SkyscraperCity Forum banner
9M views 31K replies 585 participants last post by  UbonTrakarn 
#1 · (Edited)
Ubon Ratchathani (often in short Ubon, Thai: āļ­āļļāļšāļĨāļĢāļēāļŠāļ˜āļēāļ™āļĩ) is one of the north-eastern provinces (changwat) of Thailand, and the country's easternmost. Ubon is about 600 km away from Bangkok. Neighboring Provinces are (from west clockwise) Sisaket, Yasothon and Amnat Charoen. To the north and east it borders Salavan and Champasak of Laos, to the south Preah Vihear of Cambodia.

Geography



Mekong River in Amphoe Khong Chiam
At Khong Chiam the Mun river, the biggest river of the Khorat Plateau, joins the Mekong, which forms the north-eastern boundary of Thailand with Laos. It is called Maenam Song Si or the Mun River alluvium because the brown water from Mekong River is mixed with blue water from Mun River. It is located about 84 km. from Ubon Ratchathani City centre.
The area where the borders of the three countries Thailand, Laos and Cambodia meet is promoted as the Emerald Triangle, in contrast to the Golden Triangle in the north of Thailand. The Emerald refers to the large intact monsoon forests there.
Another natural place is namtok Saeng Chan. This waterfall is 1 km. from Thung Na Muang Waterfall.
Ubon Ratchathani also boasts the following national parks:
Phu Chong Na Yoi National Park covers an area of 687 kmÂē over mountainous areas in the province. The park is where Thailand borders Laos and Cambodia. Visitors are recommended to take hiking trails which lead on to the high plateau. The best view of this is the cliffs at Pha Pheung. The interesting attractions include: the 40 m Bak tew Yai Waterfall, which is located 4 km from the park office.
Kaeng Tana National Park is in Khong Chiam District. It can be reached on two routes. The first route is by taking Highway No.2222 where visitors can see a beautiful view of Kaeng Tana, an island in the Mun River. Another way, visitors can go this way by taking the route to the National Park Office along Highway No.217.
Pha Taem National Park[1] covers an area of 140 kmÂē. Plateaus and hills dominate the park landscape. The sheer cliffs here are a result of earthquakes. The interesting places in the national park are Pha Taem and Pha Kham. On the cliffs surface are numerous prehistoric cave paintings from 3,000-4,000 years ago. These paintings depict scenes of fishing, rice farming, figures of people, animals, hands and geometric designs that show the way of life during the pre-historic time and reflect the ancient lifestyle of the people who lived there


History

The area was part of the Khmer Empire. Before the late eighteenth century, this area evidently was outside Siamese or Thai Ayutthaya Kingdom. After the fall of Ayutthaya in 1767 several new tribes settled there, including the Kha and Suai. Siamese/ Thai began to expand its influence over the area since the rise of Thonburi and Bangkok Kingdoms. Twenty years later King Rama I offered a noble title to the local leader who could unite the many small settlements into one town. This was accomplished in 1786 with the founding of Ubon Ratchathani by Thao Khamphong, the Laotian prince who fled from Vientiane. Ubon Ratchathani was then named as Bangkok's tributary subject. Before it became a province. Ubon Ratchathani was the administrative center of the monthon Isan, of which monthon Ubon was split off. In 1925 it became part of monthon Nakhon Ratchasima, with the abolishment of the monthon in 1933 the province became a first level subdivision of the country.
Until 1972 the Ubon Ratchathani province was the largest province of Thailand areawise. In 1972 Yasothon was split off, in 1993 Amnat Charoen, after which it now holds the 5th rank.

Education



Ubon Ratchathani University Gate, located in Amphoe Warin Chamrap
Ubon Ratchathani province is the main site of Ubon Ratchathani University.

Symbols

The provincial seal shows a Lotus flower in a pond. This refers to the meaning of the name of the province, which translates to Royal city of the lotus flower. Therefore the provincial flower also is the Lotus (Nymphaea lotus). The provincial tree is the Yang-khao (Dipterocarpus alatus).

Administrative divisions


The province is subdivided into 25 districts (amphoe). The districts are further subdivided into 219 subdistricts (tambon) and 2469 villages (muban). The numbers missing in the table are the districts which formed the province Amnat Charoen in 1993.
1. Mueang Ubon Ratchathani
2. Si Mueang Mai
3. Khong Chiam
4. Khueang Nai
5. Khemarat
7. Det Udom
8. Na Chaluai
9. Nam Yuen
10. Buntharik
11. Trakan Phuet Phon
12. Kut Khaopun
14. Muang Sam Sip
15. Warin Chamrap
19. Phibun Mangsahan
20. Tan Sum
21. Pho Sai
22. Samrong
24. Don Mot Daeng
25. Sirindhorn
26. Thung Si Udom
29. Na Yia
30. Na Tan
31. Lao Suea Kok
32. Sawang Wirawong
33. Nam Khun
Ubon Ratchathani City is also a center of the Ubon Ratchathani Metropolitan Area.
Nr. City/Town Thai Urban Population Notes
1. Ubon Ratchathani āđ€āļ—āļĻāļšāļēāļĨāļ™āļ„āļĢāļ­āļļāļšāļĨāļĢāļēāļŠāļ˜āļēāļ™āļĩ 85,557 Inh. Capital of the province,Historic town,Touristical,International Airport
2. Warin Chamrap āđ€āļ—āļĻāļšāļēāļĨāđ€āļĄāļ·āļ­āļ‡āļ§āļēāļĢāļīāļ™āļŠāļģāļĢāļēāļš 30,521 Inh. Educational, Railway Terminal
3. Phibun Mangsahan āđ€āļ—āļĻāļšāļēāļĨāđ€āļĄāļ·āļ­āļ‡āļžāļīāļšāļđāļĨāļĄāļąāļ‡āļŠāļēāļŦāļēāļĢ 11,326 Inh.
4. Det Udom āđ€āļ—āļĻāļšāļēāļĨāđ€āļĄāļ·āļ­āļ‡āđ€āļ”āļŠāļ­āļļāļ”āļĄ 14,933 Inh.
5. Kham Yai āđ€āļ—āļĻāļšāļēāļĨāļ•āļģāļšāļĨāļ‚āļēāļĄāđƒāļŦāļāđˆ 54,679 Inh.
6. Saen Suk āđ€āļ—āļĻāļšāļēāļĨāļ•āļģāļšāļĨāđāļŠāļ™āļŠāļļāļ‚ 23,070 Inh.
7. Trakan āđ€āļ—āļĻāļšāļēāļĨāļ•āļģāļšāļĨāļ•āļĢāļ°āļāļēāļĢ 7,672 Inh.
8. Nam Yuen āđ€āļ—āļĻāļšāļēāļĨāļ•āļģāļšāļĨāļ™āđ‰āļģāļĒāļ·āļ™ 9,644 Inh.
9. Pathum āđ€āļ—āļĻāļšāļēāļĨāļ•āļģāļšāļĨāļ›āļ—āļļāļĄ 10,679 Inh.
10. Ubon āđ€āļ—āļĻāļšāļēāļĨāļ•āļģāļšāļĨāļ­āļļāļšāļĨ 6,070 Inh.
11. Huai Khayung āđ€āļ—āļĻāļšāļēāļĨāļ•āļģāļšāļĨāļŦāđ‰āļ§āļĒāļ‚āļ°āļĒāļđāļ‡ 3,64 6 Inh.



