Tad Ton National Park
Tat Ton National Park is a national park in Chaiyaphum Province. It was declared a national park on December 31, 1980, making it the 23rd national park in Thailand. The park is located on the Phu Laen Kha mountain range, covering about one-fourth of the Phu Laen Kha mountain range. It is generally a plateau surrounded by mountains. The middle part is a wide valley. The area of the national park in the northwest is Phu Khiao, Phu Klang, and Phu Laen Kha, which have the highest elevation of 905 meters above mean sea level. In the northeast is Phu Laen Kha, the highest peak of Tat Ton National Park, with the elevation of approximately 945 meters above mean sea level. These high peaks are the source of many important streams and the origin of Tat Ton Waterfall, including Huai Lam Pha Tao or Huai Tat Ton, Huai Nam Sap, Huai Khro, Huai Tat Ton Noi, Huai Si Nuan, and Huai Kaen Thao, which all flow together to form Huai Pha Tao and flow through Mueang District, Chaiyaphum Province. In addition, there are also important streams, such as Huai Chi Long, Huai Choraka, Huai Siao, Huai Khan, and Huai Siao Noi. The forest is dry evergreen forest. In the area along the stream, valley and mountain peak, there is fertile soil and the dry dipterocarp forest is gravel soil with relatively low fertility. #National park worth visiting