After the completion of the 11 days, devotees bid adieu to their beloved Ganpati through Ganesh Visarjan.
People do Ganapati Visarjan in a bucket
or tub of water and later they use the clay in the garden.
The devotees who perform the Visarjan on this day usually perform the Puja in the afternoon and
after Madhyana they take the idol of Ganesha for Visarjan.
The festivity continues for a period of 10 days and on the 11th day of the occasion i.e. on Ananta Chaturdashi,
the celebration concludes with Ganesh Visarjan.
When Ganesha Visarjan is performed on the next day of the commencement
of the festival of Ganesha Chaturthi then it is called as one and half day Ganesh Visarjan.
On the 11th day Ganesh Visarjan is performed with dancing
and singing on the road through a procession in which people pray to God to come again next year.
The sacred day of Ganpati Visarjan is celebrated with great happiness
and grandeur as the devotees bid farewell to their favorite Lord Ganesha to go back to his place with a promise of returning next year.
The conflict in Visarjan is more dramatic in intensity, and is many- sided: between
man and wife, between' temporal power and priestly authority, between love and duty, between the dictate of humanity and the prescribed code of religion.