Tourism

Sights
Thung Si Mueang (āļ—āļļāđˆāļ‡āļĻāļĢāļĩāđ€āļĄāļ·āļ­āļ‡) - is a beautifully landscaped public park in the heart of the city in front of the city hall. It houses an imitation of a carved candle sculpture, health park, and playground.
City Pillar Shrine (āļĻāļēāļĨāļŦāļĨāļąāļāđ€āļĄāļ·āļ­āļ‡) - Located at the southern corner of the field, the sacred pillar was built in 1972.
Monument of Phra Pathum Worarat Suriyawong or Chao Kham Phong (āļ­āļ™āļļāļŠāļēāļ§āļĢāļĩāļĒāđŒāļžāļĢāļ°āļ›āļ—āļļāļĄāļ§āļĢāļĢāļēāļŠāļŠāļļāļĢāļīāļĒāļ§āļ‡āļĻāđŒ āļŦāļĢāļ·āļ­ āđ€āļˆāđ‰āļēāļ„āļģāļœāļ‡) - Phra Pathum Worarat Suriyawong is the founder of Ubon Ratchathani during 1778-1795.
Sculpture of Somdet Phra Maha Wirawong or Tisso Uan (āļ›āļāļīāļĄāļēāļāļĢāļĢāļĄāļŠāļĄāđ€āļ”āđ‡āļˆāļžāļĢāļ°āļĄāļŦāļēāļ§āļĩāļĢāļ§āļ‡āļĻāđŒ āļŦāļĢāļ·āļ­ āļ•āļīāļŠāđ‚āļŠ āļ­āđ‰āļ§āļ™) - a famous monk who was well versed in Sutra and Vipassana.
Monument of Goodness (āļ­āļ™āļļāļŠāļēāļ§āļĢāļĩāļĒāđŒāđāļŦāđˆāļ‡āļ„āļ§āļēāļĄāļ”āļĩ) - The monument was built by WWII PoWs to honour the generosity and goodness of the people of Ubon Ratchathani.
Sculpture of Harmony and Progress (āļ›āļāļīāļĄāļēāļāļĢāļĢāļĄāļĢāđˆāļ§āļĄāđƒāļˆāļāđ‰āļēāļ§āđ„āļ›āļ‚āđ‰āļēāļ‡āļŦāļ™āđ‰āļē) - The sculpture represents the harmony of 4 countries: Thailand, Lao PDR., Cambodia, and Vietnam.
Wat Thung Si Mueang (āļ§āļąāļ”āļ—āļļāđˆāļ‡āļĻāļĢāļĩāđ€āļĄāļ·āļ­āļ‡) The Buddha’s footprint is housed in the Ubosot which mirrors art blending between the early Rattanakosin era and that of Vientiane. Another important building in the temple is the Ho Trai - the Hall of Tipitaka scriptures. The wooden hall was built in the pond to protect the Tipitaka from insects.
Wat Si Ubon Rattanaram or Wat Si Thong (āļ§āļąāļ”āļĻāļĢāļĩāļ­āļļāļšāļĨāļĢāļąāļ•āļ™āļēāļĢāļēāļĄ āļŦāļĢāļ·āļ­ āļ§āļąāļ”āļĻāļĢāļĩāļ—āļ­āļ‡) - The Ubosot houses a sacred Buddha image known as “Phra Kaeo Butsarakham”. The Buddha image, in the attitude of subduing Mara, is carved from topaz into the Chiang Saen style. Each year, in the Songkran Festival, people will parade the Buddha image around for the people to pay respect and bathe.
National Museum of Ubon Ratchathani (āļžāļīāļžāļīāļ˜āļ āļąāļ“āļ‘āļŠāļ–āļēāļ™āđāļŦāđˆāļ‡āļŠāļēāļ•āļī āļ­āļļāļšāļĨāļĢāļēāļŠāļ˜āļēāļ™āļĩ) - The single-storey hip roofed building, built in 1918, once served as the city hall before it was handed to the Fine Arts Department. The museum features local exhibitions: geography, history of the city’s establishment, archaeological fine art objects, local handicrafts and folk games.
The Golden Jubilee Art and Cultural Centre (āļĻāļđāļ™āļĒāđŒāļĻāļīāļĨāļ›āļ§āļąāļ’āļ™āļ˜āļĢāļĢāļĄāļāļēāļāļˆāļ™āļēāļ āļīāđ€āļĐāļ) - The 7-storey building in contemporary Isan architecture was built to commemorate the Golden Jubilee Celebrations of His Majesty’s Accession to the Throne. H.R.H. Princess Maha Chakri Sirindhorn presided over the opening ceremony on 11 December, 2001.
Wat Chaeng (āļ§āļąāļ”āđāļˆāđ‰āļ‡) - The Ubosot, which was only completed 24 years later, is famed for its beautiful architecture and rare woodcarving. As a precious historical site, the Ubosot is well preserved in its original condition. It has won a Certificate of Honour from H.R.H. Princess Maha Chakri Sirindhorn in the ‘Architect 87’ Exhibition.
Wat Maha Wanaram (āļ§āļąāļ”āļĄāļŦāļēāļ§āļ™āļēāļĢāļēāļĄ) - It was at first only a ‘Samnak Song’, a monastic residence, for Vipassana monks. According to a stone inscription found behind the principal Buddha statue, Phrachao Yai In Paeng, it was built in 1807. The stucco Buddha statue, in the attitude of subduing Mara, was built in the Laotian style.
Wat Burapharam (āļ§āļąāļ”āļšāļđāļĢāļžāļēāļĢāļēāļĄ) - The temple once served as a residence for famous meditation monks. Today, the temple houses life-like stone figures of these monks.
Wat Supattanaram Worawihan (āļ§āļąāļ”āļŠāļļāļ›āļąāļāļ™āļēāļĢāļēāļĄāļ§āļĢāļ§āļīāļŦāļēāļĢ) - This is the first Dhammayutika temple of the province. The temple has a special Ubosot designed by a royal highway engineer Luang Sathit Nimankan (Chuan Supiyaphan). It has a Thai-style roof, western style hall and Khmer-style base.
Hat Wat Tai (āļŦāļēāļ”āļ§āļąāļ”āđƒāļ•āđ‰) - The beach situated in the middle of the Mun River. During the dry season, its white sandy beach is a favourite place for holiday-makers to enjoy the easy atmosphere and greenery.
Ban Kan Lueang Archaeological Site (āđāļŦāļĨāđˆāļ‡āđ‚āļšāļĢāļēāļ“āļ„āļ”āļĩāļšāđ‰āļēāļ™āļāđ‰āļēāļ™āđ€āļŦāļĨāļ·āļ­āļ‡) - It is an archaeological site which can be dated back to 2,800-2,500 years ago. In 1996, the Fine Arts Department found a number of artefacts such as beads, pottery, bronze bells, iron axes and chaff.
Wat Sa Prasan Suk or Wat Ban Na Mueang (āļ§āļąāļ”āļŠāļĢāļ°āļ›āļĢāļ°āļŠāļēāļ™āļŠāļļāļ‚ āļŦāļĢāļ·āļ­ āļ§āļąāļ”āļšāđ‰āļēāļ™āļ™āļēāđ€āļĄāļ·āļ­āļ‡) - The temple houses a special Ubosot in the shape of the Suphannahong Royal Barge decorated with mosaic. The abbot, Achan Bunmi, is widely honoured among the people of Ubon Ratchathani as well as those from nearby provinces.
Hat Khu Duea (āļŦāļēāļ”āļ„āļđāđ€āļ”āļ·āđˆāļ­) - The beach by the Mun River is 12 km from downtown Ubon Ratchathani via Highway 24. Lots of restaurants on the raft are available.
Ban Pa-ao (āļšāđ‰āļēāļ™āļ›āļ°āļ­āļēāļ§) - The ancient village is situated in Tambon Nong Khon. Since two centuries ago, the villagers actually immigrated from Vientiane during the reign of King Siri Bunsan and settled here. The village is famed for its brass work in an ancient style.
Wat Nong Pa Phong (āļ§āļąāļ”āļŦāļ™āļ­āļ‡āļ›āđˆāļēāļžāļ‡) - The temple is situated in a lush forest of Tambon Non Phueng. The tranquillity allows monks to study and practice Vipassana meditation. Attractions in the temple include the Phra Phothiyan Thera Museum that displays the eight requisites and wax model of Luangpu Cha.
Wat Pa Nana Chat (āļ§āļąāļ”āļ›āđˆāļēāļ™āļēāļ™āļēāļŠāļēāļ•āļī) - Numerous foreign monks study and practice Vipassana meditation here; most of them can speak Thai fluently and pray in Pali. Strict practices of the monks here make the temple quite honourable among Buddhists.
Wat Phukhao Kaeo (āļ§āļąāļ”āļ āļđāđ€āļ‚āļēāđāļāđ‰āļ§) - The temple has a very beautiful Ubosot which is delicately decorated with a tiered roof covered with terracotta tiles and supporting a golden spire in the middle. Inside is the high-relief regarding important Phrathats, relic-containing pagodas, of Thailand.
Kaeng Saphue (āđāļāđˆāļ‡āļŠāļ°āļžāļ·āļ­) - The rapids in the Mun River is a place to relax and enjoy the currents and wave sound. ‘Saphue’ derives from the word ‘Samphuet’ in Suai ethnic language which means large serpent.
Sirindhorn Dam (āđ€āļ‚āļ·āđˆāļ­āļ™āļŠāļīāļĢāļīāļ™āļ˜āļĢ) - Called Khuean Dom Noi by the locals, the rockfill dam with a clay core was constructed across the Lam Dom Noi, a tributary of the Mun River. The hydroelectric dam is 42 metres high and 940 metres long.
Chong Mek (āļŠāđˆāļ­āļ‡āđ€āļĄāđ‡āļ) - The permanent Thai-Lao border pass is 90 km from downtown Ubon Ratchathani. The pass is a land bridge to Champasak Province.
Kaeng Tana National Park (āļ­āļļāļ—āļĒāļēāļ™āđāļŦāđˆāļ‡āļŠāļēāļ•āļīāđāļāđˆāļ‡āļ•āļ°āļ™āļ°) - The park features plateaux and undulating hills with deciduous dipterocarp forest and grassland. The park has many attractions; namely,
Don Tana (āļ”āļ­āļ™āļ•āļ°āļ™āļ°) - An island in the middle of the Mun River of only 450 metres wide and 700 metres long.
Kaeng Tana (āđāļāđˆāļ‡āļ•āļ°āļ™āļ°) - The largest rapids of the Mun River. In the middle of the rapids, there is a huge sandstone boulder splitting the river into two streams, and a concrete block built during the French Colonial Era to identify a channel for cruising.
Tham Phra or Tham Phu Ma Nai (āļ–āđ‰āļģāļžāļĢāļ°āļŦāļĢāļ·āļ­āļ–āđ‰āļģāļ āļđāļŦāļĄāļēāđ„āļ™) - A stone inscription and Lingam base or ‘Yoni’ from the 7th-8th Century were found. Now the original stone inscription is kept in the National Museum, Ubon Ratchathani.
Namtok Rak Sai Nature Trail (āđ€āļŠāđ‰āļ™āļ—āļēāļ‡āļĻāļķāļāļĐāļēāļ˜āļĢāļĢāļĄāļŠāļēāļ•āļīāļ™āđ‰āļģāļ•āļāļĢāļēāļāđ„āļ—āļĢ) - The trail lines the cliff by the Mun River, 500 metres from the park’s headquarters. It runs by the cliff for 1 km. through various kinds of flora, such as lichen, moss, and fern, Tham Phra and Namtok Rak Sai.
Namtok Tat Ton (āļ™āđ‰āļģāļ•āļāļ•āļēāļ”āđ‚āļ•āļ™) - The waterfall is situated on Highway 2173, off Highway 217 by 5 km.
Annamese Lion Pulpit at Ban Chi Thuan (āļ˜āļĢāļĢāļĄāļēāļŠāļ™āđŒāļŠāļīāļ‡āļŦāđŒāļĻāļīāļĨāļ›āļ°āļāļ§āļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆāļšāđ‰āļēāļ™āļŠāļĩāļ—āļ§āļ™) - The Buddhist pulpit is placed at Wat Sinuan Saeng Sawang Arom. The concrete pulpit itself is quite unique with a lion sculpture carrying the pulpit with decorative stucco, multi-layer wooden roof, and painting in the Annamese style.
Wat Thung Si Wilai (āļ§āļąāļ”āļ—āļļāđˆāļ‡āļĻāļĢāļĩāļ§āļīāđ„āļĨ) - The temple houses Luangpho Wiset, the principal Buddha image carved from laterite seated beneath the Naga’s hood. The sacred Buddha image from the Dvaravati period is considered a sacred icon for the village. The temple is surrounded by several enclosures of Sima stones that mark the temple’s consecrated boundary.
Wat Tham Kuha Sawan (āļ§āļąāļ”āļ–āđ‰āļģāļ„āļđāļŦāļēāļŠāļ§āļĢāļĢāļ„āđŒ) - The temple was built by Luangpu Khamkhaning Chulamani to be a place for meditation practice where he also resided. Today, Luangpu has died but his body, which is not rotten, is well kept in a glass coffin and considered a sacred item.
Maenam Song Si (āđāļĄāđˆāļ™āđ‰āļģāļŠāļ­āļ‡āļŠāļĩ) - At the mouth of the Mun River, Ban Woen Buek. The Mun River runs into the Mekong, so we can see two rivers, in two different colours – ‘Song Si’ means two colours - blending together. The Mekong River will be reddish brown while the Mun River is rather blue.
Pha Taem National Park (āļ­āļļāļ—āļĒāļēāļ™āđāļŦāđˆāļ‡āļŠāļēāļ•āļīāļœāļēāđāļ•āđ‰āļĄ) - The park features plateaux, undulating hills, and towering cliffs with strange sandstone formations scattered around. The park is covered mostly by deciduous dipterocarp forest and wild flowers can be found on the rock terrace. Its attractions include:
Sao Chaliang (āđ€āļŠāļēāđ€āļ‰āļĨāļĩāļĒāļ‡) - Carved by wind and water for millions of years, the mushroom-like stone towers are scattered around the area containing shell fossils, sand and gravels in their texture. Geologists assumed that over million years ago this area was once a sea.
Pha Taem and Pha Kham (āļœāļēāđāļ•āđ‰āļĄāđāļĨāļ°āļœāļēāļ‚āļēāļĄ) - The towering cliffs house groups of pre-historical paintings which date back to 4,000-3,000 years ago. There are over 300 paintings in five categories including animals, geometrical motifs, rice farmers, hands, and ‘Tum’ or typical fish trap.
Namtok Soi Sawan (āļ™āđ‰āļģāļ•āļāļŠāļĢāđ‰āļ­āļĒāļŠāļ§āļĢāļĢāļ„āđŒ) - Two streams, Huai Soi and Huai Phai, combine and plunge 20 metres down to the pond below, making the waterfall look like a necklace – ‘Soi’ in Thai.
Namtok Thung Na Mueang (āļ™āđ‰āļģāļ•āļāļ—āļļāđˆāļ‡āļ™āļēāđ€āļĄāļ·āļ­āļ‡) - The medium-sized waterfall cascades down a 25-metre cliff through flowerbeds which are in full bloom between October to December.
Namtok Saeng Chan or Namtok Ru (āļ™āđ‰āļģāļ•āļāđāļŠāļ‡āļˆāļąāļ™āļ—āļĢāđŒāļŦāļĢāļ·āļ­ āļ™āđ‰āļģāļ•āļāļĢāļđ) - The tiny fall is special as the stream falls through a hole – ‘Ru’ – down to the pond below. At noon, sunshine through the hole makes the waterfall look like a ray of moonshine – ‘Saeng Chan’.
Dong Na Tham Forest (āļ›āđˆāļēāļ”āļ‡āļ™āļēāļ—āļēāļĄ) - From September to November is the best time to enjoy the nature around while flowers are in full bloom, as well as waterfalls and fogs over the Mekong River. From January to March is the best time to see the forest change its hue, with trees shedding their leaves, and to cruise in the Mekong from Ban Pak La to Khan Tha Kwian.
Wat Phu Anon (āļ§āļąāļ”āļ āļđāļ­āļēāļ™āļ™āļ—āđŒ) - The temple has interesting attractions including a rock terrace with large footprints, nature-made stone jar, and cave painting.
Phu Lon (āļ āļđāļŦāļĨāđˆāļ™) - The mountain is in Tambon Song Yang, 20 km north of Amphoe Si Mueang Mai. It has a cave where the late famous monk Phra Achan Man Phurithatto practiced his Vipassana.
Namtok Huai Sai Yai or Kaeng I Khiao (āļ™āđ‰āļģāļ•āļāļŦāđ‰āļ§āļĒāļ—āļĢāļēāļĒāđƒāļŦāļāđˆ āļŦāļĢāļ·āļ­ āđāļāđˆāļ‡āļ­āļĩāđ€āļ‚āļĩāļĒāļ§) - The waterfall is in the Buntharik - Khao Yot Mon Wildlife Sanctuary. The waterfall runs over the rock terrace among a shady environment.
Phu Chong - Na Yoi National Park (āļ­āļļāļ—āļĒāļēāļ™āđāļŦāđˆāļ‡āļŠāļēāļ•āļīāļ āļđāļˆāļ­āļ‡-āļ™āļēāļĒāļ­āļĒ) - The park covers a total area of 686 km2. Its boundary connects to Lao PDR and Cambodia in the area called the Emerald Triangle. Its attractions include.
Namtok Huai Luang or Namtok Bak Teo (āļ™āđ‰āļģāļ•āļāļŦāđ‰āļ§āļĒāļŦāļĨāļ§āļ‡ āļŦāļĢāļ·āļ­ āļ™āđ‰āļģāļ•āļāļšāļąāļāđ€āļ•āļ§) - Plunging down three steps from an elevation of 30 metres, the waterfall has a small pool with a white beach and turquoise coloured water.
Phlan Yao Rock Garden (āļŠāļ§āļ™āļŦāļīāļ™āļžāļĨāļēāļ™āļĒāļēāļ§) - Rocks in different formations are scattered around the area.
Pha Phueng Viewpoint (āļˆāļļāļ”āļŠāļĄāļ—āļīāļ§āļ—āļąāļĻāļ™āđŒāļœāļēāļœāļķāđ‰āļ‡) - The viewpoint is just next to the rock garden.
Namtok Koeng Mae Phong (āļ™āđ‰āļģāļ•āļāđ€āļāļīāđ‰āļ‡āđāļĄāđˆāļžāļ­āļ‡) - The waterfall is 9 km south of Namtok Huai Luang along the nature trail. It originates from the Lam Dom Noi Stream.
Kaeng Sila Thip (āđāļāđˆāļ‡āļĻāļīāļĨāļēāļ—āļīāļžāļĒāđŒ) - Huai Luang Stream runs over a rock terrace and turns fierce in the rapids. In the middle of the stream, stream power has created lots of holes on the rock surface in different sizes and depths called “Kumphalak.”
Phlan Kong Kwian (āļžāļĨāļēāļāļāļ‡āđ€āļāļ§āļĩāļĒāļ™) - The vast rock terrace with rock shelters at the front is home to wild flowers and plants. In previous days, travellers could seek shelter from this place. Thus, it is called Phlan Kong Kwian which literally means cart terrace.
Phu Hin Dang (āļ āļđāļŦāļīāļ™āļ”āđˆāļēāļ‡) - The cliff-top viewpoint to witness the forest scenery of Lao PDR. and Cambodia. Its cliff is especially painted with natural bright hues. Geologists explain that dry weather millions of years ago catalyzed the mineral residues in the seawater and resulted this way.
Namtok Kaeng Lamduan (āļ™āđ‰āļģāļ•āļāđāļāđˆāļ‡āļĨāļģāļ”āļ§āļ™) - The fall is situated in the compound of the Ubon Ratchathani Wildlife Reservation Promotion and Development Station. The waterfall runs over a rock terrace and through the shady forest of Lamduan trees.
Prasat Ban Ben (āļ›āļĢāļēāļŠāļēāļ—āļšāđ‰āļēāļ™āđ€āļšāļāļˆāđŒ) - The Khmer sanctuary is a religious site comprising three brick Prangs on separated laterite bases. The Fine Arts Department excavated the site in 1990 and found lintels featuring 9 directional guardian angels and the God Indra on his Erawan heavenly elephant.

