SERVICES

Bungsamran: Beyond Fishing Experience

Fishing for rare, large fish with over 40 different species in a serene and beautiful natural setting. Spread over 128,000 square meters, Bungsamran offers a full range of amenities, high-quality fishing gear, professional staff ready to provide guidance, and cozy accommodations where you can relax after a day of adventure.

2P1_File.jpg

FISHING

Our large fishing pond features over 40 species of fish, including more than 1,000 giant Mekong Catfish and Siamese Carp. You are guaranteed an exceptional giant fishing experience. We offer comprehensive equipment and professional guides to assist you throughout your fishing adventure.

Open 24 hours.

See Our Packages
2P1_File.jpg

ACCOMMODATION

Our accommodation services include bungalows available in various sizes, perfect for both small and large fishing groups. We have a total of 29 bungalows, each available in shifts just like our fishing services.

Open 24 hours, with check-in available at any time.

See Our Accommodation
ACCOMMODATION of Bungsamran Fishing Park

BIG FISH SHOP

We offer a comprehensive range of fishing equipment, including rods, reels, baits, and accessories, all available in one convenient location. Everything you need for a complete and enjoyable fishing experience can be found here.

Operating Hours: 09:00 AM - 09:00 PM

BIG FISH SHOP of Bungsamran Fishing Park

RESTUARANT AND CAFE

We offer a full range of services, including a restaurant, café, and mini-mart:

Restaurant: Open daily from 10:00 AM - 10:00 PM
Café: Open daily from 08:00 AM - 08:00 PM
Mini-Mart: Open 24 hours a day

See our menu
RESTUARANT AND CAFE of Bungsamran Fishing Park

MORE THAN 40 FISH SPECIES

Discover Rare & Giant

Fish Varieties
Ripsaw catfish

Ripsaw catfish

This species grows to a length of 100 centimeters (39 in) SL and weights up to 13 kilograms (29 lb). This species is a minor component of local commercial fisheries. It has lateral thorns that can damage any potential predator or handler.

Read More
Sturgeon

Sturgeon

Sturgeons are long-lived, late-maturing fishes with distinctive characteristics, such as a heterocercal caudal fin similar to those of sharks, and an elongated, spindle-like body that is smooth-skinned, scaleless, and armored with five lateral rows of bony plates called scutes.

Read More
Peacock bass

Peacock bass

The speckled peacock bass is the largest species and can grow to 1 m (3.3 ft) in length, and may be the largest of all cichlid fishes. Most display a color pattern based on a theme of three wide vertical stripes on their bodies, sometimes with smaller intermediate bands, only a grey, brown, yellow, or green background.

Read More
Soldier River Barb

Soldier River Barb

The Soldier River Barb has a sleek, elongated body with a small head and narrow tail. It has two pairs of barbels around its mouth. Its large scales are silver in color. It has a high dorsal fin and a deeply forked tail fin. This fish is very agile and fast.

Read More
Great snakehead/Cobra Fish

Great snakehead/Cobra Fish

It has a relatively round, long body with a smaller head compared to other snakehead species. Its body color changes with age and environment, typically having a dark base such as greenish-brown or black. Juveniles have an orange stripe running from head to tail base.

Read More
Stingrays

Stingrays

Batoids are flat-bodied, and, like sharks, are cartilaginous fish, meaning they have a boneless skeleton made of a tough, elastic cartilage. Most batoids have five ventral slot-like body openings called gill slits that lead from the gills, but the Hexatrygonidae have six.

Read More
Boeseman Croaker

Boeseman Croaker

It has a slender body tapering towards the rear, a small head with a deep concave forehead, and high-positioned eyes. The wide mouth is below the snout, with five small pores under the chin. The dorsal fin is long, with a stiff front and soft rear.

Read More
Barramundi

Barramundi

This species has an elongated body form with a large, slightly oblique mouth and an upper jaw extending behind the eye. The lower edge of the preoperculum is serrated with a strong spine at its angle; the operculum has a small spine and a serrated flap above the origin of the lateral line. Its scales are ctenoid.

