Zimbabwe β The Jewel of Southern Africa
Home to the world’s largest waterfall, Africa’s finest canoe safari, the greatest elephant population on the continent, and stone ruins that predate European contact by five centuries. Zimbabweans are among Africa’s most genuinely welcoming people β and the country remains dramatically undervisited.
Mosi-oa-Tunya β “The Smoke That Thunders” β is the world’s largest waterfall by the combined measure of width and height. No photograph does it justice. No description prepares you. It must be experienced.
Victoria Falls
π Matabeleland North Β· ZimbabweβZambia Border1.7km wide, 108m high, visible from 50km away as a permanent column of mist. At full flood (MarchβMay) the Zambezi becomes a wall of spray so dense it soaks visitors 200m back. The Zimbabwe side of the Rainforest walkway gives the most complete view of the full curtain β you move through 16 viewpoints along the gorge lip, getting progressively wetter. On the Zambia side, Devil’s Pool offers something extraordinary: swimming in a natural rock pool on the very lip of the falls during low water.
Devil’s Pool (SeptemberβDecember, Zambia side). You swim across to a natural rock lip and lie with your chin over the edge while 108m of waterfall drops away directly beneath your face. Nothing in African adventure tourism comes close.
Activities
Victoria Falls town is one of Africa’s adventure capitals. The Batoka Gorge below the falls hosts Grade 5 white water rafting through 23 rapids β one of the world’s great half-day adrenaline experiences. The bridge between Zimbabwe and Zambia has Africa’s highest commercial bungee jump at 111m. Helicopter “Flight of Angels” over the falls takes 15 minutes and gives the only perspective that captures the full scale.
When to Visit
AprilβMay for maximum flood (most dramatic spray, least visibility of the actual falls). SeptemberβOctober for clear views, Devil’s Pool swimming, and best rafting conditions. JuneβAugust is the compromise: good views and good flow.
Zambezi National Park
π 10 min from Victoria Falls TownOften overlooked in favour of the falls themselves, Zambezi National Park runs 40km along the upper Zambezi β lion, elephant, buffalo, giraffe, and 400+ bird species within a short drive of town. Sunset canoe safaris on the river above the falls offer an eerily calm contrast to the thunder downstream.
A canoe safari on the Zambezi above the falls at dusk β hippos surfacing in the golden light, elephants drinking on the bank, the distant roar of the falls on the breeze β with almost no other visitors. The calmest possible experience in the world’s most dramatic river setting.
Combining
Add a half-day game drive in Zambezi NP to any Victoria Falls itinerary β the park is 10 minutes from the falls and consistently produces lion, buffalo, and large elephant herds. Most lodges in Vic Falls town offer transfers.
Zimbabwe’s largest park and one of Africa’s greatest elephant sanctuaries. Over 40,000 elephants roam 14,651kmΒ² of mopane and teak woodland β and in dry season, herds of 50β100+ converge on pump-maintained waterholes in scenes of extraordinary density.
Hwange National Park
π Matabeleland North Β· Western ZimbabweZimbabwe’s flagship national park β home to over 40,000 elephants, one of the largest populations on earth, and the continent’s second-largest painted wild dog population. The park’s pump-maintained waterholes are the key to Hwange’s extraordinary dry-season wildlife viewing: as the surrounding bush dries out between July and October, every large mammal within hundreds of kilometres is drawn to these points. A single waterhole at dusk can hold 200 elephants, 2 lion prides, wild dogs, sable antelope, and giraffe simultaneously.
Hwange’s painted wild dog packs are among the most reliably seen in Africa. The pack from the Somalisa area has been studied for years β guides know individual dogs by name. To watch the pack return from a hunt at dawn, the whole family greeting each other in a chaos of yipping and tail-wagging, is one of the most joyful things in African wildlife.
Private Camps vs Main Camp
Hwange’s national park Main Camp offers affordable self-drive and guided options with excellent waterhole hides. Private concessions (Somalisa, Linkwasha, Davison’s) on the boundary permit night drives, walking safaris, and fly camping β dramatically different from vehicle-based safaris. For wild dogs and leopards, stay private.
Combine With
Hwange pairs naturally with Victoria Falls (45 min by road) β 3 nights Hwange + 2 nights Vic Falls is one of Zimbabwe’s finest short circuits. Extend to Mana Pools for the ultimate Zimbabwe safari.
