Shekhawati Fair
The Shekhawati Festival
held on 10th and 11th February every year is organised jointly by the State
Department of Tourism, District administrations of Sikar, Jhunjhunu and
Churu.
Shekhawati, already famous for its frescoes, is fast
becoming a rural tourism destination too. Travelling on horse back, the
tourists get a closer view of the countryside and the people. And they
return with an indelible imprint of not only the friendliness of the people
but also of the agricultural revolution sweeping the villages -- the region
now exports 80 per cent of its crops whereas only a few years ago it could
meet only 10 per cent of its requirement through local production.
For a broad-based discovery of Shekhawati's culture, the festival is
spread over a number of venues - Nawalgarh, Sikar, Jhunjhunu and Churu. The
programmes include a one day tour of the region, camel and jeep safaris,
farm visits, rural games, cultural programmes, haveli competitions and
fireworks.
Nawalgarh is the central venue of the festival and
can be reached comfortably by train and road from Jaipur (140 kms by Road).
Nawalgarh also has some of the finest frescoes of Shekhawati. The Clock
Tower is a famous landmark and the Roop Niwas Palace hotel occupies a place
of pride in the town.
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Guest
Comments -----Original
Message----- Name: Ingrid Erickson
Country: ------
Email: ierickson@uwsa.edu
Tour: Customized Tour
Hello
Durjay,
I'm back at home and at work. The flight home was quite
an ordeal! First a ten-hour delay in Delhi, then a 20-hour flight to
Toronto, then a second overnight delay in Toronto before my flight to
Chicago. To top it all off, the bus I took from Chicago to Milwaukee got in
an accident on the way home. So I arrived home on Sunday afternoon instead
of Saturday at 8 a.m. as planned. But there was an empty seat next to me on
the Delhi-Toronto flight, so I got plenty of sleep. And I'm happy to be home
safe.
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