Local products
Ubon Ratchathani’s local products include hand-woven cotton, Khit pillow, loincloth, silk, brassware, and basketry.
Mu Yo (Moo Yaw) or preserved pork, Chinese sausage, Isan sausage, and Khem Mak Nat or black-eared catfish or iridescent shark-catfish in saline water with chopped pineapple. Various preserved and ready-to-eat food such as dried fish, dried frog’s skin, and steamed bun with bamboo shoot stuff.

Culture


Festivals
Flower Festival (āļ‡āļēāļ™āđ€āļ—āļĻāļāļēāļĨāđ„āļĄāđ‰āļ”āļ­āļāđ„āļĄāđ‰āļ›āļĢāļ°āļ”āļąāļš) - Held every February at Thung Kham Nam Saep Stadium, Amphoe Warin Chamrap, the festival features floral floats, decorative and flowering plant contests and fair.
Kaeng Saphue Songkran Festival (āļ‡āļēāļ™āļ›āļĢāļ°āđ€āļžāļ“āļĩāļĄāļŦāļēāļŠāļ‡āļāļĢāļēāļ™āļ•āđŒāđāļāđˆāļ‡āļŠāļ°āļžāļ·āļ­) - Held every April in Amphoe Phibun Mangsahan, the festival comprises a beauty contest, fair, local sports, and local music contest.
Illuminated Boat Procession (āļ‡āļēāļ™āļ›āļĢāļ°āđ€āļžāļ“āļĩāđ„āļŦāļĨāđ€āļĢāļ·āļ­āđ„āļŸ) - Held every October to mark the end of the Buddhist Lent, boats from different temples will illuminate the river near the Rattanakosin Bicentennial Bridge.
Traditional Boat Races (āļ‡āļēāļ™āđāļ‚āđˆāļ‡āļ‚āļąāļ™āđ€āļĢāļ·āļ­āļĒāļēāļ§āļ›āļĢāļ°āđ€āļžāļ“āļĩ) - Several boat racing tournaments are held annually in October after the end of the Buddhist Lent. The Mueang Ubon Ratchathani Municipality’s tournament is held near the Rattanakosin Bicentennial Bridge. Tambon Phibun Mangsahan Municipality’s tournament is held near the Mun River Bridge, and Wat Pho Tak’s tournament is held in front of the temple.
 
See less See more
#17,241 ·
āđ‚āļĢāļ‡āļŦāļ™āļąāļ‡ SFC āļĄāļļāļĄāļĄāļ­āļ‡āļˆāļēāļāļŠāļąāđ‰āļ™ 5 āļāļąāđˆāļ‡āđ‚āļĢāļ‡āđāļĢāļĄ
āļ™āļĩāđˆāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļāļąāđˆāļ‡āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ•āđˆāļ­āđ€āļ•āļīāļĄāļ‚āļķāđ‰āļ™āļĄāļēāļˆāļēāļāļŠāļąāđ‰āļ™ 4 āļ™āļ°āļ„āļĢāļąāļš
āļŠāđˆāļ§āļ™āļ•āļķāļāļ—āļĩāđˆāļŠāļĢāđ‰āļēāļ‡āđƒāļŦāļĄāđˆāļ­āļĒāļđāđˆāļ–āļąāļ”āļ­āļ­āļāđ„āļ›āļ­āļĩāļ







 
#17,242 ·
āļžāļ·āđ‰āļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ”āđ‰āļēāļ™āļŦāļĨāļąāļ‡āļšāļīāđŠāļāļ‹āļĩ āļĢāļīāļĄāļ–āļ™āļ™āđ€āļĨāļĩāđˆāļĒāļ‡āđ€āļĄāļ·āļ­āļ‡
āļāļģāļĨāļąāļ‡āđ€āļ„āļĨāļĩāļĒāļĢāđŒāļžāļ·āđ‰āļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ„āļĢāļąāļš āļ‚āļ™āļēāļ”āđ„āļĄāđˆāđƒāļŦāļāđˆāļĄāļēāļ
āđ„āļĄāđˆāļĢāļđāđ‰āļ§āđˆāļēāļˆāļ°āđƒāļŠāđˆāļ™āļ„āļĢāļŠāļąāļĒāđāļ­āļĢāđŒāļ•āļēāļĄāļ—āļĩāđˆāđ€āļ„āļĒāļĄāļĩāļ‚āđˆāļēāļ§āļŦāļĢāļ·āļ­āļ›āļĨāđˆāļēāļ§ ????






 
#17,243 ·
āļšāļĢāļīāđ€āļ§āļ“āļ­āļļāļšāļĨāđ€āļ‹āđ‡āļ™āđ€āļ•āļ­āļĢāđŒāļžāļ­āļĒāļ—āđŒāļāļģāļĨāļąāļ‡āļˆāļ°āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ­āļ”āļĩāļ•āļ„āļĢāļąāļš
āđāļ–āļ§āļ™āļĩāđ‰āļˆāļ°āļ–āļđāļāļ—āļļāļšāļ—āļīāđ‰āļ‡āđāļĨāļ°āļŠāļĢāđ‰āļēāļ‡āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ­āļēāļ„āļēāļĢāļžāļēāļ“āļīāļŠāļĒāđŒ 10 āļ„āļđāļŦāļē
āļ•āļēāļĄāļ›āđ‰āļēāļĒāļ—āļĩāđˆāļ•āļīāļ”āļšāļ­āļ ( āļ„āļļāļ“āļ§āļąāļŠāđ€āļ„āļĒāļĄāļēāđāļˆāđ‰āļ‡āļ‚āđˆāļēāļ§āđāļĨāđ‰āļ§ )





āđ€āļ„āļĒāļ„āļīāļ”āļ§āđˆāļēāļ•āļĢāļ‡āļ™āļĩāđ‰āļˆāļ°āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āđ‚āļĨāļ•āļąāļŠāļ§āļēāļĢāļīāļ™
āđ€āļŦāđ‡āļ™āļĢāļ·āđ‰āļ­āļ–āļ­āļ™āļāļąāļ™āđƒāļŦāļāđˆ
āļĄāļēāļ§āļąāļ™āļ™āļĩāđ‰āļ•āļīāļ”āļ›āđ‰āļēāļĒāļ‚āļēāļĒāļ—āļĩāđˆāđ€āļ‰āļĒāđ€āļĨāļĒ āļ‚āļ™āļēāļ” 7 āđ„āļĢāđˆ
āļ­āļĒāļđāđˆāđ€āļĨāļĒāļŠāļĩāđˆāđāļĒāļāļ•āļĨāļēāļ”āļ§āļēāļĢāļīāļ™āđ€āļˆāļĢāļīāļāļĻāļĢāļĩāļĄāļēāļ™āļīāļ”āđ€āļ”āļĩāļĒāļ§
āļāļąāđˆāļ‡āļ‚āļēāđ„āļ›āļĄ.āļ­āļļāļšāļĨāļŊāļ„āļĢāļąāļš

 
#17,244 · (Edited)
āđāļĨāļ°āđāļĨāđ‰āļ§....
āļ–āđ‰āļēāđ„āļĄāđˆāļœāļīāļ”āļžāļĨāļēāļ”āļ•āļĢāļ‡āļ™āļĩāđ‰āļ™āđˆāļēāļˆāļ°āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āđ‚āļĨāļ•āļąāļŠāļ§āļēāļĢāļīāļ™ ( āļĢāļķāļ›āļĨāđˆāļēāļ§ )
āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āđāļšāļš express āļ•āļąāđ‰āļ‡āļ­āļĒāļđāđˆāļ”āđ‰āļēāļ™āļŦāļ™āđ‰āļēāļ•āļĨāļēāļ”āļ§āļēāļĢāļīāļ™āđ€āļˆāļĢāļīāļāļĻāļĢāļĩ āđƒāļāļĨāđ‰āļ•āļđāđ‰ ATM āđāļšāļ‡āļāđŒāļāļĢāļļāļ‡āđ€āļ—āļž
āļĄāļĩāđ€āļŠāļēāļ•āļąāđ‰āļ‡āļ§āļēāļ‡āđ„āļ§āđ‰āļ—āļĩāđˆāļžāļ·āđ‰āļ™āļ”āđ‰āļ§āļĒ āđ€āļŦāđ‡āļ™āđāļšāļšāļ™āļĩāđ‰āđāļĨāđ‰āļ§
āļœāļĄāđāļ­āļšāļŦāļ§āļąāļ‡āļ§āđˆāļē
āđƒāļ™āļ­āļ™āļēāļ„āļ•āļšāđ‰āļēāļ™āđ€āļĢāļēāļˆāļ°āļĄāļĩāđ‚āļĨāļ•āļąāļŠāļ‚āļ™āļēāļ”āđƒāļŦāļāđˆāđ†āļ­āļĩāļāļ‹āļąāļ 1 āđāļŦāđˆāļ‡
āļ­āļĒāļđāđˆāđƒāļ™āđ€āļ‚āļ•āļ­.āđ€āļĄāļ·āļ­āļ‡āļŦāļĢāļ·āļ­āļ­.āļ§āļēāļĢāļīāļ™āļāđ‡āđ„āļ”āđ‰




āđ‚āļ•āđ‚āļĒāļ•āđ‰āļēāļ”āļĩāđ€āļĒāļĩāđˆāļĒāļĄāļ§āļēāļĢāļīāļ™āļŠāļģāļĢāļēāļšāļ„āļĢāļąāļš
āļžāļ·āđ‰āļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆāđƒāļŦāļāđˆāđ‚āļ•āļ—āļĩāđ€āļ”āļĩāļĒāļ§



āđƒāļāļĨāđ‰āđ†āļāļąāļšāđ‚āļ•āđ‚āļĒāļ•āđ‰āļēāļ”āļĩāđ€āļĒāļĩāđˆāļĒāļĄāļ§āļēāļĢāļīāļ™āļāļģāļĨāļąāļ‡āļ–āļĄāļ—āļĩāđˆāļ„āļĢāļąāļš
āđ„āļĄāđˆāļĢāļđāđ‰āđ€āļŦāļĄāļ·āļ­āļ™āļāļąāļ™āļ§āđˆāļēāļˆāļ°āļ—āļģāļ­āļ°āđ„āļĢ



 
#17,245 ·
^^āļ–āļĄāļ—āļĩāđˆāđ€āļĒāļ­āļ°āļĄāļēāļāļ™āļ°āļ„āļĢāļąāļšāļšāđ‰āļēāļ™āđ€āļĢāļē āđāļ•āđˆāđ„āļĄāđˆāļĢāļđāđ‰āļ§āđˆāļēāļ–āļĄāļ—āļģāļ­āļ°āđ„āļĢ āđāļ•āđˆāļĨāļ°āļ—āļĩāđˆāļāļ§āđ‰āļēāļ‡āđ†āļ—āļąāđ‰āļ‡āļ™āļąāđ‰āļ™

@āđ€āļ—āļĩāđˆāļĒāļ§āļšāļīāļ™āļ­āļļāļšāļĨ-āđ€āļŠāļĩāļĒāļ‡āđƒāļŦāļĄāđˆ āļ›āļĢāļąāļšāđ€āļ§āļĨāļēāļšāļīāļ™āļŠāđ‰āļēāļāļ§āđˆāļēāđ€āļ”āļīāļĄāļ™āļīāļ”āļŦāļ™āđˆāļ­āļĒāļ„āļĢāļąāļš

āđ€āļ—āļĩāđˆāļĒāļ§āļšāļīāļ™ FD3406 āļ­āļ­āļāļˆāļēāļāļ—āđˆāļēāļ­āļēāļāļēāļĻāļĒāļēāļ™āļ™āļēāļ™āļēāļŠāļēāļ•āļīāđ€āļŠāļĩāļĒāļ‡āđƒāļŦāļĄāđˆ(CNX)āđ€āļ§āļĨāļē 07.20āļ™
āđ€āļ”āļīāļ™āļ—āļēāļ‡āļ–āļķāļ‡āļ—āđˆāļēāļ­āļēāļāļēāļĻāļĒāļēāļ™āļ™āļēāļ™āļēāļŠāļēāļ•āļīāļ­āļļāļšāļĨāļĢāļēāļŠāļ˜āļēāļ™āļĩ(UBP) āđ€āļ§āļĨāļē8.35āļ™

