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			Phu Singh (ภูสิงห์)   
Thai. ‘Lion
Mountain’. Name of a mountain 
in
				Beung Kahn. 
Its main attraction is a group of three, bare, elongated, rocks,
surrounded by green forest, that —especially when seen from above— are reminiscent of 
a pod of whales and are hence also nicknamed
Hin Sahm Wahn, i.e. the ‘Three 
Whales Rocks’ (fig.). The main mountain also has a significant grass field known 
as Lahn Tham Phu Singh (ลานธรรมภูสิงห์), i.e. ‘Phu Singh's 
		      
		      Dharma 
Yard’, which features some bulky rocks of which one resembles a reclining lion, 
and which stands at the origin of the mountain's name. At the tail end is a 
small cavity which is used by monks to sit and meditate. In front of the large 
rocks is a gilded  
		
		Buddha image 
named 
	
	Luang Pho
			
			
			Phra
			
Singh, 
which is seated in the 
		
		bhumisparsa pose 
and accompanied by two disciples. 
On the way up is another rock similar to the Three Whales Rocks that offer a 
magnificent viewpoint over the area and the 
	
	Mekhong 
River. The summits of these rocks are rounded and no 
balustrades have been put up, in order to maintain their natural beauty. Hence a 
maximum number of no more than 50 people are allowed to visit the rock at any 
given time, while some dotted lines painted in yellow indicate how close to the 
rounded edges one can go safely before it becomes a slippery slope. Besides 
this, are also a number of other interesting rock formations, such as pratu Phu 
Singh (ประตูภูสิงห์), i.e. ‘Lion Mountain's Gateway’; Hin Chang (หินช้าง), 
‘Elephant 
Rock’, which resembles an  
elephant; 
Hua Jai Singh (หัวใจสิงห์), i.e. 
‘Heart of the Lion Rock’, and a viewpoint named Sang Roi Bo (สร้างร้อยบ่อ),
i.e. ‘To Create a Hundred Puddles’, which consists of a bare rock surface 
with countless natural depressions formed by erosion.  
			
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