Churu, India: A Hidden Gem of Rajasthan. People And Mansions

@x-rain · 2025-10-08 19:04 · Worldmappin

But let's start from the beginning - on October 2, I arrived in Delhi on a flight from Kathmandu...

Paharganj, Delhi

On October 2, I arrived in Delhi, but somehow I didn’t catch the vibe, although there is huge potential for photography there. Every time I was happy to go out for a photo walk, but every time the catch was tiny.

DSC_8277.JPG

Eventually, I realized that I should leave Delhi, despite feeling moral pain, "oh no, I don't want to miss all those Delhi photo opportunities".

DSC_8237.JPG

What was wrong, you are asking?.. Usually, I choose non-tourist areas in the cities I visit, but, this time, I found a decent room for a good price on booking.com in a travelers' hub, called Paharganj. I had been there before and knew what to expect, and I thought, why not.

DSC_8269.JPG

A colorful alley in Paharganj

Turns out, it would be better to avoid this place. Numerous hidden sellers suck away a huge amount of time and destroy inspiration - I just couldn't fully focus on photography.

I was thinking about moving to a hostel in a residential district in Delhi, away from Paharganj. But then I realized, I got stuck in Delhi, and I should leave - that simple. That was the initial plan anyway: two nights, one photo walk, not more.

Want to mention: even within Paharganj, good people regularly care about you and advise you of good things. Strangers offer genuine help in the metro if they see a confused foreigner.

DSC_8238.JPG

Small cheerful talks with locals are also common. No doubt, people of Delhi are amazing, but I wanted to move on, towards adventures in less developed parts of India.

A Train to Churu

Luckily, on the train line I needed, there were no problems with tickets, so I purchased one upon arrival at a train station - after a one-hour sleep at night with the alarm clock at 5:30 am - no problem! - many nice adventures start this way! 🤠

DSC_8326-4.JPG

Surprisingly, my sleeper class car was quite empty - after an hour of the trip, most people left - the whole compartment, consisting of 6 berths, was left for me and a nice Indian lady - hush, she's sleeping:

DSC_8329.JPG

I had a berth myself available for sleeping but I couldn't stop watching things in the windows - Delhi railway slums, towns, small stations, farms, people, cows, birds - so many brightly green parakeets in Rajasthan!

DSC_8328.JPG

Churu

Churu is not famous at all, and I liked that - we live in a time when the standard and typical have completely lost meaning, at least for people who don't want to live generic lives.

If everyone goes to city X, go to city Y - this formula is not a universal travel rule, but sometimes it works wonderfully. That’s what happened with Churu. I thought about Jaipur - no doubt a marvelous city (and visited by many) - but at the last moment I decided to jump into the unknown - a city I researched on Google.Maps and considered "it might be cool".

I arrived on October 6 when Churu was flooded with rainwater, waded to a guesthouse, I had found on Google.Maps, paid for a fan room ($4.5) and - after washing the feet, which was necessary hygiene minimum considered all the dirt in the flood water - quickly fell asleep.

A Walk

Yesterday, I went for my first photo walk in the city and was amazed - Churu doesn’t just have a few mansions with murals, it has a charming old town where buildings with wall paintings are literally everywhere.

Foreigners come here very rarely, so I got a lot of attention - people passing on motorcycles often say hello, some stop to ask questions or pose in front of the camera, sometimes they take pictures of the foreigner themselves - to show their friends and relatives.

The place isn't spoiled with tourism - in four hours of walking, only one person begged for money, and no one tried to sell me a thing just because I am a foreigner. Even auto rickshaw drivers don’t offer their services.

DSC_8362.JPG

As it is supposed in India 🙂, there are many animals in the streets of Churu.

All streets are "guarded" by these wonderful giants:

DSC_8383.JPG

Not just a simple cow - this beast can smash you if it wants. But it doesn't want. Most of these roaming horned guys are males... Is this religious or has a practical reason, I don't know yet.

DSC_8401.JPG

In Churu, horse-driven vehicles still work for carrying freight. It looks so lovely but I feel sad about animals - they don't want this work at all.

And not only horses - donkeys, mules, and:

DSC_8745.JPG

After you see this in the street... you are a happy person!

DSC_8407-2.JPG

Rajashtani ladies wear red saris... eyes-catching like poppies.

DSC_8433-2.JPG

Men - prepare to talk, talk, and again talk. 😀 There is always one with basic English to help the rest to understand a foreigner.

DSC_8438.JPG

Many smiles - it's not a selection, Churu is this.

DSC_8443.JPG

All those colors and emotions would be enough for me to be happy about coming to Churu but the city has more, much more to offer.

DSC_8485.JPG

Such mansions, called havelis, are usual for the old town of Churu.

DSC_8469.JPG

As I understand, several havelis are considered cultural heritage and protected in some way, the rest just live out their life...

DSC_8529-2.JPG

Some of them just stay empty, but others serve as residential buildings, many of them. For example:

DSC_8504-3.JPG

A doorbell and a lightbulb. You can find many such examples, including plastic pipes cutting through murals - people need to live somewhere so they live.

DSC_8586.JPG

Isn't this a masterpiece? Churu murals are never or almost never the same so you can always discover something very special.

DSC_8633.JPG

Also, these wall paintings slowly disappear, ruined by time - you might be the last person who photographs one or another scene. That adds to walks in old Churu a sense of transience.

DSC_8619.JPG

Apart from murals, this city offers so many fantastic textures and details... A perfect destination.

DSC_8518-2.JPG

However, it has one complicated side to introverts - you need a lot of social energy to walk these streets. A number of handshakes can count dozens - depends on how open you are looking. A number of teenagers who want to be photographed sometimes exceeds all reasonable limits 😄 However, you can use the latter to your advantage - I'll share lovely portraits of young locals in one of the nest posts. 🙂

The photos were taken with a Nikkor 50mm on a full-frame DSLR Nikon D750 in Delhi and, on October 7, 2025, in Churu, Rajasthan, India.

#photography #india #churu #rajasthan #street
Payout: 0.000 HBD
Votes: 785
More interactions (upvote, reblog, reply) coming soon.