āđ€āļ—āļĩāđˆāļĒāļ§āļšāļīāļ™ FD3407 āļ­āļ­āļāļˆāļēāļāļ—āđˆāļēāļ­āļēāļāļēāļĻāļĒāļēāļ™āļ™āļēāļ™āļēāļŠāļēāļ•āļīāļ­āļļāļšāļĨāļĢāļēāļŠāļ˜āļēāļ™āļĩ(UBP)āđ€āļ§āļĨāļē 09.00āļ™
āđ€āļ”āļīāļ™āļ—āļēāļ‡āļ–āļķāļ‡āļ—āđˆāļēāļ­āļēāļāļēāļĻāļĒāļēāļ™āļ™āļēāļ™āļēāļŠāļēāļ•āļīāđ€āļŠāļĩāļĒāļ‡āđƒāļŦāļĄāđˆ(CNX) āđ€āļ§āļĨāļē10.10āļ™
 
#17,246 ·
āļŠāđˆāļ§āļ‡āļ§āļąāļ™āļŦāļĒāļļāļ”āļ—āļĩāđˆāļœāđˆāļēāļ™āļĄāļē
āļŦāđ‰āļēāļ‡āļ•āđˆāļēāļ‡āđ†āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļšāđ‰āļēāļ™āđ€āļĢāļēāļ„āļ™āđ€āļĒāļ­āļ°āļĄāļēāļāļ„āļĢāļąāļš
āļ­āļĒāđˆāļēāļ‡āļ‹āļīāļ•āļĩāđ‰āļĄāļ­āļĨāļĨāđŒāļ—āļĩāđˆāļˆāļ­āļ”āļĢāļ–āđ€āļ•āđ‡āļĄ
āļ—āļąāđ‰āļ‡āļ—āļĩāđˆāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļŠāļąāđ‰āļ™āļĨāļēāļ™āļˆāļ­āļ”,āļĨāļēāļ™āļˆāļ­āļ”āļ”āđ‰āļēāļ™āļ‚āđ‰āļēāļ‡āđāļĨāļ°āļĨāļēāļ™āļˆāļ­āļ”āļ”āđ‰āļēāļ™āļŦāļĨāļąāļ‡
āļˆāļ™āļ•āđ‰āļ­āļ‡āļ‚āļĒāļēāļĒāļžāļ·āđ‰āļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆāđ†āļ•āļīāļ”āļāļąāļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ‹āļ·āđ‰āļ­āđ„āļ§āđ‰āđāļĨāđ‰āļ§
āđƒāļŦāđ‰āļĢāļ–āđ€āļ‚āđ‰āļēāđ„āļ›āļˆāļ­āļ”āđ€āļžāļīāđˆāļĄāđ€āļ•āļīāļĄ āļ•āļēāļĄāļĢāļđāļ›










āļžāļ·āđ‰āļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆāļĒāļąāļ‡āļ§āđˆāļēāļ‡āļ­āļĩāļāđ€āļĒāļ­āļ°
āļĢāļ­āļ—āļēāļ‡āļœāļđāđ‰āļšāļĢāļīāļŦāļēāļĢāļŠāļļāļ™āļĩāļĒāđŒāļ™āļģāļĄāļēāļžāļīāļˆāļēāļĢāļ“āļē
 
#17,247 ·
^^
āļĢāļđāļ›āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ”āļīāļ™āļ§āđˆāļēāļ‡āđ†āļ—āļĩāđˆāđ€āļĻāļĐāļāļĢāļ°āļ”āļēāļĐāđ€āļĒāļ­āļ°
āđ€āļžāļĢāļēāļ°āđ€āļĄāļ·āđˆāļ­āļ„āļ·āļ™āļāđˆāļ­āļ™āļŦāļ™āđ‰āļēāļ™āļąāđ‰āļ™āļĄāļĩāļ„āļ­āļ™āđ€āļŠāļĢāļīāđŒāļ•āļ•āļĢāļ‡āļ™āļąāđ‰āļ™āļ„āļĢāļąāļš
āļžāļ­āļ‡āļēāļ™āđ€āļĨāļīāļāđāļĨāđ‰āļ§āđ€āļāđ‡āļšāļāļąāļ™āđ„āļĄāđˆāļŦāļĄāļ” āļāđ‡āļĢāļāđ„āļ”āđ‰āđƒāļˆ :eek:hno::eek:hno:
 
#17,248 ·
-āļ­āđˆāļēāļ™āļ‚āđˆāļēāļ§āđ€āļĢāļ·āđˆāļ­āļ‡āđ‚āļĢāļ‡āļžāļĒāļēāļšāļēāļĨāļŠāļĢāļĢāļžāļŠāļīāļ—āļ˜āļīāļ›āļĢāļ°āļŠāļ‡āļ„āđŒāđāļĨāđ‰āļ§āļ™āđˆāļēāđ€āļŦāđ‡āļ™āđƒāļˆāļšāļļāļ„āļĨāļēāļāļĢāļ—āļĩāđˆāļ•āđ‰āļ­āļ‡āļĢāļąāļšāļ„āļ™āļ›āđˆāļ§āļĒāļˆāļģāļ™āļ§āļ™āļĄāļēāļ āļŦāļĄāļ­āļĄāļĩāļ™āđ‰āļ­āļĒ āđāļ•āđˆāļ•āđ‰āļ­āļ‡āļĢāļąāļšāđ€āļ„āļŠāđ€āļĒāļ­āļ°āļĄāļēāļāđ† āļŠāļ‡āļŠāļēāļĢāļœāļđāđ‰āļĄāļēāđƒāļŠāđ‰āļšāļĢāļīāļāļēāļĢāļ”āđ‰āļ§āļĒāļ™āļ°āļ„āļĢāļąāļšāļ—āļĩāđˆāļ•āđ‰āļ­āļ‡āļ™āļ­āļ™āđ€āļ•āļĩāļĒāļ‡āđ€āļŠāļĢāļīāļĄāđāļĨāļ°āļ™āļąāđˆāļ‡āļĢāļ­āļĒāļ·āļ™āļĢāļ­āļĢāļąāļšāļāļēāļĢāđƒāļŦāđ‰āļšāļĢāļīāļāļēāļĢāļ™āļēāļ™āļĄāļēāļāđ† āļœāļĄāđ€āļ­āļ‡āļāđ‡āļ•āđ‰āļ­āļ‡āđ„āļ›āđ‚āļĢāļ‡āļžāļĒāļēāļšāļēāļĨāļŠāļĢāļĢāļžāļŠāļīāļ—āļ˜āļīāļ›āļĢāļ°āļŠāļ‡āļ„āđŒāđ€āļ”āļ·āļ­āļ™āļĨāļ°1-2āļ„āļĢāļąāđ‰āļ‡ āļāđ‡āđ‡āđ€āļ‚āđ‰āļēāđƒāļˆāđ€āļĨāļĒāļ§āđˆāļēāļ„āļ™āļ›āđˆāļ§āļĒāđ€āļĒāļ­āļ°āļĄāļēāļāļˆāļĢāļīāļ‡āđ†
āļœāļĄāļ­āļĒāļēāļāđ€āļŦāđ‡āļ™āđ‚āļĢāļ‡āļžāļĒāļēāļšāļēāļĨāļŠāļĢāļĢāļžāļŠāļīāļ—āļ˜āļīāļ›āļĢāļ°āļŠāļ‡āļ„āđŒ2 āļŦāļĢāļ·āļ­āđ‚āļĢāļ‡āļžāļĒāļēāļšāļēāļĨāļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļĄāļŦāļēāļ§āļīāļ—āļĒāļēāļĨāļąāļĒāļ­āļļāļšāļĨāļŊāđ€āļ•āļīāļšāđ‚āļ•āđāļĨāļ°āļĄāļĩāļĻāļąāļāļĒāļ āļēāļž āđ€āļžāļ·āđˆāļ­āļšāļĢāļĢāđ€āļ—āļēāļ āļēāļĢāļ°āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āđ‚āļĢāļ‡āļžāļĒāļēāļšāļēāļĨāļŠāļĢāļĢāļžāļŠāļīāļ—āļ˜āļīāļ›āļĢāļ°āļŠāļ‡āļ„āđŒ
-āļ—āđˆāļēāļ—āļēāļ‡āļšāļĢāļīāđ€āļ§āļ“āļŦāļ™āđ‰āļēāļ•āļĨāļēāļ”āļ§āļēāļĢāļīāļ™āđ€āļˆāļĢāļīāļāļĻāļĢāļĩāļˆāļ°āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āđ‚āļĨāļ•āļąāļŠāđ€āļ­āđ‡āļāđ€āļžāļĨāļŠāļˆāļĢāļīāļ‡āđ†āļ”āđ‰āļ§āļĒ
-āđ‚āļĢāļ‡āļŦāļ™āļąāļ‡āđ€āļ­āļŠāđ€āļ­āļŸāđƒāļŦāļāđˆāļĄāļēāļ āđ€āļŦāđ‡āļ™āđƒāļ™FBāļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļ‹āļīāļ•āļĩāđ‰āļĄāļ­āļĨāļĨāđŒāļšāļ­āļāļ§āđˆāļēāļāļģāļĨāļąāļ‡āļ•āļīāļ”āļ•āđˆāļ­āļĢāđ‰āļēāļ™āļĄāļēāļĨāļ‡āļ—āļĩāđˆāđ‚āļĢāļ‡āļŦāļ™āļąāļ‡āđ€āļ­āļŠāđ€āļ­āļŸ āļĨāļļāđ‰āļ™āđƒāļŦāđ‰āļĄāļĩāļĢāđ‰āļēāļ™āļ™āđˆāļēāļŠāļ™āđƒāļˆāļŦāļĨāļēāļĒāđ†āļĢāđ‰āļēāļ™ āđāļĨāļ°āļ­āļĒāļēāļāđ€āļŦāđ‡āļ™āđ€āļ­āļŠāđ€āļ­āļŸāļ•āļāđāļ•āđˆāļ‡āļŠāļ§āļĒāđ†āļ—āļąāđ‰āļ‡āļ āļēāļĒāđƒāļ™āđāļĨāļ°āļ āļēāļĒāļ™āļ­āļ āļĢāļ§āļĄāļ—āļąāđ‰āļ‡āļ”āđ‰āļēāļ™āļŦāļ™āđ‰āļēāļŦāđ‰āļēāļ‡āļ‹āļīāļ•āļĩāđ‰āļĄāļ­āļĨāļĨāđŒāļ”āđ‰āļ§āļĒ:)
-āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ”āļīāļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ‹āļīāļ•āļĩāđ‰āļĄāļ­āļĨāļĨāđŒāļ‹āļ·āđ‰āļ­āđ€āļžāļ·āđˆāļ­āļ‚āļĒāļēāļĒāļĄāļĩāļāļēāļĢāļ›āļĢāļąāļšāļžāļ·āđ‰āļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆāđƒāļŦāđ‰āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆāļˆāļ­āļ”āļĢāļ–āđāļĨāđ‰āļ§āđ€āļŦāļĢāļ­āļ„āļĢāļąāļš āđ€āļĢāđ‡āļ§āļˆāļąāļ‡ āđ€āļŦāļĄāļ·āļ­āļ™āđ€āļžāļīāđˆāļ‡āđ€āļŦāđ‡āļ™āļ§āđˆāļēāļĒāļąāļ‡āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ›āđˆāļēāļŦāļāđ‰āļēāļ­āļĒāļđāđˆāđ€āļĨāļĒ
 
#17,249 ·
āļĄāļēāļ”āļđāđ‚āļĢāļšāļīāļ™āļŠāļąāļ™āļĒāļīāđˆāļ‡āļĒāļ‡āļĄāļąāđˆāļ‡
āļ—āļĩāđˆāļˆāļ­āļ”āļĢāļ–āļ­āļēāļˆāļˆāļ°āđ„āļĄāđˆāļāļ§āđ‰āļēāļ‡ āđāļ•āđˆāļāđ‡āđāļ™āđˆāļ™āđ€āļ­āļĩāđŠāļĒāļ”






 
#17,250 ·
āļ”āļđāļˆāļēāļāļĢāļđāļ›āļŠāļ–āļēāļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ•āđ‰āļ­āļ‡āļŠāļ‡āļŠāļąāļĒāđ‚āļĨāļ•āļąāļŠāđ€āļ­āđ‡āļāļ‹āđŒāđ€āļžāļĨāļŠāļ•āļĨāļēāļ”āļ§āļēāļĢāļīāļ™āđ€āļˆāļĢāļīāļāļĻāļĢāļĩāđāļĨāđ‰āļ§ āļŠāļąāļ§āļĢāđŒāđ€āļĨāļĒāļ„āļĢāļąāļš āđ‚āļ„āļĢāļ‡āļŠāļĢāđ‰āļēāļ‡āđāļšāļšāļ™āļĩāđ‰ āļŠāļĩāđāļšāļšāļ™āļĩāđ‰ āļ‚āļ™āļēāļ”āļ›āļĢāļ°āļĄāļēāļ“āļ™āļĩāđ‰

āđāļĨāđ‰āļ§āđ‚āļĨāļ•āļąāļ§āđƒāļŦāļāđˆāļ§āļēāļĢāļīāļ™āļĄāļĩāļ„āļ§āļēāļĄāļ„āļ·āļšāļŦāļ™āđ‰āļēāļ­āļ°āđ„āļĢāļŦāļĢāļ·āļ­āļĒāļąāļ‡āļ™āđ‰āļ­...
 
