Days 8–9 · The Road to NanMountain Drive & Orange Country
The drive from Chiang Rai south to Nan takes three hours on a road that passes through mountains and valleys that most foreign visitors never see. There are viewpoints worth stopping at: pull out the camera and let the view take the time it deserves. Nan itself is a small, quietly beautiful city that has kept its historic core largely intact — wooden shophouses, temples with gilded ceilings, and a market scene that runs on local rhythms rather than tourist ones.
On the way, or on a morning excursion from Nan, you visit the orange orchards. Nan's oranges have a national reputation earned by altitude: the cool nights at these elevations do something to the sugar chemistry that lowland groves cannot match. At the orchard, you walk in among the trees and pick directly from branches. The fruit is juiced on the spot. The difference from anything you have bought in a shop is immediate and permanent.
Season note: Orange harvest runs from late October through February. If your travel falls outside this window, we substitute visits to other seasonal produce — we will always tell you in advance what is ready when you arrive.
Days 10–11 · The Organic HighlandsBo Kluea District Hill Farms
The road from Nan town to Bo Kluea district is a narrow valley road that climbs to nearly 1,000 metres — past small hillside villages, stretches of the Nan River, and occasional views that make the whole journey worth it. Bo Kluea sits at an altitude where the air is cool year-round, and the farms here produce vegetables with a flavour intensity that the lowlands cannot match simply because plants grow more slowly and concentratedly at elevation.
The organic farms we visit are not demonstration plots. These are working operations run by farmers who made the shift from conventional hill-slope corn farming — which was stripping the topsoil — to organic systems that sell directly to Chiang Mai hotels and restaurants. You walk the plots, learn how they make compost from kitchen scraps, and taste vegetables straight from the earth: cherry tomatoes sweet enough to eat like candy, basil with a fragrance that the imported variety simply does not have.
The day is designed with space to breathe. Lunch at a local family kitchen. An afternoon walk through the village. No schedule beyond the farm visit itself.
Day 12 · Nan Walking Street & Temple TimeThe City Itself
Nan's walking street — on Saturday and Sunday evenings — is one of the few in Northern Thailand that has held its genuinely local character. The scale is small, the vendors are mostly townspeople, and the food on offer is Nan-specific: haw mee pan (a rice noodle dish found almost nowhere outside this city), khao pun (rice noodles in a rich northern curry broth with dried kapok flowers), and Nan-style larb whose spicing is completely different from the Isan version most visitors have tried. In the daytime, Nan's temples — particularly Wat Phumin with its celebrated mural paintings — reward a slow morning.
Days 13–14 · Phayao — Lychee Country & the Submerged TempleKwan Phayao Lake
Phayao is a small city on the road between Nan and Chiang Mai that almost every itinerary skips. That is its best quality. Kwan Phayao — the largest freshwater lake in Northern Thailand — sits in the middle of the city and reads as a sea of liquid jade, ringed by mountains on all sides. At its centre, barely visible, is Wat Tilok Aram: a temple built in the fifteenth century and submerged when a dam was raised in the reign of Rama V. In the dry season (January to April), the stupa's top emerges from the water. Your boat moves toward it slowly across the afternoon surface, and the guide does not fill the silence.
Before the lake, the Phayao orchards: if your travel falls in the lychee season (late April through June), this is a different experience entirely from what was available in Chiang Rai. Lychee picked warm from the branch and eaten immediately — the flesh still cool from the night air inside — is not the same fruit that arrives in supermarkets after a two-day transit. Out of season, the orchards offer other fruits: mango, maprang, and the farm visit retains its character even without the headline crop.
Day fourteen is unhurried: a final breakfast on the lake, and then either a two-hour drive to Chiang Mai or the scenic route back to Chiang Rai for your departure flight. Your guide stays with you until you are safely checked in.
Ending options: The journey can end in Phayao, Chiang Mai, or Chiang Rai depending on your outward flight. We will plan the final day around your departure time.