Read More
Giant Snake Head

Giant Snake Head

The young of the C.micropeltes are red in color, with orange and black lateral stripes appearing after about two months. As the giant snakehead matures, it loses its stripes and redness, and instead develops a bluish-black and white pattern on its upper body.

Read More
Giant Featherback

Giant Featherback

It inhabits lowland river mainstreams and tributaries with rocky and sunken wood bottoms, as well as forest-covered streams. It feeds on smaller fishes, insects and vertebrates, mostly at night.

Read More
Clown Knifefish

Clown Knifefish

The clown knifefish is very distinct, with normally silvery gray with a long, knife-like body (laterally compressed) and a long anal fin that gives it its common name. Mature fish normally have five to 10 (or even more) black spots ringed with white that usually decrease in size as the fish grows.

Read More
Great White Sheatfish

Great White Sheatfish

It shares parts of its native range with the externally similar, but much larger Wallagonia leerii, and is subsequently often confused for it. It can, however, be differentiated by its relatively long and narrower head, as well as its dorsal fin, which is high and sharp.

Read More
 Redtail catfish

Redtail catfish

Unlike other, bottom-dwelling catfish species, the redtail is an active swimmer, and does not lie in-wait on the river bottom to ambush passing prey.

Read More
Asian Redtail Catfish

Asian Redtail Catfish

This species is the largest Bagrid catfish in Asia, and may reach 80 kilograms.[3] The caudal fin is white when the fish is small, but it becomes bright red when it reaches about 15 cm (6 in).

Read More
Tambaqui

Tambaqui

It is similar in shape to the piranha and juveniles are sometimes confused with the carnivorous fish; the tambaqui is tall and laterally compressed with large eyes and a slightly arched back. Unlike more predatory species, the teeth of the tambaqui are molar-like, an adaption for crushing plant seeds and nuts.

Read More
Arapaima

Arapaima

The arapaima is torpedo-shaped, with large, blackish-green scales and red markings. It is streamlined and sleek, with its dorsal and anal fins set near its tail.

Read More
Alligator Gar

Alligator Gar

The body of an alligator gar is torpedo-shaped, usually brown or olive colored, fading to a lighter gray or yellow ventral surface. In very rare occurrences, they can also be black, seen in gars that have a high level of melanin.

Read More
Black Sheatfish

Black Sheatfish

The Black Sheatfish has a long but somewhat stout body, with a flattened side towards the tail. Its body is grey to almost black in color. The head is large and flat with a wide mouth. Inside the mouth, there are small teeth on both jaws, and it has two pairs of whiskers.

Read More
Jullien's Golden-Price Carp

Jullien's Golden-Price Carp

This fish has many identifying characteristics. Most noticeable are its five longitudinal stripes above its lateral line. For its teeth, it has large pharyngeal teeth in a single row. Pharyngeal teeth are located in the throat of some species of fish, specifically the pharyngeal arch of these fishes’ throats.

Read More
Chao Phraya Giant Catfish

Chao Phraya Giant Catfish

The Giant Pangasius is a ray-finned fish part of the family Pangasiidae commonly known as Shark Catfishes. They are recognized for having both dorsal and ventral long fins, which help stabilize the fish and keep it upright.

Read More
Siamese Giant Crap

Siamese Giant Crap

Giant barbs are usually seen in large pools along the edges of large rivers, but seasonally enter smaller canals, floodplains, and flooded forests. Young barbs are usually found in smaller tributaries and swamps, but can acclimate to living in ponds, canals, and swamps. The fish generally live in pairs.

Read More
Mekong Giant Catfish

Mekong Giant Catfish

Grey to white in color and lacking stripes, the Mekong giant catfish is distinguished from other large catfish species in the river by the near-total lack of barbels and the absence of teeth.

Read More