#17,251 ·
āļĄāļēāļ”āļđāļĒāļīāđˆāļ‡āđ€āļˆāļĢāļīāļāļ›āļēāļĢāđŒāļ„
āļ™āļĩāđˆāļāđ‡āđāļ™āđˆāļ™āļˆāļ™āļ•āđ‰āļ­āļ‡āļ‚āļĒāļēāļĒāļĄāļēāļˆāļ­āļ”āļ—āļĩāđˆāļšāļĢāļīāđ€āļ§āļ“āđ„āļ™āļ—āđŒāļžāļĨāļēāļ‹āđˆāļēāđ€āļ”āļīāļĄ






āļšāļĢāļīāđ€āļ§āļ“āļ™āļĩāđ‰āļ„āļ·āļ­āđ€āļ”āļĒāđŒāđāļ­āļ™āļ”āđŒāđ„āļ™āļ—āđŒāļžāļĨāļēāļ‹āđˆāļēāđ€āļ”āļīāļĄ
āļœāļĄāđ€āļ„āļĒāđ„āļ›āļˆāļ­āļ”āļāļąāļšāđ€āļžāļ·āđˆāļ­āļ™ āļ•āļ­āļ™āđāļĢāļāđ†āđ€āļ„āđ‰āļēāđ€āļāđ‡āļšāļ„āđˆāļēāļˆāļ­āļ”āļ„āļąāļ™āļĨāļ° 20 āļšāļēāļ—
āđ„āļĄāđˆāļĢāļđāđ‰āļ§āđˆāļēāļ•āļ­āļ™āļ™āļĩāđ‰āļĒāļąāļ‡āđ€āļāđ‡āļšāļ­āļĒāļđāđˆāļŦāļĢāļ·āļ­āļ›āļĨāđˆāļēāļ§
āđāļ•āđˆāļŠāđˆāļ§āļ‡āļŦāļ™āļąāļ‡āļ”āļąāļ‡āđ†āļ‰āļēāļĒ āđ€āļŠāđˆāļ™ āļ—āļĢāļēāļ™āļŠāđŒāļŸāļ­āļĢāđŒāļĄāđ€āļĄāļ­āļĢāđŒ 3 āđāļŪāļĢāļĩāđˆāļžāļ­āļ•āđ€āļ•āļ­āļĢāđŒ
āļ™āļĩāđˆāļĢāļ–āđ€āļ•āđ‡āļĄāļ•āļĨāļ­āļ”
āļ›āļĨ. ZZ āļĢāļĩāļšāļĄāļēāđ€āļ™āđ‰āļ­....
 
#17,252 ·
āļŦāđ‰āļēāļ‡āļŠāļļāļ™āļĩāļĒāđŒ āļ‹āļīāļĩāđ‰āļ•āļīāđ‰āļĄāļ­āļĨāļĨāđŒāļāđ‡āđƒāļŦāļāđˆāļĄāļēāļāđāļĨāđ‰āļ§

āđ€āļ­āļŠ āđ€āļ­āļŸ āļĒāļąāļ‡āđ„āļĄāđˆāļŦāļ™āđˆāļģāđƒāļˆ āļŠāļĢāđ‰āļēāļ‡āđ€āļ­āļ‡āđ€āļĨāļĒ

āđāļšāļšāļ™āļĩāđ‰āļ™āđˆāļēāļˆāļ°āļˆāļąāļ”āđ€āļ•āđ‡āļĄāļŠāđāļ•āļ™āļ­āđ‚āļĨāļ™
 
#17,253 · (Edited)
-āļ­āđˆāļēāļ™āļ‚āđˆāļēāļ§āđ€āļĢāļ·āđˆāļ­āļ‡āđ‚āļĢāļ‡āļžāļĒāļēāļšāļēāļĨāļŠāļĢāļĢāļžāļŠāļīāļ—āļ˜āļīāļ›āļĢāļ°āļŠāļ‡āļ„āđŒāđāļĨāđ‰āļ§āļ™āđˆāļēāđ€āļŦāđ‡āļ™āđƒāļˆāļšāļļāļ„āļĨāļēāļāļĢāļ—āļĩāđˆāļ•āđ‰āļ­āļ‡āļĢāļąāļšāļ„āļ™āļ›āđˆāļ§āļĒāļˆāļģāļ™āļ§āļ™āļĄāļēāļ āļŦāļĄāļ­āļĄāļĩāļ™āđ‰āļ­āļĒ āđāļ•āđˆāļ•āđ‰āļ­āļ‡āļĢāļąāļšāđ€āļ„āļŠāđ€āļĒāļ­āļ°āļĄāļēāļāđ† āļŠāļ‡āļŠāļēāļĢāļœāļđāđ‰āļĄāļēāđƒāļŠāđ‰āļšāļĢāļīāļāļēāļĢāļ”āđ‰āļ§āļĒāļ™āļ°āļ„āļĢāļąāļšāļ—āļĩāđˆāļ•āđ‰āļ­āļ‡āļ™āļ­āļ™āđ€āļ•āļĩāļĒāļ‡āđ€āļŠāļĢāļīāļĄāđāļĨāļ°āļ™āļąāđˆāļ‡āļĢāļ­āļĒāļ·āļ™āļĢāļ­āļĢāļąāļšāļāļēāļĢāđƒāļŦāđ‰āļšāļĢāļīāļāļēāļĢāļ™āļēāļ™āļĄāļēāļāđ† āļœāļĄāđ€āļ­āļ‡āļāđ‡āļ•āđ‰āļ­āļ‡āđ„āļ›āđ‚āļĢāļ‡āļžāļĒāļēāļšāļēāļĨāļŠāļĢāļĢāļžāļŠāļīāļ—āļ˜āļīāļ›āļĢāļ°āļŠāļ‡āļ„āđŒāđ€āļ”āļ·āļ­āļ™āļĨāļ°1-2āļ„āļĢāļąāđ‰āļ‡ āļāđ‡āđ‡āđ€āļ‚āđ‰āļēāđƒāļˆāđ€āļĨāļĒāļ§āđˆāļēāļ„āļ™āļ›āđˆāļ§āļĒāđ€āļĒāļ­āļ°āļĄāļēāļāļˆāļĢāļīāļ‡āđ†
āļœāļĄāļ­āļĒāļēāļāđ€āļŦāđ‡āļ™āđ‚āļĢāļ‡āļžāļĒāļēāļšāļēāļĨāļŠāļĢāļĢāļžāļŠāļīāļ—āļ˜āļīāļ›āļĢāļ°āļŠāļ‡āļ„āđŒ2 āļŦāļĢāļ·āļ­āđ‚āļĢāļ‡āļžāļĒāļēāļšāļēāļĨāļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļĄāļŦāļēāļ§āļīāļ—āļĒāļēāļĨāļąāļĒāļ­āļļāļšāļĨāļŊāđ€āļ•āļīāļšāđ‚āļ•āđāļĨāļ°āļĄāļĩāļĻāļąāļāļĒāļ āļēāļž āđ€āļžāļ·āđˆāļ­āļšāļĢāļĢāđ€āļ—āļēāļ āļēāļĢāļ°āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āđ‚āļĢāļ‡āļžāļĒāļēāļšāļēāļĨāļŠāļĢāļĢāļžāļŠāļīāļ—āļ˜āļīāļ›āļĢāļ°āļŠāļ‡āļ„āđŒ
-āļ—āđˆāļēāļ—āļēāļ‡āļšāļĢāļīāđ€āļ§āļ“āļŦāļ™āđ‰āļēāļ•āļĨāļēāļ”āļ§āļēāļĢāļīāļ™āđ€āļˆāļĢāļīāļāļĻāļĢāļĩāļˆāļ°āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āđ‚āļĨāļ•āļąāļŠāđ€āļ­āđ‡āļāđ€āļžāļĨāļŠāļˆāļĢāļīāļ‡āđ†āļ”āđ‰āļ§āļĒ
-āđ‚āļĢāļ‡āļŦāļ™āļąāļ‡āđ€āļ­āļŠāđ€āļ­āļŸāđƒāļŦāļāđˆāļĄāļēāļ āđ€āļŦāđ‡āļ™āđƒāļ™FBāļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļ‹āļīāļ•āļĩāđ‰āļĄāļ­āļĨāļĨāđŒāļšāļ­āļāļ§āđˆāļēāļāļģāļĨāļąāļ‡āļ•āļīāļ”āļ•āđˆāļ­āļĢāđ‰āļēāļ™āļĄāļēāļĨāļ‡āļ—āļĩāđˆāđ‚āļĢāļ‡āļŦāļ™āļąāļ‡āđ€āļ­āļŠāđ€āļ­āļŸ āļĨāļļāđ‰āļ™āđƒāļŦāđ‰āļĄāļĩāļĢāđ‰āļēāļ™āļ™āđˆāļēāļŠāļ™āđƒāļˆāļŦāļĨāļēāļĒāđ†āļĢāđ‰āļēāļ™ āđāļĨāļ°āļ­āļĒāļēāļāđ€āļŦāđ‡āļ™āđ€āļ­āļŠāđ€āļ­āļŸāļ•āļāđāļ•āđˆāļ‡āļŠāļ§āļĒāđ†āļ—āļąāđ‰āļ‡āļ āļēāļĒāđƒāļ™āđāļĨāļ°āļ āļēāļĒāļ™āļ­āļ āļĢāļ§āļĄāļ—āļąāđ‰āļ‡āļ”āđ‰āļēāļ™āļŦāļ™āđ‰āļēāļŦāđ‰āļēāļ‡āļ‹āļīāļ•āļĩāđ‰āļĄāļ­āļĨāļĨāđŒāļ”āđ‰āļ§āļĒ:)
-āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ”āļīāļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ‹āļīāļ•āļĩāđ‰āļĄāļ­āļĨāļĨāđŒāļ‹āļ·āđ‰āļ­āđ€āļžāļ·āđˆāļ­āļ‚āļĒāļēāļĒāļĄāļĩāļāļēāļĢāļ›āļĢāļąāļšāļžāļ·āđ‰āļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆāđƒāļŦāđ‰āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆāļˆāļ­āļ”āļĢāļ–āđāļĨāđ‰āļ§āđ€āļŦāļĢāļ­āļ„āļĢāļąāļš āđ€āļĢāđ‡āļ§āļˆāļąāļ‡ āđ€āļŦāļĄāļ·āļ­āļ™āđ€āļžāļīāđˆāļ‡āđ€āļŦāđ‡āļ™āļ§āđˆāļēāļĒāļąāļ‡āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ›āđˆāļēāļŦāļāđ‰āļēāļ­āļĒāļđāđˆāđ€āļĨāļĒ
āļ„āļļāļ“āđ€āļ›āļĩāđŠāļĒāļ
āļ›āļĢāļ°āđ€āļ”āđ‡āļ™ sfc + āļĢāđ‰āļēāļ™āļ„āđ‰āļēāļĒāđˆāļ­āļĒ āļŦāļĄāļēāļĒāļ–āļķāļ‡āļŠāļēāļ‚āļēāļ­āļļāļšāļĨāļŊāđ€āļŦāļĢāļ­āļ„āļĢāļąāļš
āļˆāļ°āđ„āļ”āđ‰āļĢāļ­āļĨāļļāđ‰āļ™āļ”āđ‰āļ§āļĒāļ„āļ™...

