Khand ki Ghar Central Madhya Pradesh · 2026

Khand ki Ghar.

A working farm of 30 acres in the maize-and-wheat belt of central Madhya Pradesh, about two hours from Jabalpur and ten kilometres from a national park. Family-run. Small. Slow. Real.

A still from the south field at dawn.

What this is

We host a small number of guests at a time, in cottages built the way houses are built here. Our kitchen uses what the field gave us this week, and what the neighbours brought by.

There is no spa, no pool, no buffet. There is the land, the family, and the people of the village who have always lived here.

This is not a resort. Not a heritage hotel. Not a tribal theme park. Not a safari camp.

A day in the life

During rabi season, November to February, the easiest time to visit.

5:30 am

The sun comes up late in winter. The cocks have been awake for an hour. If you want to walk before breakfast, Sukhdev will take you around the south field.

6:30 am

Chai on the verandah. The cook has been up since five. There is jaggery if you want it sweet.

7:00 am

Morning work begins. You can join or watch. The day's work depends on the week.

9:00 am

Breakfast. Poha, paratha, dahi, whatever was picked this morning. Always chai.

10:00 am

The slow hours. Read, walk, sit, talk. Some go with Prahlad to the forest edge.

1:00 pm

Lunch. A thali with four or five things, all from here or nearby. The meal takes an hour if you let it.

3:00 pm

The hottest part of the day in summer, the coldest in winter. Indoors, a quilt, a book.

4:30 pm

Tea. Snacks. The light changes.

5:30 pm

Walk to the village (3 km, easy). Or stay for a cooking session in the kitchen.

7:00 pm

Sunset. Bonfire in winter. The sky is enormous here.

8:30 pm

Dinner. Lighter than lunch. Sometimes a sweet if there is jaggery or chironji.

10:00 pm

Sleep. The stars are very clear. There is occasional jackal call.

This is one day. Other days are different. We will tell you what is actually happening when you arrive.

Things to do

All optional. All invitations.

On the farm

Morning farm walk
Two hours · With the farmer

Learn what is planted where, what is coming up, what the soil is doing.

Free with stay
Work alongside
Half-day or full-day · Seasonal

Sow, weed, harvest, sort, thresh. We will feed you well.

Free with stay
The kitchen garden
Any time · Self-guided

Salad greens, herbs, gourds, tomatoes in season. Pick your own.

Free with stay
The milch animals
Morning or evening

Two buffalo, a cow, some hens. The children will want to show you how.

Free with stay
Bullock cart ride
Half an hour

Around the property and the adjacent fields.

Rs 500 per person

In the village

Walk to the village
3 km · Easy terrain

A small shop, a temple, a handpump, a choupal where the men meet in the evening.

Free
Tea at the choupal
Evening

Sit with the men. They will offer chai and conversation.

Free
Dinner in a Gond home
Evening · Pre-arranged

The mother of the house cooks a traditional meal. You eat with the family.

Rs 1,500 per person
Pardhan music evening
One to two hours

The Pardhan are the Gond singer-bards. They will come and play.

Rs 3,500 per session
Visit a crafts family
Pre-arranged

Bell metal, terracotta, bamboo work, lac bangles. Crafts family keeps 70%.

Free to visit
Cooking class in a village home
Three hours

Learn a specific dish: dal, baati, mahua-based sweet.

Rs 1,000 per person
A walk with the schoolteacher
Two hours

He knows the area's history, the Gond epic, the old stories.

Rs 500 per person

In the forest

Forest edge walk
Two hours · With a guide

Pre-dawn or late afternoon. The guide knows the plants, the tracks, the birds.

Rs 700 per person
Birdwatching morning
Two to three hours

Best October to March. With a naturalist when one is available.

Rs 1,500 per person
Mahua flower collection
March to April only

Walk with a village family to collect mahua flowers at dawn.

Free with stay
Night walk in the buffer
Two hours · Cooler months

After dinner. Headlamps. Insects, owls, possibly leopard tracks.