Sinamatella & Robins Camp
π Northern Hwange Β· Remote SectorThe rarely visited northern sector of Hwange β a completely different landscape of sandveld and teak forests. Sinamatella perches on an escarpment with views over a vast game-rich pan. Robins Camp is one of Zimbabwe’s most peaceful places β remote, quiet, and surrounded by wildlife that rarely sees vehicles. Self-drive adventurers only.
You can spend an entire day driving Hwange’s northern roads without passing another vehicle. That degree of wilderness solitude, with this quality of wildlife, barely exists anywhere else in Africa.
Access
Sinamatella is 45km north of the main Hwange road β accessible on 4×4 tracks in the rainy season, standard vehicles in dry season. Book Zimbabwe Parks chalets well in advance. Fuel up before entering β no stations inside the park.
UNESCO World Heritage wilderness on the Zambezi floodplain β where walking and canoeing among elephant, lion, and wild dogs is not only permitted but encouraged. The most intimate wildlife experience in southern Africa.
Mana Pools National Park
π Mashonaland West Β· Middle Zambezi ValleyAfrica’s most extraordinary walking and canoeing safari destination β a UNESCO World Heritage floodplain where the rules are different from every other park on the continent. You may leave your vehicle on foot anywhere. You may canoe the Zambezi unguided. The result is close-quarter wildlife encounters that feel genuinely wild: walking through a herd of elephants, paddling within metres of hippos, following a wild dog pack on foot across an albida woodland. The standing elephants of Mana β who rear up on their hind legs to reach pods 6m above the ground β are found nowhere else.
The Zambezi at dawn by canoe. No engine, no guide commentary, no vehicle. Just the sound of the water and a bull elephant drinking 10 metres away. Crocodiles slide off sandbanks as you pass. A fish eagle calls from the fig tree directly overhead. It is the closest thing in Africa to being genuinely alone in the wild.
How to Experience Mana
Mana Pools is best experienced from a private camp rather than the national park’s basic facilities. Wilderness Safaris’ Ruckomechi, Vundu, and Mana Pools Camp are among the finest small camps in Africa. The multi-day canoe trail β paddling the Zambezi over 4β7 days, camping on sandbanks β is one of Africa’s great wilderness journeys.
The Standing Elephants
The albida trees of Mana drop nutrient-rich pods that elephants have learned to reach by standing on their hind legs β sometimes for minutes at a time. This behaviour, seen nowhere else at this frequency, makes Mana’s elephants arguably the most photographed in Africa. John the elephant β the most famous individual β perfected this to an art form before his death in 2020.
Lake Kariba
π Mashonaland West Β· ZimbabweβZambia BorderOne of the world’s largest man-made lakes β created in 1959 by damming the Zambezi. The drowned submerged trees that still break the surface at dusk create one of Africa’s most distinctive sunsets. Houseboat safaris drift between islands where elephant and buffalo wade to drink, with tiger fishing from the deck and hippos bellowing through the night.
Kariba sunsets. The dead trees silhouetted in the still water, turning black against an orange sky β it is Zimbabwe’s most photographed image and it earns every photograph taken of it.
Houseboat Safaris
Houseboat charters range from basic to fully staffed luxury vessels. Most include game drives on the Matusadona National Park shore and fishing at dawn. Best combined with Mana Pools as a more relaxed complement. Kariba town has daily flights from Harare.
The largest ancient structure in sub-Saharan Africa south of the Pyramids β a stone city of 18,000 people at its peak, controlling the gold trade between inland Africa and the Indian Ocean. The country is named for it.
Great Zimbabwe National Monument
π Masvingo Province Β· Central ZimbabweBuilt between the 11th and 15th centuries by the Shona-speaking Karanga people β without mortar, without metal tools, and without any external influence. The Great Enclosure’s perimeter wall is 250m long, 11m high, and 5m thick, constructed from precisely shaped granite blocks fitted so tightly that a knife blade cannot be inserted between them. At its peak this was the capital of a trading empire that connected the interior of Africa to the Arab and Indian Ocean worlds via gold and ivory.