āļ‚āļ­āļ­āļ āļąāļĒāļ„āļĢāļąāļš
āļ­āđˆāļēāļ™āļœāļīāļ”āđ„āļ›āļ•āļ­āļ™āđāļĢāļāļ™āļķāļāļ§āđˆāļēāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™ FB āļ‚āļ­āļ‡ SFC
āđ€āļžāļīāđˆāļ‡āđ€āļŦāđ‡āļ™āļ§āđˆāļēāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™ FB āļ‚āļ­āļ‡ CITYMALL āļ‡āļąāđ‰āļ™āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļŠāļēāļ‚āļēāļ­āļļāļšāļĨāļŊāđāļŦāļ‡āļĄāđ†
 
#17,254 ·
^^āļ•āđ‰āļ­āļ‡āļĒāļ­āļĄāļĢāļąāļšāļ§āđˆāļēāļĨāļ°āđāļ§āļāļšāđ‰āļēāļ™āđ€āļĢāļēāļ›āļĢāļ°āļŠāļēāļāļĢāļˆāļģāļ™āļ§āļ™āļĄāļēāļāļĒāļąāļ‡āļĒāļēāļāļˆāļ™āļ„āļĢāļąāļš
āļ—āļģāđƒāļŦāđ‰āļĢ.āļž.āļĻāļđāļ™āļĒāđŒāļŠāļĢāļĢāļžāļŠāļīāļ—āļ˜āļīāļīāļ›āļĢāļ°āļŠāļ‡āļ„āđŒāļ•āđ‰āļ­āļ‡āļĢāļąāļšāļ āļēāļĢāļ°āļˆāļģāļ™āļ§āļ™āļĄāļēāļ āļ—āļąāđ‰āļ‡āļˆāļēāļāļ­āļļāļšāļĨāđ€āļ­āļ‡āđāļĨāļ°āđƒāļāļĨāđ‰āđ€āļ„āļĩāļĒāļ‡āļāļīāļ™āļžāļ·āđ‰āļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆāļĢāļąāļšāļœāļīāļ”āļŠāļ­āļšāđ„āļ›āļ–āļķāļ‡āļ™āļ„āļĢāļžāļ™āļĄāđ‚āļ™āđˆāļ™ āļĢāļ§āļĄāļ–āļķāļ‡āļžāļĩāđˆāļ™āđ‰āļ­āļ‡āļˆāļēāļāļ›āļĢāļ°āđ€āļ—āļĻāđ€āļžāļ·āđˆāļ­āļ™āļšāđ‰āļēāļ™āļ”āđ‰āļ§āļĒ āļ‚āļ“āļ°āļ—āļĩāđˆāļĢ.āļž.āļ­āļģāđ€āļ āļ­āđƒāļŦāļāđˆāđ†āļ­āļĒāđˆāļēāļ‡āļ§āļēāļĢāļīāļ™āļŠāļģāļĢāļēāļšāļāđ‡āđ€āļžāļīāđˆāļ‡āļĄāļēāļ‚āļĒāļēāļĒāļĢāļ°āļĒāļ°āļŦāļĨāļąāļ‡ āļĢāļ§āļĄāļ–āļķāļ‡āļĢ.āļž.āļŠāļĄāđ€āļ”āđ‡āļˆāļžāļĢāļ°āļĒāļļāļžāļĢāļēāļŠāđ€āļ”āļŠāļ­āļļāļ”āļĄ(āļĒāļąāļ‡āļ”āļĩāļ—āļĩāđˆāļ›āļąāļˆāļˆāļļāļšāļąāļ™āļšāļļāļĢāļĩāļĢāļąāļĄāļĒāđŒāđāļĨāļ°āļŠāļļāļĢāļīāļ™āļ—āļĢāđŒāļāđ‡āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļĢāļž.āļĻ.āđāļĨāđ‰āļ§ āđāļ•āđˆāļĻāļĢāļĩāļŠāļ°āđ€āļāļĐāļāđ‡āđ„āļ”āđ‰āļĒāļīāļ™āļ§āđˆāļēāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āđāļĨāđ‰āļ§ āđāļ•āđˆāļœāļĄāđ„āļĄāđˆāđāļ™āđˆāđƒāļˆ)

āļ­āļĒāđˆāļēāļ‡āļ­āļļāļ”āļĢ āļ‚āļ­āļ™āđāļāđˆāļ™ āđ‚āļ„āļĢāļēāļŠ āļĒāļąāļ‡āļ­āļĒāļđāđˆāļ•āļīāļ”āļāļąāļ™āđāļĨāļ°āļŠāđˆāļ‡āļ•āđˆāļ­āļāļąāļ™āđ„āļ”āđ‰āļŠāļšāļēāļĒ
āđ‚āļ”āļĒāđ€āļ‰āļžāļēāļ°āļ‚āļ­āļ™āđāļāđˆāļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆāļĄāļĩāļ—āļąāđ‰āļ‡āļĢ.āļž.āļĻāļđāļ™āļĒāđŒāļ‚āļ­āļ™āđāļāđˆāļ™āđāļĨāļ°āļĢ.āļž.āļĻāļĢāļĩāļ™āļ„āļĢāļīāļ™āļ—āļĢāđŒ
āļ‚āļ­āļ™āđāļāđˆāļ™āļ™āļĩāđˆāđ€āļĻāļĢāļĐāļāļāļīāļˆāļāđ‡āļ”āļĩ āļœāļđāđ‰āļ„āļ™āļāđ‡āļĄāļĩāļ„āļ§āļēāļĄāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ­āļĒāļđāđˆāļ”āļĩ āđ€āļžāļĢāļēāļ°āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āđ€āļĄāļ”āļīāļ„āļąāļĨāļŪāļąāļšāļ”āđ‰āļ§āļĒ

āļāđ‡āļŦāļ§āļąāļ‡āļ§āđˆāļēāļĢ.āļž.āļĄ.āļ­āļļāļšāļĨāļĢāļēāļŠāļ˜āļēāļ™āļĩ āļˆāļ°āđ€āļŠāļĢāđ‡āļˆāđ€āļĢāđ‡āļ§āđ† āļ•āļēāļĄāđāļœāļ™āļ„āļ·āļ­āđ€āļ›āļīāļ”āļ›āļĩ55āđƒāļŠāđˆāļĄāļąāđ‰āļĒāļ„āļĢāļąāļš
āļŠāđˆāļ§āļ™āļ•āļąāļ§āļ­āļĒāļēāļāđƒāļŦāđ‰āļĢ.āļž.āļāļ­āļ‡āļšāļīāļ™21āļžāļąāļ’āļ™āļēāđƒāļŦāđ‰āđ€āļ—āļĩāļĒāļšāđ€āļ—āđˆāļē āļĢ.āļž.āļ„āđˆāļēāļĒāļŠāļĢāļĢāļžāļŠāļīāļ—āļ˜āļīāļŊ


@SF āļ§āļąāļ™āļ™āļĩāļīāļœāđˆāļēāļ™āđ„āļ›āđāļ–āļ§āđ†Terminal21āļŦāđ‰āļēāļ‡āđƒāļŦāļāđˆāļ”āļĩ āđāļ–āļĄāļ›āđ‰āļēāļĒSFCāđ€āļšāđ‰āļ­āđ€āļĢāļīāđˆāļĄ
āļ„āļīāļ”āļ§āđˆāļēāļ—āļĩāđˆāļŠāļļāļ™āļĩāļĒāđŒāļ„āļ‡āļĄāļĩāļ›āđ‰āļēāļĒāđāļšāļšāđ€āļ”āļĩāļĒāļ§āļāļąāļ™āļĄāļēāļ•āļīāļ”āļšāļ™āļ•āļķāļāđ‚āļĢāļ‡āļŦāļ™āļąāļ‡āļŠāļąāđ‰āļ™āļšāļ™āđ†āļ”āđ‰āļēāļ™āļ‚āđ‰āļēāļ‡āļ­āļēāļ„āļēāļĢāļāļąāđˆāļ‡āļĢ.āļĢ.āļ­āļąāļŠāļŠāļąāļĄāļŠāļąāļāđƒāļŦāđ‰āļĄāļ­āļ‡āđ€āļŦāđ‡āļ™āđāļ•āđˆāđ„āļāļĨ
 
#17,255 · (Edited)
-āđ€āļĒāļĩāđˆāļĒāļĄāļ„āļĢāļąāļš āļ„āļļāļ“āļžāļĪāļĻāļˆāļī āļ—āļĩāđˆāļĄāļēāļŠāđˆāļ§āļĒāļ­āļąāļžāđ€āļ”āļ—āđ‚āļ„āļĢāļ‡āļāļēāļĢāļ•āđˆāļēāļ‡āđ†āđƒāļ™āđ€āļĄāļ·āļ­āļ‡āļ­āļļāļšāļĨāđ€āļĢāļē āļˆāļēāļāļĢāļđāļ›āļ•āļĨāļēāļ”āļ§āļēāļĢāļīāļ™āđ€āļˆāļĢāļīāļāļĻāļĢāļĩāļ—āļĩāđˆāđ€āļŦāđ‡āļ™āļĢāđ‰āļēāļ™āļāļģāļĨāļąāļ‡āļ•āļāđāļ•āđˆāļ‡āļ­āļĒāļđāđˆ āļ™āđˆāļēāļˆāļ°āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āđ‚āļĨāļ•āļąāļŠāđ€āļ­āđ‡āļāļ‹āđŒāđ€āļžāļĢāļŠāļˆāļĢāļīāļ‡āđ†āđāļĨāđ‰āļ§āļĨāđˆāļ°āļ„āļĢāļąāļš



-āļŠāđˆāļ§āļ™āđ‚āļĢāļ‡āļŦāļ™āļąāļ‡SFāļ—āļĩāđˆāļŠāļļāļ™āļĩāļĒāđŒāļ—āļēāđ€āļ§āļ­āļĢāđŒ āđ„āļ”āđ‰āļ‚āđˆāļēāļ§āļ§āđˆāļēāļ™āđˆāļēāļˆāļ°āļĄāļĩāļĢāđ‰āļēāļ™āđāļšāļĢāļ™āļ”āđŒāđ€āļ™āļĄāļĄāļēāđ€āļ›āļīāļ”āļŦāļĨāļēāļĒāļĢāđ‰āļēāļ™āļ„āļĢāļąāļš āļāļģāļĨāļąāļ‡āļ”āļīāļ§āļāļąāļ™āļ­āļĒāļđāđˆ
 
#17,256 ·
āđ€āļŦāđ‡āļ™āļ‚āđˆāļēāļ§āļ™āļĩāđ‰āđāļĨāđ‰āļ§āđ€āļŦāđ‡āļ™āđƒāļˆāđ‚āļĢāļ‡āļžāļĒāļēāļšāļēāļĨāđƒāļŦāļāđˆāļˆāļĢāļīāļ‡āđ†āļ„āļĢāļąāļš.....



āļĄāļĩāđ€āļ•āļĩāļĒāļ‡āđ„āļ­āļ‹āļĩāļĒāļđāļĄāļēāļāļ—āļĩāđˆāļŠāļļāļ”āđƒāļ™āļ›āļĢāļ°āđ€āļ—āļĻāđ€āļĨāļĒāđ€āļŦāļĢāļ­āļ„āļ°.....āļĄāļēāļāļāļ§āđˆāļēāļĻāļīāļĢāļīāļĢāļēāļŠ


āļ­āļ™āļēāļ„āļ•.....āļ™āļ­āļāļˆāļēāļāļ­āļļāļšāļĨāļŊāļˆāļ°āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļĻāļđāļ™āļĒāđŒāļāļĨāļēāļ‡āļāļēāļĢāļ„āđ‰āļēāļāļēāļĢāļĨāļ‡āļ—āļļāļ™āļāļąāļšāđ€āļžāļ·āđˆāļ­āļ™āļšāđ‰āļēāļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆāļŠāļģāļ„āļąāļāļĄāļēāļāđ† āđ‚āļĢāļŠāđ€āļŦāđ‡āļ™āļ§āđˆāļēāļĢāļąāļāļŊāļ•āđ‰āļ­āļ‡āļŠāļ™āļąāļšāļŠāļ™āļļāļ™āļ‡āļšāļ›āļĢāļ°āļĄāļēāļ“āđƒāļ™āļāļēāļĢāļœāļĨāļīāļ•āļšāļļāļ„āļĨāļēāļāļĢāļ—āļēāļ‡āļ”āđ‰āļēāļ™āđāļžāļ—āļĒāđŒāļžāļĒāļēāļšāļēāļĨāđāļĨāļ°āļāļēāļĢāļŠāļēāļ˜āļēāļĢāļ“āļŠāļļāļ‚āđƒāļ™āļ­āļļāļšāļĨāļŊāđƒāļŦāđ‰āļĄāļēāļāļāļ§āđˆāļēāļ™āļĩāđ‰āļŠāļąāļāļĢāđ‰āļ­āļĒāļŠāļąāļāļžāļąāļ™āđ€āļ—āđˆāļē

āđ€āļžāļĢāļēāļ°āļ­āļļāļšāļĨāļŊāļˆāļ°āļ•āđ‰āļ­āļ‡āļĢāļ­āļ‡āļĢāļąāļšāļœāļđāđ‰āļ›āđˆāļ§āļĒāļ—āļąāđ‰āļ‡āđƒāļ™āļ›āļĢāļ°āđ€āļ—āļĻāđāļĨāļ°āļ›āļĢāļ°āđ€āļ—āļĻāđ€āļžāļ·āđˆāļ­āļ™āļšāđ‰āļēāļ™āļĄāļēāļāļ‚āļķāđ‰āļ™āļŦāļĨāļēāļĒāđ€āļ—āđˆāļēāļ•āļąāļ§āđƒāļ™āļ­āļ™āļēāļ„āļ•āļ™āļ°āļ„āļ°
 
#17,257 ·
āļ­āļēāļ„āļēāļĢSFāļ™āļĩāđˆāļĄāļĩ5āļŠāļąāđ‰āļ™āđƒāļŠāđˆāļĄāļąāđ‰āļĒāļ„āļĢāļąāļš
1-3āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļĢāđ‰āļēāļ™āļ„āđ‰āļēāļ—āļĩāđˆāļˆāļ°āļĄāļēāđ€āļžāļīāđˆāļĄ 4-5āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āđ‚āļĢāļ‡āļŦāļ™āļąāļ‡
āļœāļĄāđ€āļ‚āđ‰āļēāđƒāļˆāļ–āļđāļāļĄāļąāđ‰āļĒ
 
