The Giant Swing (Sao Ching Cha)
📍 Bangkok, Bangkok
A towering 21-metre teak arch in old Bangkok, painted brilliant red — all that remains of a daredevil Brahmin harvest ceremony in which men once swung up to grab a bag of coins with their teeth.
Standing in a quiet square in front of Wat Suthat, the Giant Swing is one of Bangkok’s most striking and least-understood landmarks. The current red teak structure is a careful reconstruction, but the ceremony it commemorates was real — and genuinely dangerous.
Why It’s Interesting
The original swing hosted a Brahmin rite welcoming the god Shiva to earth, in which teams swung in a high arc to seize a bag of silver coins suspended on a pole. Injuries and deaths eventually ended the practice in the 1930s. Today the bare frame stands as a piece of living history — best paired with a visit to the magnificent murals inside neighbouring Wat Suthat.
Getting There
It’s in the Phra Nakhon old town, walkable from Wat Suthat and an easy ride-hail from the river or the MRT. Come at golden hour, when the red teak glows against the sky.
📸 Mon-chan's camera roll
Snapshots from our very good boy on the road.
Where it is
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Talat Noi
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Nearby discoveries
The Erawan Museum
Ancient City (Muang Boran)
Wat Samphran (The Dragon Temple)
Phra Pathom Chedi
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