Inside the Great Enclosure there is a conical tower 9m tall β a completely solid stone construction whose purpose remains debated. Standing next to it, inside walls built six centuries before the first European set foot in this country, the scale of what the Karanga people achieved sinks in slowly. This is Africa’s story, told entirely in stone.
Getting There
Masvingo is 4 hrs by road from Harare or 5 hrs from Bulawayo. Great Zimbabwe is 30 min from Masvingo town. The on-site museum displays the famous Zimbabwe Birds β soapstone sculptures that became the national symbol. Allow 3β4 hours for the full ruins circuit.
Gonarezhou National Park
π Masvingo & Manicaland Β· Southeast ZimbabweZimbabwe’s second-largest park and arguably its most beautiful β “The Place of Many Elephants” sits along the Mozambique border, centred on the dramatic Chilojo Cliffs: red sandstone walls 170m high above the Runde River, with elephant herds moving across the plain below. Part of the transfrontier Great Limpopo Park, it remains almost entirely undiscovered.
The Chilojo Cliffs at sunrise. Red walls glowing against a pale sky, with a line of elephants walking along the river far below. Gonarezhou has some of Zimbabwe’s largest-tusked elephants β including the famous Matsauke bulls. Almost no other visitors.
Access
Gonarezhou is reached by road from Chiredzi (4 hrs from Masvingo) or by light aircraft to the Chipinda Pools airstrip. Open MayβOctober (closed in wet season). The park’s few camps are basic but well-positioned. Campfire Community trust runs excellent community safaris on the boundary.
A UNESCO landscape of improbable granite kopjes balanced impossibly on each other β sheltering the highest concentration of San Bushman cave paintings in southern Africa, white rhino populations, and Africa’s densest black eagle population. One of Zimbabwe’s most spiritually charged places.
Matobo Hills National Park
π Matabeleland South Β· 35km South of Bulawayo3,000kmΒ² of ancient rounded granite domes, balancing boulders, and hidden valleys β the result of 2 billion years of geological activity. The Matobo Hills have been sacred to the Ndebele and San peoples for millennia. Over 13,000 San Bushman cave paintings are sheltered in rock overhangs throughout the hills β the highest density in southern Africa, with some panels dating back 13,000 years. White rhinos (both black and white species present) can be tracked on foot with armed rangers. Cecil John Rhodes is buried on the summit of Malindidzimu (“World’s View”) β one of the finest views in Zimbabwe.
The cave paintings at Nswatugi and Inanke are accessible on guided walks β images of eland, zebra, and human figures painted with extraordinary delicacy in ochre, charcoal, and white. No glass, no barriers. You read them at arm’s length in the same rock shelter where the San artist stood 3,000 years ago. Few places in Africa bring the past this close.
Cave Paintings
The key painted sites β Nswatugi Cave, Inanke Cave, and White Rhino Cave β all require a guide from the Matobo National Park office. Nswatugi has the finest preserved panels; Inanke is the most atmospheric walk. Allow a full day if visiting two sites.
Combine With
Matobo is a 2-night stand-alone destination or combines naturally with Bulawayo (Zimbabwe’s second city, with excellent National Museum of Natural History) and the Khami Ruins UNESCO site β another pre-colonial stone enclosure 22km from Bulawayo.
Bulawayo
π Matabeleland North Β· Southwest ZimbabweZimbabwe’s second city has a slower, more spacious character than Harare β wide colonial-era streets, an excellent National Museum of Natural History (one of Africa’s finest), and a railway heritage that produced the legendary Bulawayo Steam Train Safari. The gateway to Matobo Hills, Hwange, and Victoria Falls on the scenic rail route.
The National Museum of Natural History. The geology, natural history, and cultural collections are extraordinary β and almost entirely unvisited by international tourists. The Ndebele cultural collection alone is worth the stop.
Getting Around
Bulawayo is served by daily flights from Harare (1 hr) and Johannesburg. The BulawayoβVictoria Falls road (6 hrs) passes through Hwange. The steam train safari (seasonal) runs the original 1903 BulawayoβVic Falls line β contact Zimbabwe Tourism for current schedules.
Ready to Plan Your Zimbabwe Journey?
Victoria Falls + Hwange + Mana Pools β Zimbabwe’s ultimate 10-day circuit. Or combine with Botswana, Zambia, or South Africa for a southern Africa grand tour. All quoted in KES.