#17,258 ·
āļĄāļēāļšāļ­āļāļ‚āđˆāļēāļ§āļ„āļĢāļąāļš āđ„āļ”āđ‰āļžāļīāļāļąāļ”āđ‚āļĨāļ•āļąāļŠāļ­āļĩāļāļ—āļĩāđˆāļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļ§āļēāļĢāļīāļ™āļ„āļĢāļąāļš
āļ­āļĒāļđāđˆāļ”āđ‰āļēāļ™āļ‚āđ‰āļēāļ‡āļ•āļĨāļēāļ”āđāļĄāđˆāļāļīāļĄāđ€āļ•āļĩāļĒāļ‡āļ•āļīāļ”āļāļąāļšāļĢāđ‰āļēāļ™āļ‚āđ‰āļēāļ§āļ•āđ‰āļĄāļ”āļ§āļ‡āļ”āļĩ
āļŠāļĄāļēāļŠāļīāļāļ—āđˆāļēāļ™āđƒāļ”āļœāđˆāļēāļ™āđ„āļ›āđāļ–āļ§āļ™āļąāđ‰āļ™āļĢāļšāļāļ§āļ™āļ–āđˆāļēāļĒāļĢāļđāļ›āļĄāļēāļāļēāļāļāļąāļ™āļ”āđ‰āļ§āļĒāļ™āļ°āļ„āļĢāļąāļš
āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ•āļĢāļ‡āļ™āļąāđ‰āļ™āđ€āļĨāđ‡āļāļĄāļēāļāļ™āđˆāļēāļˆāļ°āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āđ‚āļĨāļ•āļąāļŠāļ•āļĨāļēāļ”
 
#17,259 ·
^^āđƒāļŠāđˆāļ•āļĢāļ‡āļ”āđ‰āļēāļ™āļ‚āđ‰āļēāļ‡āļ•āļĨāļēāļ”āļĄāļąāđ‰āļĒāļ„āļĢāļąāļš āđ€āļŦāđ‡āļ™āđ€āļŦāļĄāļ·āļ­āļ™āļĄāļĩāļ—āļĩāđˆāļ§āđˆāļēāļ‡āļžāļ­āļˆāļ°āļˆāļ­āļ”āļĢāļ–āđ„āļ”āđ‰
āļ‚āļ™āļēāļ”āļāđ‡āļ™āđˆāļēāļˆāļ°āļĨāļ‡āļ•āļĨāļēāļ”āđ‚āļĨāļ•āļąāļŠāđ„āļ”āđ‰āļžāļ­āļ”āļĩ āđāļ•āđˆāđ‚āļĨāļ•āļąāļŠāļ§āļēāļĢāļīāļ™āļ™āļĩāđˆāļāđ‡āļĒāļąāļ‡āđ€āļ‡āļĩāļĒāļš āđ€āļŦāļ­āđ†
 
#17,260 ·
āļāļēāļĢāđ€āļ„āļŦāļ°āļŊāļŠāļđ ECO VILLAGE āļŠāļĢāđ‰āļēāļ‡āđāļšāļĢāļ™āļ”āđŒ āļŠāļēāļ™āļ•āđˆāļ­ ‘āļšāđ‰āļēāļ™āđ€āļ­āļ·āđ‰āļ­āļ­āļēāļ—āļĢ’ 2.8 āđāļŠāļ™āļĒāļđāļ™āļīāļ•

āļāļ„āļŠ.āļĨāļļāļĒāļŠāļĢāđ‰āļēāļ‡ “āļšāđ‰āļēāļ™āđ€āļ­āļ·āđ‰āļ­āļ­āļēāļ—āļĢ” 2.81 āđāļŠāļ™āļĒāļđāļ™āļīāļ• āļĢāļ­āļ‡āļĢāļąāļšāļ„āļ™āļĢāļēāļĒāđ„āļ”āđ‰āļ™āđ‰āļ­āļĒ āļžāļĢāđ‰āļ­āļĄāđ€āļ”āļīāļ™āļŦāļ™āđ‰āļē 29 āđ‚āļ„āļĢāļ‡āļāļēāļĢ ECO VILLAGE āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ­āļĒāļđāđˆāļ­āļēāļĻāļąāļĒāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļĄāļīāļ•āļĢāļāļąāļšāļŠāļīāđˆāļ‡āđāļ§āļ”āļĨāđ‰āļ­āļĄ āđāļĨāļ°āļ™āļģāļ—āļĩāđˆāļ”āļīāļ™ 11 āđāļ›āļĨāļ‡āđƒāļŦāđ‰āđ€āļ­āļāļŠāļ™āļ—āļģāļšāđ‰āļēāļ™āđ€āļ”āļĩāđˆāļĒāļ§-āļ—āļēāļ§āļ™āđŒāđ€āļŪāļēāļŠāđŒ

āļŦāļĨāļąāļ‡āļˆāļēāļāļ—āļĩāđˆāļ„āļ“āļ°āļĢāļąāļāļĄāļ™āļ•āļĢāļĩ āļĄāļĩāļĄāļ•āļīāđ€āļŦāđ‡āļ™āļŠāļ­āļšāđƒāļŦāđ‰āļāļēāļĢāđ€āļ„āļŦāļ°āđāļŦāđˆāļ‡āļŠāļēāļ•āļīāļˆāļąāļ”āļ—āļģāđāļœāļ™āļžāļĨāļīāļāļŸāļ·āđ‰āļ™ āđ‚āļ”āļĒāđƒāļŦāđ‰āļ„āļ‡āļ˜āļļāļĢāļāļĢāļĢāļĄāđ‚āļ„āļĢāļ‡āļāļēāļĢāļšāđ‰āļēāļ™āđ€āļ­āļ·āđ‰āļ­āļ­āļēāļ—āļĢāđ„āļ§āđ‰āļ•āđˆāļ­āđ„āļ› āļ‹āļķāđˆāļ‡āđ„āļ”āđ‰āļĢāļąāļšāļĄāļ­āļšāļŦāļĄāļēāļĒāļˆāļēāļ āļ™āļēāļĒāļŠāļąāļ™āļ•āļī āļžāļĢāđ‰āļ­āļĄāļžāļąāļ’āļ™āđŒ āļĢāļąāļāļĄāļ™āļ•āļĢāļĩāļ§āđˆāļēāļāļēāļĢāļāļĢāļ°āļ—āļĢāļ§āļ‡āļāļēāļĢāļžāļąāļ’āļ™āļēāļŠāļąāļ‡āļ„āļĄāđāļĨāļ°āļ„āļ§āļēāļĄāļĄāļąāđˆāļ™āļ„āļ‡āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļĄāļ™āļļāļĐāļĒāđŒ (āļžāļĄ.) āđƒāļŦāđ‰āļŠāļĢāđ‰āļēāļ‡āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ­āļĒāļđāđˆāļ­āļēāļĻāļąāļĒāļ āļēāļĒāđƒāļ•āđ‰āđ‚āļ„āļĢāļ‡āļāļēāļĢāļšāđ‰āļēāļ™āđ€āļ­āļ·āđ‰āļ­āļ­āļēāļ—āļĢ āļ•āļēāļĄ āļ„āļ§āļēāļĄāđ€āļŦāļĄāļēāļ°āļŠāļĄāļ‚āļ­āļ‡āļ—āļģāđ€āļĨāļ—āļĩāđˆāļ•āļąāđ‰āļ‡āđāļĨāļ°āļĢāļēāļ„āļēāļ‚āļēāļĒ āđ€āļžāļ·āđˆāļ­āđ„āļĄāđˆāđƒāļŦāđ‰āđ€āļāļīāļ”āļ›āļąāļāļŦāļēāļ‹āđ‰āļģāļĢāļ­āļĒāđ‚āļ„āļĢāļ‡āļāļēāļĢāļšāđ‰āļēāļ™āđ€āļ­āļ·āđ‰āļ­āļ­āļēāļ—āļĢāđ€āļ”āļīāļĄ

āļ™āļēāļĒāļ§āļīāļ‘āļđāļĢāļĒāđŒ āđ€āļˆāļĩāļĒāļŠāļāļļāļĨ āļœāļđāđ‰āļ§āđˆāļēāļāļēāļĢ āļāļēāļĢāđ€āļ„āļŦāļ°āđāļŦāđˆāļ‡āļŠāļēāļ•āļī (āļāļ„āļŠ.) āđ€āļ›āļīāļ”āđ€āļœāļĒāļ§āđˆāļē āļāļēāļĢāļˆāļąāļ”āļ—āļģāđ‚āļ„āļĢāļ‡āļāļēāļĢāđ€āļžāļ·āđˆāļ­āļ„āļ™āļĢāļēāļĒāđ„āļ”āđ‰āļ™āđ‰āļ­āļĒ “āļšāđ‰āļēāļ™āđ€āļ­āļ·āđ‰āļ­āļ­āļēāļ—āļĢ” āļ‹āļķāđˆāļ‡āļĄāļĩāđ€āļ›āđ‰āļēāļŦāļĄāļēāļĒāļ”āļģāđ€āļ™āļīāļ™āļāļēāļĢ āļˆāļģāļ™āļ§āļ™ 281,556 āļŦāļ™āđˆāļ§āļĒ āļ‚āļ“āļ°āļ™āļĩāđ‰āļāđˆāļ­āļŠāļĢāđ‰āļēāļ‡āđāļĨāđ‰āļ§āđ€āļŠāļĢāđ‡āļˆ 246,036 āļŦāļ™āđˆāļ§āļĒ (āļ‚āđ‰āļ­āļĄāļđāļĨ āļ“ āļĄāļī.āļĒ.54) āļ„āļēāļ”āļ§āđˆāļē āļŠāđˆāļ§āļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆāđ€āļŦāļĨāļ·āļ­āļˆāļ°āļāđˆāļ­āļŠāļĢāđ‰āļēāļ‡āđāļĨāđ‰āļ§āđ€āļŠāļĢāđ‡āļˆāļžāļĢāđ‰āļ­āļĄāļŠāđˆāļ‡āļĄāļ­āļšāļ­āļēāļ„āļēāļĢāļ—āļąāđ‰āļ‡āļŦāļĄāļ”āļ āļēāļĒāđƒāļ™āļ•āđ‰āļ™āļ›āļĩ 2556 āđāļĨāļ°āđ‚āļ„āļĢāļ‡āļāļēāļĢāļ—āļĩāđˆāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļĄāļīāļ•āļĢāļāļąāļšāļŠāļīāđˆāļ‡āđāļ§āļ”āļĨāđ‰āļ­āļĄ 29 āđ‚āļ„āļĢāļēāļ‡āļāļēāļĢ

āđ‚āļ”āļĒāļĨāđˆāļēāļŠāļļāļ”āļĄāļ­āļšāļŦāļĄāļēāļĒāđƒāļŦāđ‰āļ™āļēāļ‡āļžāļĢāļĢāļ“āļŠāļļāļ āļē āļĒāļļāļ—āļ˜āļ āļąāļ“āļ‘āđŒāļšāļĢāļīāļ āļēāļĢ āļœāļđāđ‰āļŠāđˆāļ§āļĒāļœāļđāđ‰āļ§āđˆāļēāļāļēāļĢ āļāļēāļĢāđ€āļ„āļŦāļ°āđāļŦāđˆāļ‡āļŠāļēāļ•āļī āļ”āļģāđ€āļ™āļīāļ™āļāļēāļĢāđƒāļ™āđ€āļĢāļ·āđˆāļ­āļ‡āļāļēāļĢāļ‚āļēāļĒ āđ‚āļ„āļĢāļ‡āļāļēāļĢāļšāđ‰āļēāļ™āđ€āļ­āļ·āđ‰āļ­āļ­āļēāļ—āļĢāļ—āļĩāđˆāđ€āļŦāļĨāļ·āļ­āļˆāļģāļ™āļ§āļ™ 40,000 āļĒāļđāļ™āļīāļ•āđƒāļŦāđ‰āļŦāļĄāļ” āļ‹āļķāđˆāļ‡āđ€āļĢāļīāđˆāļĄāļ§āļąāļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆ 1 āļ•āļļāļĨāļēāļ„āļĄ āļ™āļĩāđ‰āđāļĨāļ°āđ€āļĢāđˆāļ‡āđ‚āļ„āļĢāļ‡āļāļēāļĢāļšāđ‰āļēāļ™āđ€āļ­āļ·āđ‰āļ­āļ­āļēāļ—āļĢ āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ­āļĒāļđāđˆāļĢāļ°āļŦāļ§āđˆāļēāļ‡āļāļēāļĢāļāđˆāļ­āļŠāļĢāđ‰āļēāļ‡āļ­āļĩāļ 14,000-15,000 āļŦāļ™āđˆāļ§āļĒāđƒāļŦāđ‰āđ€āļŠāļĢāđ‡āļˆ āđ‚āļ”āļĒāļˆāļ°āđƒāļŦāđ‰āļ—āļĒāļ­āļĒāđ€āļŠāļĢāđ‡āļˆāļ•āļąāđ‰āļ‡āđāļ•āđˆāļ›āļĩ 2555 āđāļĨāļ°āļ•āđ‰āļ­āļ‡āđ€āļŠāļĢāđ‡āļˆāļ—āļąāđ‰āļ‡āļŦāļĄāļ”āđƒāļ™āļ›āļĩ 2556

