Interesting, colorful, noisy. You can buy cheap if you bargain. Prices are initially inflated, but sellers make concessions. We listened to a concert performed by children, sang, danced, and imprisoned durians. The market is open on Saturdays and Sundays. A rich food zone with Thai delicacies.
The weekend market, of which there are countless smaller ones on weekends, is scattered all over the pukhtet.
Since a third of the market has been allocated for parking, the entire market can be slowly bypassed in a couple of hours.
It is better not to visit before sunset - it is very hot and stuffy.
And in fact, there is not much point in wasting time on the naka market.
Unless you are looking for fake clothes, bags, shoes, glasses, so that everything is in one place.
Souvenirs as everywhere, Thai ointments, pastes at the same price as in any pharmacy.
There are only a few purely Thai made departments, try to find more.
The food court does not differ in anything special, only a large one.
To go in, to stagger, to get in touch with the local flavor is an unremarkable bazaar.