļĢāļĩāļĒāļšāļĢāđ‰āļ­āļĒāđ€āļĄāļ·āđˆāļ­āļ›āļĩ āļž.āļĻ.2403 āđāļĨāļ°āđ„āļ”āđ‰āļ—āļĢāļ‡āļžāļĢāļ°āļĢāļēāļŠāļ—āļēāļ™āļ™āļēāļĄāđ„āļ§āđ‰āļ§āđˆāļē "āļžāļĢāļ°āļ™āļ„āļĢāļ„āļĩāļĢāļĩ" āđāļ•āđˆāļŠāļēāļ§āļšāđ‰āļēāļ™āļŠāđˆāļ§āļ™āđƒāļŦāļāđˆāļāļĨāļąāļšāļ™āļīāļĒāļĄāđ€āļĢāļĩāļĒāļāļāļąāļ™āļ•āļīāļ”āļ›āļēāļāļ§āđˆāļē "āđ€āļ‚āļēāļ§āļąāļ‡" āļĄāļēāļˆāļ™āļ–āļķāļ‡āļ›āļąāļˆāļˆāļļāļšāļąāļ™

āļ āļēāļĒāđƒāļ™āđ€āļ‚āļēāļ§āļąāļ‡āļ™āļąāđ‰āļ™ āļ›āļĢāļ°āļāļ­āļšāļ”āđ‰āļ§āļĒāļžāļĢāļ°āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ™āļąāđˆāļ‡ āļ§āļąāļ” āđāļĨāļ°āļāļĨāļļāđˆāļĄāļ­āļēāļ„āļēāļĢāļ•āđˆāļēāļ‡ āđ† āļ āļēāļĒāđƒāļ•āđ‰āļŠāļ–āļēāļ›āļąāļ•āļĒāļāļĢāļĢāļĄāļ™āļĩāđ‚āļ­āļ„āļĨāļēāļŠāļŠāļīāļāļœāļŠāļĄāļœāļŠāļēāļ™āļāļąāļšāļāļĨāļīāđˆāļ™āļ­āļēāļĒāļŠāļ–āļēāļ›āļąāļ•āļĒāļāļĢāļĢāļĄāđāļšāļšāļˆāļĩāļ™āļ­āļąāļ™āļŠāļ§āļĒāļ‡āļēāļĄ āđ‚āļ”āļĒāđāļ•āđˆāļĨāļ°āđāļŦāđˆāļ‡āļ•āļąāđ‰āļ‡āļ­āļĒāļđāđˆāļĒāļ­āļ”āđ€āļ‚āļē 3 āļĒāļ­āļ”āļ”āđ‰āļ§āļĒāļāļąāļ™ āļāļĨāđˆāļēāļ§āļ„āļ·āļ­ āļĒāļ­āļ”āđ€āļ‚āļēāļ”āđ‰āļēāļ™āļ—āļīāļĻāļ•āļ°āļ§āļąāļ™āļ­āļ­āļ āđ€āļĢāļīāđˆāļĄāļˆāļēāļāļšāļĢāļīāđ€āļ§āļ“āđ€āļŠāļīāļ‡āđ€āļ‚āļēāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ•āļąāđ‰āļ‡āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļ§āļąāļ”āļĄāļŦāļēāļŠāļĄāļ“āļēāļĢāļēāļĄ āļ§āļąāļ”āđ€āļāđˆāļēāđāļāđˆāļ—āļĩāđˆāļĄāļĩāļĄāļēāļ•āļąāđ‰āļ‡āđāļ•āđˆāļŠāļĄāļąāļĒāļ­āļĒāļļāļ˜āļĒāļē āļ§āļąāļ”āļ™āļĩāđ‰āļ‡āļ”āļ‡āļēāļĄāļ”āđ‰āļ§āļĒāļ āļēāļžāļˆāļīāļ•āļĢāļāļĢāļĢāļĄāļāļēāļœāļ™āļąāļ‡āļˆāļēāļāļāļĩāļĄāļ·āļ­āļ‚āļĢāļąāļ§āļ­āļīāļ™āđ‚āļ‚āđˆāļ‡ āļ›āļĢāļ°āļ”āļąāļšāļ­āļĒāļđāđˆāļ āļēāļĒāđƒāļ™āļžāļĢāļ°āļ­āļļāđ‚āļšāļŠāļ– āļŠāđˆāļ§āļ™āļšāļ™āļĒāļ­āļ”āđ€āļ‚āļēāļ™āļąāđ‰āļ™āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ•āļąāđ‰āļ‡āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļ§āļąāļ”āļžāļĢāļ°āđāļāđ‰āļ§ (āļ™āđ‰āļ­āļĒ)āļ‹āļķāđˆāļ‡āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ§āļąāļ”āļ›āļĢāļ°āļˆāļģāļžāļĢāļ°āļ™āļ„āļĢāļ„āļĩāļĢāļĩ āļ›āļĢāļ°āļāļ­āļšāļ”āđ‰āļ§āļĒāļžāļĢāļ°āļ­āļļāđ‚āļšāļŠāļ–āļ‚āļ™āļēāļ”āđ€āļĨāđ‡āļāļ›āļĢāļ°āļ”āļąāļšāļ”āđ‰āļ§āļĒāļŦāļīāļ™āļ­āđˆāļ­āļ™ āļ”āđ‰āļēāļ™āļŦāļĨāļąāļ‡āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļžāļĢāļ°āļžāļļāļ—āļ˜āđ€āļŠāļĨāđ€āļˆāļ”āļĩāļĒāđŒ āļŠāđˆāļ§āļ™āļ”āđ‰āļēāļ™āļŦāļ™āđ‰āļēāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļŦāļ­āļĢāļ°āļ†āļąāļ‡āļĢāļđāļ›āļŠāļĩāđˆāđ€āļŦāļĨāļĩāđˆāļĒāļĄāļĒāđˆāļ­āļĄāļļāļĄāļ‚āļ™āļēāļ”āđ€āļĨāđ‡āļ

āļĒāļ­āļ”āđ€āļ‚āļēāļāļĨāļēāļ‡ āļ›āļĢāļ°āļ”āļīāļĐāļāļēāļ™āļžāļĢāļ°āļ˜āļēāļ•āļļāļˆāļ­āļĄāđ€āļžāļŠāļĢāļ‹āļķāđˆāļ‡āļĄāļĩāļ„āļ§āļēāļĄāļŠāļđāļ‡ 40 āđ€āļĄāļ•āļĢāđāļĨāļ°āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆāļšāļĢāļĢāļˆāļļāļžāļĢāļ°āļšāļĢāļĄāļŠāļēāļĢāļĩāļĢāļīāļāļ˜āļēāļ•āļļāđ„āļ§āđ‰āļ āļēāļĒāđƒāļ™ āļˆāļēāļāļˆāļļāļ”āļ™āļĩāđ‰āļŠāļēāļĄāļēāļĢāļ–āļĄāļ­āļ‡āđ€āļŦāđ‡āļ™āļžāļĢāļ°āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ™āļąāđˆāļ‡āļ•āđˆāļēāļ‡ āđ† āļĢāļ§āļĄāļ—āļąāđ‰āļ‡āļ—āļīāļ§āļ—āļąāļĻāļ™āđŒāļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļ•āļąāļ§āđ€āļĄāļ·āļ­āļ‡āđ€āļžāļŠāļĢāļšāļļāļĢāļĩāđ„āļ”āđ‰āļ­āļĒāđˆāļēāļ‡āļ™āđˆāļēāļ›āļĢāļ°āļ—āļąāļšāđƒāļˆ āļĒāļ­āļ”āđ€āļ‚āļēāļ”āđ‰āļēāļ™āļ—āļīāļĻāļ•āļ°āļ§āļąāļ™āļ•āļ āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ•āļąāđ‰āļ‡āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļžāļĢāļ°āļĢāļēāļŠāļ§āļąāļ‡āļ­āļąāļ™āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ›āļĢāļ°āļ—āļąāļšāđ„āļ”āđ‰āđāļāđˆ āļžāļĢāļ°āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ™āļąāđˆāļ‡āđ€āļžāļŠāļĢāļ āļđāļĄāļīāđ„āļžāđ‚āļĢāļˆāļ™āđŒ āļžāļĢāļ°āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ™āļąāđˆāļ‡āļ›āļĢāļēāđ‚āļĄāļ—āļĒāđŒāļĄāđ„āļŦāļŠāļ§āļĢāļĢāļĒāđŒ āļžāļĢāļ°āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ™āļąāđˆāļ‡āđ€āļ§āļŠāļĒāļąāļ™āļ•āđŒāļ§āļīāđ€āļŠāļĩāļĒāļĢāļ›āļĢāļēāļŠāļēāļ— āļžāļĢāļ°āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ™āļąāđˆāļ‡āļĢāļēāļŠāļ˜āļĢāļĢāļĄāļŠāļ āļē āļŦāļ­āļŠāļąāļŠāļ§āļēāļĨāđ€āļ§āļĩāļĒāļ‡āļŠāļąāļĒ āļŦāļ­āļžāļīāļĄāļēāļ™āđ€āļžāļŠāļĢāļĄāđ€āļŦāļĻāļ§āļĢāđŒ āļžāļĢāļ°āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ™āļąāđˆāļ‡āļŠāļąāļ™āļ–āļēāļ„āļēāļĢāļŠāļ–āļēāļ™ āļŦāļ­āļˆāļ•āļļāđ€āļ§āļ—āļ›āļĢāļīāļ•āļžāļąāļˆāļ™āđŒ āļĻāļēāļĨāļēāļ—āļąāļĻāļ™āļēāļ™āļąāļāļ‚āļąāļ•āļĪāļāļĐāđŒ āļ™āļ­āļāļˆāļēāļāļ™āļĩāđ‰āđāļĨāđ‰āļ§āļĒāļąāļ‡āļĄāļĩāđ‚āļĢāļ‡āļĢāļ– āđ‚āļĢāļ‡āļĄāđ‰āļē āļĻāļēāļĨāļēāļĄāļŦāļēāļ”āđ€āļĨāđ‡āļ āļĻāļēāļĨāļēāļĨāļđāļāļ‚āļļāļ™ āļĻāļēāļĨāļēāļ”āđˆāļēāļ™ āļĻāļēāļĨāļēāđ€āļĒāđ‡āļ™āđƒāļˆ āļ—āļīāļĄāļ”āļēāļšāļ­āļ‡āļ„āļĢāļąāļāļĐāđŒ āđ‚āļĢāļ‡āļ„āļĢāļąāļ§ āļ•āļēāļĄāđāļšāļšāļžāļĢāļ°āļĢāļēāļŠāļ§āļąāļ‡āļ—āļąāđˆāļ§āđ„āļ› āļĢāļ­āļšāļžāļĢāļ°āļĢāļēāļŠāļ§āļąāļ‡āļĄāļĩāļ›āđ‰āļ­āļĄāļĨāđ‰āļ­āļĄāļ­āļĒāļđāđˆāļ—āļąāđ‰āļ‡ 4 āļ—āļīāļĻāļ„āļ·āļ­ āļ›āđ‰āļ­āļĄāļ˜āļ•āļĢāļāļ›āđ‰āļ­āļ‡āļ›āļāļ—āļēāļ‡āļ—āļīāļĻāļ•āļ°āļ§āļąāļ™āļ­āļ­āļ āļ›āđ‰āļ­āļĄāļ§āļīāļĢāļļāļŽāļŦāļāļšāļĢāļīāļĢāļąāļāļĐāđŒāļ—āļēāļ‡āļ—āļīāļĻāđƒāļ•āđ‰ āļ›āđ‰āļ­āļĄāļ§āļīāļĢāļđāļ›āļąāļāļĐāđŒāļ›āđ‰āļ­āļ‡āļāļąāļ™āļ—āļēāļ‡āļ—āļīāļĻāļ•āļ°āļ§āļąāļ™āļ•āļ āđāļĨāļ°āļ›āđ‰āļ­āļĄāđ€āļ§āļŠāļŠāļļāļ§āļĢāļĢāļ“āļĢāļąāļāļĐāļēāļ—āļēāļ‡āļ—āļīāļĻāđ€āļŦāļ™āļ·āļ­ āļāļĢāļĄāļĻāļīāļĨāļ›āļēāļāļĢāđ„āļ”āđ‰āđƒāļŠāđ‰āļšāļēāļ‡āļŠāđˆāļ§āļ™āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļžāļĢāļ°āļĢāļēāļŠāļ§āļąāļ‡āļšāļ™āļĒāļ­āļ”āđ€āļ‚āļēāļ”āđ‰āļēāļ™āļ—āļīāļĻāļ•āļ°āļ§āļąāļ™āļ•āļāļˆāļąāļ”āļ•āļąāđ‰āļ‡āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļžāļīāļžāļīāļ˜āļ āļąāļ“āļ‘āļŠāļ–āļēāļ™āđāļŦāđˆāļ‡āļŠāļēāļ•āļīāļžāļĢāļ°āļ™āļ„āļĢāļ„āļĩāļĢāļĩ āļ āļēāļĒāđƒāļ™āđ€āļāđ‡āļšāļĢāļąāļāļĐāļēāđ‚āļšāļĢāļēāļ“āļ§āļąāļ•āļ–āļļāļ•āđˆāļēāļ‡ āđ† āđ„āļ”āđ‰āđāļāđˆ āđ€āļ„āļĢāļ·āđˆāļ­āļ‡āļĢāļēāļŠāļđāļ›āđ‚āļ āļ„āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļžāļĢāļ°āļšāļēāļ—āļŠāļĄāđ€āļ”āđ‡āļˆāļžāļĢāļ°āļˆāļ­āļĄāđ€āļāļĨāđ‰āļēāđ€āļˆāđ‰āļēāļ­āļĒāļđāđˆāļŦāļąāļ§ āđāļĨāļ°āļžāļĢāļ°āļšāļēāļ—āļŠāļĄāđ€āļ”āđ‡āļˆāļžāļĢāļ°āļˆāļļāļĨāļˆāļ­āļĄāđ€āļāļĨāđ‰āļēāđ€āļˆāđ‰āļēāļ­āļĒāļđāđˆāļŦāļąāļ§ āļĢāļđāļ›āļŦāļĨāđˆāļ­āđ‚āļĨāļŦāļ°āļŠāļģāļĢāļīāļ” āļ—āļ­āļ‡āđ€āļŦāļĨāļ·āļ­āļ‡āļ—āļĩāđˆāđƒāļŠāđ‰āļŠāļģāļŦāļĢāļąāļšāļ•āļāđāļ•āđˆāļ‡āļŦāđ‰āļ­āļ‡āļ•āđˆāļēāļ‡ āđ† āđƒāļ™āļžāļĢāļ°āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ™āļąāđˆāļ‡ āđ€āļ„āļĢāļ·āđˆāļ­āļ‡āļāļĢāļ°āđ€āļšāļ·āđ‰āļ­āļ‡āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļˆāļĩāļ™ āļāļĩāđˆāļ›āļļāđˆāļ™ āđāļĨāļ°āļĒāļļāđ‚āļĢāļ› āļ™āļąāļāļ—āđˆāļ­āļ‡āđ€āļ—āļĩāđˆāļĒāļ§āļŠāļēāļĄāļēāļĢāļ–āļ‚āļķāđ‰āļ™āļŠāļĄāļ­āļļāļ—āļĒāļēāļ™āļ›āļĢāļ°āļ§āļąāļ•āļīāļĻāļēāļŠāļ•āļĢāđŒāļžāļĢāļ°āļ™āļ„āļĢāļ„āļĩāļĢāļĩ (āđ€āļ‚āļēāļ§āļąāļ‡) āđ„āļ”āđ‰āđ‚āļ”āļĒāļāļēāļĢāđ€āļ”āļīāļ™āļ‚āļķāđ‰āļ™āļŦāļĢāļ·āļ­āđ‚āļ”āļĒāļŠāļēāļĢāļĢāļ–āļĢāļēāļ‡āđ„āļŸāļŸāđ‰āļēāļāđ‡āđ„āļ”āđ‰ (āļ•āļąāđ‹āļ§āđ„āļ›-āļāļĨāļąāļš) āļ•āļ­āļ™āļ™āļĩāđ‰āļ„āđˆāļēāļ•āļąāđ‹āļ§āļ›āļĢāļąāļšāļˆāļēāļ 30āļšāļēāļ—āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™ 75 āļšāļēāļ—āđāļĨāđ‰āļ§āļ„āļĢāļąāļš

āđ€āļ„āļĢāļ”āļīāļ•:...

   Read more
Page 1 of 7
Previous
Next