āļŠāđˆāļ§āļ™āđ‚āļ„āļĢāļ‡āļāļēāļĢāđ€āļ„āļŦāļ°āļŠāļļāļĄāļŠāļ™ āđƒāļ™āļ›āļĩāļ‡āļš āļ›āļĢāļ°āļĄāļēāļ“āđƒāļŦāļĄāđˆāļ™āļĩāđ‰ āļāļēāļĢāđ€āļ„āļŦāļ°āļŊ āļˆāļ°āļ—āļģāļāļēāļĢāļ‹āđˆāļ­āļĄ āđāļĨāļ°āļ™āļģāļĄāļēāļ‚āļēāļĒāđƒāļŦāļĄāđˆāļ­āļĩāļāļ„āļĢāļąāđ‰āļ‡āđāļ•āđˆāļˆāļ°āļĄāļĩāļāļēāļĢāļ›āļĢāļąāļš āļĢāļēāļ„āļēāļ‚āļēāļĒāđ€āļžāļīāđˆāļĄāļ‚āļķāđ‰āļ™ āđ€āļžāļ·āđˆāļ­āđ„āļĄāđˆāđƒāļŦāđ‰āļāļēāļĢāđ€āļ„āļŦāļ°āļŊāļ•āđ‰āļ­āļ‡ āļ—āļīāđ‰āļ‡āļ­āļēāļ„āļēāļĢāđ„āļ§āđ‰ āđāļĨāļ°āļĨāļ”āļ‚āļēāļ”āļ—āļļāļ™ āđ‚āļ”āļĒāļāļēāļĢāļ‹āđˆāļ­āļĄ āđ‚āļ„āļĢāļ‡āļāļēāļĢāđāļĨāļ°āļ‚āļēāļĒāļ™āļąāđ‰āļ™āđ„āļ”āđ‰āļ”āļģāđ€āļ™āļīāļ™āļāļēāļĢāđāļĨāđ‰āļ§āļ•āļąāđ‰āļ‡āđāļ•āđˆāđ€āļ”āļ·āļ­āļ™āļŠāļīāļ‡āļŦāļēāļ„āļĄāļ—āļĩāđˆāļœāđˆāļēāļ™āļĄāļēāđāļĨāļ°āļˆāļ°āļ—āļĒāļ­āļĒ āļ‹āđˆāļ­āļĄāđ„āļ›āđ€āļĢāļ·āđˆāļ­āļĒāđ† āđ€āļ™āļ·āđˆāļ­āļ‡āļˆāļēāļāļ—āļĩāđˆāļœāđˆāļēāļ™āļĄāļēāļāļēāļĢāđ€āļ„āļŦāļ°āļŊ āđ„āļ”āđ‰āļ‚āļēāļĒāđ‚āļ„āļĢāļ‡āļāļēāļĢāđ€āļ„āļŦāļ°āļŠāļļāļĄāļŠāļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆāļĒāļķāļ”āļ„āļ·āļ™āļĄāļēāļˆāļēāļāļĨāļđāļāļ„āđ‰āļē āđ‚āļ”āļĒāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļāļēāļĢāļ‚āļēāļĒāļ•āļēāļĄāļŠāļ āļēāļžāđƒāļŦāđ‰āļĨāļđāļāļ„āđ‰āļēāđ„āļ›āļ‹āđˆāļ­āļĄāđ€āļ­āļ‡

āļ™āļ­āļāļˆāļēāļāļ™āļĩāđ‰ āļĒāļąāļ‡āđ€āļĢāđˆāļ‡āļˆāļąāļ”āļ—āļģāđ‚āļ„āļĢāļ‡āļāļēāļĢāļ—āļĩāđˆāļ­āļĒāļđāđˆāļ­āļēāļĻāļąāļĒāļ—āļĩāđˆāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļĄāļīāļ•āļĢāļāļąāļšāļŠāļīāđˆāļ‡āđāļ§āļ”āļĨāđ‰āļ­āļĄ āļ āļēāļĒāđƒāļ•āđ‰āđ‚āļ„āļĢāļ‡āļāļēāļĢāļ™āđˆāļēāļ­āļĒāļđāđˆāļ™āđˆāļēāļŠāļšāļēāļĒāļ­āļĒāđˆāļēāļ‡āļĒāļąāđˆāļ‡āļĒāļ·āļ™ (ECO VILLAGE) āđ‚āļ”āļĒāļĄāļĩāļāļēāļĢāļ­āļ­āļāđāļšāļšāļ—āļĩāđˆāļ„āļģāļ™āļķāļ‡āļ–āļķāļ‡āļāļēāļĢāļ›āļĢāļ°āļŦāļĒāļąāļ”āļžāļĨāļąāļ‡āļ‡āļēāļ™ āđāļĨāļ°āļ™āļģāļ§āļąāļŠāļ”āļļāļāđˆāļ­āļŠāļĢāđ‰āļēāļ‡āļ—āļĩāđˆāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļĄāļīāļ•āļĢāļāļąāļšāļŠāļīāđˆāļ‡āđāļ§āļ”āļĨāđ‰āļ­āļĄāļĄāļēāđƒāļŠāđ‰āđƒāļ™āļāļēāļĢāļāđˆāļ­āļŠāļĢāđ‰āļēāļ‡

āļ‚āļ“āļ°āļ™āļĩāđ‰āļĄāļĩāđāļœāļ™āļ”āļģāđ€āļ™āļīāļ™āļāļēāļĢāđƒāļ™āļžāļ·āđ‰āļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆāļāļĢāļļāļ‡āđ€āļ—āļžāļĄāļŦāļēāļ™āļ„āļĢ āļ›āļĢāļīāļĄāļ“āļ‘āļĨ āđāļĨāļ°āļ āļđāļĄāļīāļ āļēāļ„ āļˆāļģāļ™āļ§āļ™ 29 āđ‚āļ„āļĢāļ‡āļāļēāļĢ āđāļĨāļ°āļˆāļ°āļ™āļģāļĢāđˆāļ­āļ‡ 9 āđ‚āļ„āļĢāļ‡āļāļēāļĢ āļ­āļēāļ—āļī āđ‚āļ„āļĢāļ‡āļāļēāļĢāļĻāļĢāļĩāļ™āļ§āļĄāļīāļ™āļ—āļĢāđŒ 2, āļžāļēāļĢāđŒāļ„āļ§āļīāļĨāļĨāđŒ āļĢāđˆāļĄāđ€āļāļĨāđ‰āļēāļžāļēāļĢāđŒāļ„āļ§āļīāļĨāļĨāđŒ āļāļĢāļļāļ‡āđ€āļ—āļž-āļāļĢāļĩāļ‘āļē, āļšāļēāļ‡āļžāļĨāļĩ āļ—āļēāļ§āļ™āđŒāđ‚āļŪāļĄ, āļāļĢāļĩāļ™āļ§āļīāļĨāļĨāđŒ āļ‚āļ­āļ™āđāļāđˆāļ™ āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ•āđ‰āļ™

āļŠāđˆāļ§āļ™āđāļœāļ™āđ‚āļ„āļĢāļ‡āļāļēāļĢāļĢāđˆāļ§āļĄāļ—āļļāļ™āļāļąāļšāļ āļēāļ„āđ€āļ­āļāļŠāļ™ āđ€āļžāļ·āđˆāļ­āļ›āļĢāļąāļšāļšāļ—āļšāļēāļ—āļ­āļ‡āļ„āđŒāļāļĢāđƒāļŦāđ‰āļŠāļ­āļ”āļ„āļĨāđ‰āļ­āļ‡āļāļąāļšāļāļēāļĢāļ”āļģāđ€āļ™āļīāļ™āļ‡āļēāļ™āđƒāļ™āļ­āļ™āļēāļ„āļ• āđ‚āļ”āļĒāđ€āļ›āļīāļ”āđ‚āļ­āļāļēāļŠāđƒāļŦāđ‰āđ€āļ­āļāļŠāļ™āļĢāđˆāļ§āļĄāļĨāļ‡āļ—āļļāļ™āļšāļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ”āļīāļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆāļĄāļĩāļĻāļąāļāļĒāļ āļēāļžāđāļĨāļ°āļĢāļ­āļāļēāļĢāļžāļąāļ’āļ™āļē āļ‚āļ“āļ°āļ™āļĩāđ‰āļĄāļĩāđāļœāļ™ āļ—āļĩāđˆāļˆāļ°āļ™āļģāļ—āļĩāđˆāļ”āļīāļ™ 11 āđāļ›āļĨāļ‡ āļĄāļēāļžāļąāļ’āļ™āļēāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļ—āļĩāđˆāļ­āļĒāļđāđˆāļ­āļēāļĻāļąāļĒāļ›āļĢāļ°āđ€āļ āļ—āļ•āđˆāļēāļ‡āđ† āļ­āļēāļ—āļī āļšāđ‰āļēāļ™āđ€āļ”āļĩāđˆāļĒāļ§ āļ—āļēāļ§āļ™āđŒāđ€āļŪāļēāļŠāđŒ āļ—āļēāļ§āļ™āđŒāđ‚āļŪāļĄ āļ­āļēāļ„āļēāļĢāļžāļēāļ“āļīāļŠāļĒāđŒ āļŊāļĨāļŊ āđāļšāđˆāļ‡āđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āļāļēāļĢāļžāļąāļ’āļ™āļēāđ‚āļ„āļĢāļ‡āļāļēāļĢāļ—āļĩāđˆāļĄāļĩāļĄāļđāļĨāļ„āđˆāļēāļ™āđ‰āļ­āļĒāļāļ§āđˆāļē 1,000 āļĨāđ‰āļēāļ™āļšāļēāļ— 10 āđ‚āļ„āļĢāļ‡āļāļēāļĢ āđ„āļ”āđ‰āđāļāđˆ āđ‚āļ„āļĢāļ‡āļāļēāļĢāđ€āļŠāļĩāļĒāļ‡āđƒāļŦāļĄāđˆ 3/2 (āļŦāļ™āļ­āļ‡āļŦāļ­āļĒ), āđ€āļŠāļĩāļĒāļ‡āđƒāļŦāļĄāđˆ (āļ”āļ­āļĒāļŠāļ°āđ€āļāđ‡āļ”), āļŠāļĨāļšāļļāļĢāļĩ (āļŠāļąāļĒāļžāļĢāļ§āļīāļ–āļĩ), āļĢāļ°āļĒāļ­āļ‡ (āļšāđ‰āļēāļ™āļ‰āļēāļ‡ 2), āļĢāđˆāļĄāđ€āļāļĨāđ‰āļē, āļāļĢāļ°āļšāļĩāđˆāļ™āđ‰āļ­āļĒ, āļ āļđāđ€āļāđ‡āļ• (āļ–āļĨāļēāļ‡), āļ āļđāđ€āļāđ‡āļ• 2 (āļāļēāļĢāļ—āđˆāļēāļŊ), āļ āļđāđ€āļāđ‡āļ• (āđ€āļ—āļžāļāļĢāļ°āļĐāļąāļ•āļĢāļĩ) āđāļĨāļ°āđ‚āļ„āļĢāļ‡āļāļēāļĢāļ•āļĢāļąāļ‡

āļ—āļąāđ‰āļ‡āļ™āļĩāđ‰ āđ‚āļ„āļĢāļ‡āļāļēāļĢāļ—āļĩāđˆāļĄāļĩāļĄāļđāļĨāļ„āđˆāļēāļĄāļēāļāļāļ§āđˆāļē 1,000 āļĨāđ‰āļēāļ™āļšāļēāļ— 1 āđ‚āļ„āļĢāļ‡āļāļēāļĢ āđ„āļ”āđ‰āđāļāđˆ āđ‚āļ„āļĢāļ‡āļāļēāļĢāļšāļēāļ‡āļžāļĨāļĩ āļ‚āļ“āļ°āļ™āļĩāđ‰āļ­āļĒāļđāđˆāļĢāļ°āļŦāļ§āđˆāļēāļ‡āļāļēāļĢāļĻāļķāļāļĐāļēāļ„āļ§āļēāļĄāđ€āļ›āđ‡āļ™āđ„āļ›āđ„āļ”āđ‰āļ‚āļ­āļ‡āđ‚āļ„āļĢāļ‡āļāļēāļĢ āļˆāļ°āļ›āļĢāļ°āļāļēāļĻāđ€āļŠāļīāļāļŠāļ§āļ™āđ€āļ­āļāļŠāļ™āļĢāđˆāļ§āļĄāļĨāļ‡āļ—āļļāļ™āļ›āļĢāļ°āļĄāļēāļ“āļ›āļĨāļēāļĒ āļ›āļĩ 2554 āđāļĨāļ°āđ„āļ”āđ‰āļ™āļģāļĢāđˆāļ­āļ‡ 4 āđ‚āļ„āļĢāļ‡āļāļēāļĢ āļ—āļĩāđˆāļĄāļĩāļĄāļđāļĨāļ„āđˆāļēāļ™āđ‰āļ­āļĒāļāļ§āđˆāļē 1,000 āļĨāđ‰āļēāļ™āļšāļēāļ— āđ„āļ”āđ‰āđāļāđˆ āđ‚āļ„āļĢāļ‡āļāļēāļĢāļšāļēāļ‡āļžāļĨāļĩ āļ—āļēāļ§āļ™āđŒāđ‚āļŪāļĄ, āļāļĢāļĩāļ™āļ§āļīāļĨāļĨāđŒ āļ‚āļ­āļ™āđāļāđˆāļ™, āļ™āļ„āļĢāļŠāļ§āļĢāļĢāļ„āđŒ āļ™āļīāļ§āļĄāļēāļĢāđŒāļ— āđāļĨāļ°āđ‚āļ„āļĢāļ‡āļāļēāļĢāļ­āļļāļšāļĨāļĢāļēāļŠāļ˜āļēāļ™āļĩ āļ—āļēāļ§āļ™āđŒāđ‚āļŪāļĄ

āļŠāļĒāļēāļĄāļ˜āļļāļĢāļāļīāļˆ
 
Top