Colors of Ayutthaya Full-Day Bike Tour


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From $60.94

37 reviews   (4.76)

Price varies by group size

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Pricing Info: Per Person

Duration: 6 hours

Departs: Thailand, Thailand

Ticket Type: Mobile or paper ticket accepted

Free cancellation

Up to 24 hours in advance.

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Overview

The once mighty city of Ayutthaya was founded in 1350 and became the second Siamese capital after Sukhothai. Cycling through the countryside and the historical city is the most enjoyable way to explore Ayutthaya.

Join the Colors of Ayutthaya full-day bicycle tour takes you off the beaten track and shows you the real Ayutthaya!


What's Included

Bottled water and lunch

Professional guide

Use of bicycle

What's Not Included

Alcoholic drinks (available to purchase)

Gratuities


Traveler Information

  • INFANT: Age: 0 - 5
  • CHILD: Age: 6 - 11
  • ADULT: Age: 12 - 80

Additional Info

  • Face masks required for travellers in public areas
  • Hand sanitiser available to travellers and staff
  • NOTE: Since you will visit ancient temples, you are expected to dress respectfully. We recommend you to wear longer shorts (knees covered) and to have your shoulders covered when we enter the temples.
  • Regular temperature checks for staff
  • Social distancing enforced throughout experience
  • Suitable for all physical fitness levels
  • Vegetarian option is available, please advise at time of booking if required
  • Face masks required for guides in public areas
  • Guides required to regularly wash hands
  • Minimum age to join the tour is 12 years. Children younger than 12 years will not be accepted on our join in tour.
  • Public transportation options are available nearby
  • Regularly sanitised high-traffic areas
  • Specialized infant seats are available
  • Temperature checks for travellers upon arrival

Cancellation Policy

For a full refund, cancel at least 24 hours before the scheduled departure time.

  • For a full refund, you must cancel at least 24 hours before the experience’s start time.
  • If you cancel less than 24 hours before the experience’s start time, the amount you paid will not be refunded.

What To Expect

Recreational Ayutthaya Biking
Here we start and finish our ride. Select the bicycles and adjust the seats and off we go.

10 minutes • Admission Ticket Included

Temple of the Reclining Buddha (Wat Lokayasutharam)
Wat Lokaya Sutha is a massive temple ruin. It is aligned toward an east/west axis. The monastery has been heavily restored, including floor tiles and brick floors throughout. Most of the temple exists only at the basic foundation level. This includes some stubs of pillars and basic walls. At the eastern entrance are the remnants of three vihans. Behind these sermon halls is a large 30 meters high, Late Ayutthaya period, Khmer-style prang. This prang-tower has a hollow entrance on its eastern side. The remains of an ubsot can be seen behind the prang. Only the basic foundation layer has survived, but there are many sema stones and the detritus of Buddha images. A large bell tower stands on the southwestern corner of this ubosot.

The highlight of this temple is its enormous reclining Buddha image (37 meters long and 8 meter high), which is located behind the ubosot.

10 minutes • Admission Ticket Free

Wat Phra Sri Sanphet
Wat Phra Si Sanphet (Thai: วัดพระศรีสรรเพชญ์; "Temple of the Holy, Splendid Omniscient") was the holiest temple on the site of the old Royal Palace in Thailand's ancient capital of Ayutthaya until the city was completely destroyed by the Burmese in 1767. It was the grandest and most beautiful temple in the capital and it served as a model for Wat Phra Kaew in Bangkok.

10 minutes • Admission Ticket Included

Wat Mahathat
Wat Mahathat, “the temple of the Great Relic” was one of the most important temples in the Ayutthaya Kingdom. Located on the historical island the large monastery features a huge central prang, a very large principal viharn and ubosot and a great number of subsidiary chedis and viharns. The upper part of its once massive central prang has collapsed. Today only the base remains.

One of the temple’s most photographed objects is the head of a stone Buddha image entwined in the roots of a tree.

10 minutes • Admission Ticket Included

Wat Chaiwatthanaram
Wat Chaiwattanaram rests on the bank of the Chao Phraya river, to the west of the city island. The temple was ordered to built in 1630 by King Prasat Thong to honor his mother, featuring the architectural style influenced by Angkor temple in Cambodia—its unique feature is a large, central prang (Khmer-style pagoda) surrounded by smaller prangs, symbolizing Mount Sumeru, the gods' mountain according to Hindu belief.

10 minutes • Admission Ticket Included

Historic City of Ayutthaya
The Ayutthaya Historical Park comprises of the ruins of temples and palaces of the capital of the ancient Ayutthaya Kingdom. The park is located on an island surrounded by three rivers where the old capital used to be.

The Ayutthaya Kingdom, which existed from 1351 until 1767 was one of the largest and most prosperous empires of its time. The ruins of many impressive temples and palaces give an impression of the wealth of the ancient Kingdom.

40 minutes • Admission Ticket Free

Vihara Phra Mongkhon Bophit
Phra Mongkhon Bophit or the Buddha of the Holy and Supremely Auspicious

Reverence was sculpted in 1538 in the reign of King Chairacha (r. 1534-1547) at Wat

Chi Chiang Sai. 1538 is generally accepted as the year that the image was built, based

on the Luang Prasoet version of the Royal Chronicles of Ayutthaya (Most of the other

versions put its construction at 880 of the Chulasakkarat era or somehow 20 years

earlier).

10 minutes • Admission Ticket Free






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