← All Spectacles
Fauna · Khimsar, Rajasthan, India

Demoiselle Crane Night Roost — Rajasthan India

The demoiselle crane (Anthropoides virgo) winter congregation at Khichan village in Rajasthan — the world's largest accessible demoiselle crane roost, 20,000–30,000 cranes descending on the village's traditional feeding ground from September through March in a daily spectacle managed by the Jain community whose members have provided grain to the cranes for 150 years. The morning departure (the entire roost lifting simultaneously at sunrise in a continuous stream of grey and white birds filling the sky for 30 minutes) and the evening arrival (the cranes' simultaneous descent from every compass direction, the sky filling with spiralling birds for 90 minutes before dark) create a crane spectacle of unusual cultural embeddedness — the cranes' survival in this desert landscape directly attributable to the Jain principle of ahimsa (non-violence to all living things). The Khichan villagers' relationship with the cranes (some families feeding the birds for three generations) and the feeding ground's position between the village houses create a wildlife encounter of complete human-bird integration.

When
Sep — Mar, peak Nov — Jan
Best viewing
Witness tens of thousands of demoiselle cranes arriving and departing a village feeding ground at sunrise and dusk, with the birds so accustomed to people that you can watch from rooftops and lanes at close range. Daily from September through March.
Category
Fauna
Status
Returns Jan 2027

About this spectacle

Each day from September through March, between 20,000 and 30,000 demoiselle cranes descend on Khichan village in Rajasthan's Thar Desert. At sunrise the entire roost lifts simultaneously, a continuous stream of grey and white birds filling the sky for a full 30 minutes — the sound of massed wingbeats and calls washing over the village rooftops. At dusk the spectacle reverses: cranes spiral in from every compass direction for up to 90 minutes, the sky layered with circling birds catching the last desert light before they settle to the feeding ground. The feeding area sits among village houses, meaning visitors stand within metres of thousands of cranes accepting grain put down by Jain families who have maintained this tradition for 150 years. The encounter is unlike any managed wildlife reserve — cranes and people share the same lanes, rooftops serve as viewing platforms, and the birds show no fear. The scale, proximity, and daily reliability make Khichan one of the most remarkable human-wildlife encounters in the world.

When to go

Sep — Mar, peak Nov — Jan

Getting there

Nearest airport: JOD. Nearest city: Jodhpur.

Booking options

Goyova doesn't process bookings directly. When you tap "Plan this trip" in the app, you'll see options from our partner providers — accommodation, tours, transport — with affiliate links where applicable. See our affiliate disclosure for details.

For Your Phone

Download Goyova.

Available on Android now. iPhone coming soon — we're in App Store review.

Get it on Google Play Coming soon App Store