Rs 1,200 per person

Longer programs

Work exchange
Two to four weeks

Four to five hours per day on the farm in exchange for accommodation and meals.

Free in exchange
A week with a village family
A week or more

Live with a host family. Work alongside. Eat what they eat. The deepest immersion.

By arrangement
Photography residency
Two weeks

Document the region. We host in exchange for a photo essay.

By arrangement

Ways to stay

From a day visit to a fortnight.

Day visit
Rs 2,500 to Rs 4,000

Arrive in the morning, leave in the evening. Lunch, one activity, tea. No overnight.

Weekend
Rs 15,000 to Rs 22,000

2 nights, 3 days. The standard stay. Most guests start here.

A full week
Rs 40,000 to Rs 60,000

6 nights, 7 days. Settle, meet more villagers, see the rhythm.

A fortnight or longer
By arrangement

For writers, researchers, photographers. Discounted for longer stays.

Work exchange
Free in exchange

2-4 weeks. Four to five hours per day on the farm. Full accommodation and meals.

Living with a village family
By arrangement

A week or more in a village family's home. The most immersive option.

Pricing is a starting point for conversation. Children under 8 stay free with parents. Children 8-12 at half rate. No AC. No bar. Vegetarian is the default; vegan, Jain, and gluten-free are mostly possible with notice.

The people

The property is not the point. The people are.

The host
Founder and host

Grew up coming to this land with his father. Knows every field, every tree, every neighbour.

"My father used to say: the soil knows when you are in a hurry."

The kitchen elder
Runs the kitchen

Cooked for guests in the past, including the host's father. Will teach you a recipe if you ask.

Sukhdev
Farmer

Works the south field most days. Quiet, knows the land.

"The wheat tells you when it is ready. You only have to look."

Prahlad
Naturalist in training

Knows the birds, the plants, the trees. Will take you to the forest if you ask.

"A black-rumped flameback visits the neem behind cottage 3 at dawn. We see it most days."

The Pardhan musician
Singer-bard

A real Pardhan singer, with consent to be named. Will come by some evenings.

"The songs are not for performance. They are for the village. They are for the soil."

The schoolteacher
Historian of the area

Knows the region's history. Will talk for hours if you let him.

Every person mentioned here is real and is here with their consent. We pay fairly for any service rendered. We do not stage cultural experiences.

The seasons

A different property every three months.

Kharif
June to October · 25-35°C · Humid

Sowing. Monsoon arrives. Land greens. Forest is loud with insects. Best for writers, photographers, rain-tolerant guests.

Post-monsoon
October to November · 18-30°C · Clear

Cleanest air. First harvests. Festival season. Forest at its most active. Best for first-time guests.

Rabi
November to March · 5-25°C · Cold nights

Peak season. Wheat sowing in November, harvest in March. Best stargazing. Best for most guests.

Spring
March to April · 25-40°C · Dry

Mahua flowers. Chironji ripens. First heat. Distinctive seasonal programming. Best for repeat guests, mahua seekers.

Summer
April to June · 35-45°C · Very dry

Lean season. We may close partially. The property is being prepared for the next kharif. Best for friends of the family, work-exchangers, researchers.

The story

A working farm with a real one.

To be written by the host in his own words, with the family's consent. The story of his father, the land, and why this house is being opened.

How to come

By air

Jabalpur (JLR) is 2.5 hours by car. Khajuraho (HJR) is 4 hours. Bhopal (BPL) is 5-6 hours.

By train

Jabalpur Junction is 2.5 hours by car. Damoh may be closer.

By road

From Jabalpur: 2-2.5 hours. Pickup available. Self-drive possible.

How to inquire

A conversation, not a booking form.

WhatsApp: [ number to be added ]

Email: [ email to be added ]

When you write, please tell us: when you are thinking of coming, how many of you, anything specific you want to experience, and any dietary or accessibility requirements.

If we are not the right fit, we will say so. We would rather you have a good trip elsewhere than a bad one here.