Kok River
Kok River (แม่น้ำกก) | |
The Kok River in Amphoe Mae Ai, Chiang Mai Province | |
Countries | Burma, Thailand |
---|---|
States | Shan State, Chiang Mai Province, Chiang Rai Province |
Districts | Mae Ai, Mueang Chiang Rai, Mae Chan, Wiang Chai, Chiang Saen |
Tributaries | |
- right | Fang, Lao River |
City | Chiang Rai city |
Source | |
- location | Daen Lao Range, Shan State, Burma |
Mouth | Mekong River |
- location | Sop Kok, Wiang Chai, Chiang Rai Province |
- elevation | 358 m (1,175 ft) |
- coordinates | MM 20°14′39″N 100°8′19″E / 20.24417°N 100.13861°ECoordinates: MM 20°14′39″N 100°8′19″E / 20.24417°N 100.13861°E |
Length | 285 km (177 mi) |
Basin | 10,875 km2 (4,199 sq mi) |
Discharge | for Chiang Rai city |
- average | 120 m3/s (4,238 cu ft/s) |
- max | 848 m3/s (29,947 cu ft/s) |
- min | 5 m3/s (177 cu ft/s) |
Map of the Thai highlands
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The Kok River (Thai: แม่น้ำกก, rtgs: Maenam Kok, Thai pronunciation: [mɛ̂ːnáːm kòk]) flows in Southeast Asia.
Course
The river originates in the Daen Lao Range, Shan State, Burma. It flows eastwards across the Burma–Thailand border, coming in at the Thai border town of Taton (most often spelled Thathon). It flows to Mae Ai district, Chiang Mai Province. Most of its length in Thailand is in Chiang Rai Province where it passes Mueang Chiang Rai District after which it bends northeastwards and flows through Mae Chan, Wiang Chai and Chiang Saen districts.
It is a wide, shallow, and slow-moving river. There is about 600 metres (2,000 ft) of small-scale whitewater halfway between the towns of Taton and Chiang Rai. Alongside the Mae Kok river, an hour's boat ride upstream from Chiang Rai town, is an touristy "elephant camp" on its north shore.
For several kilometres downriver from Chiang Rai, the river becomes a lake, until it reaches the irrigation dam near Wiang Chai.
The Kok River is a tributary of the Mekong River, with its mouth at Sop Kok in Chiang Saen district, opposite the Lao border.[1]
Phahonyothin Road crosses this river near Chiang Rai City. Altogether, there are five bridges crossing the Mae Kok river near Chiang Rai city.
Tributaries
The main tributaries of the Kok River are the Fang and the Lao River, the latter having its source in the Phi Pan Nam Range.[2]
Boating and rafting
Small long-tail boats ply the Mae Kok between the towns of Taton and Chiang Rai. Boomerang Park is gearing up to start, in 2013, to offer low-cost rafting trips along the Mae Kok river.
Dams
There is a small dam with 11 gates which provides irrigation for rice fields east of Chiang Rai. The dam is 11 kilometres (7 mi) miles east of the Hwy 1 bridge. It turns the river into a lake, several miles long, for eight months of the year. Additionally, there is a dam planned on the Burmese side of where the river flows in to Thailand, about 32 kilometres (20 mi) upstream from the border.
Top Gear
In October 2013 [3][4] the cast and crew of the British television show Top Gear constructed a bridge over the river Kok as part of their Burma Special. The bridge was originally planned to be built over the River Kwai but the Kok was chosen "accidentally". The show aired in two parts on 9 March 2014 and 16 March 2014.
References
- ↑ Tue Kell Nielsen, Kok River Basin, North Thailand
- ↑ Kok River Basin
- ↑ "Khiri Travel and Asia Film Fixers Make Top Gear Myanmar a Reality". Khiri Travel. 13 March 2014. Retrieved 17 March 2014.
- ↑ "Top Gear: Trucking in Burma". AFF. 2014. Retrieved 17 March 2014.
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kok River. |
External links
- Kok and Northern Mekong RBC
- Thailand: flooding hit several northern and northeastern provinces
- Some Selected Wetlands in the Mekong River Basin of Thailand
- Kok River Basin in Thailand