Zambia

Mirroring Zimbabwe on the other side of the Zambezi river is the Zambian part of the Victoria Falls. And then there are a number of national parks that are low on visitors and high on game experiences. 

The Lower Zambezi downstream from Lake Kariba offers an immersive, tranquil experience. Safaris are conducted by vehicle, boar or in a canoe. 

Kafue National Park has recovered from extensive poaching and any visitor supports the anti-poaching effort just by going there and providing jobs for the surrounding community. 

South Luangwa and the remote, walking safaris only, North Luangwa are both special. Very small camps are dotted around the national park and can be reached by car – or more adventurous – by foot. 

“In the declining years of the British Empire, in Northern Rhodesia, Stewart Gore-Browne was a proper English gentleman who built himself a sprawling country estate, complete with liveried servants, rose gardens, and lavish dinners finished off with vintage port in the library. All that was missing was a woman to share it with. He adored the beautiful aviatrix Ethel Locke King, but she was almost twenty years his senior, married, and his aunt. Lorna, the only other woman Gore-Brown cared for, was married as well, but years later her orphaned daughter would become Gore-Browne’s wife. The story of a colonialist who beat his servants yet supported Rhodesian independence and who was given a chief’s burial by the local elders when he died, The Africa House rescues “from oblivion the life story of an astonishing man, an astonishing marriage, and an astonishing house” ( The Spectator ).

Awe Africa’s recommends:

  • for travellers that have ‘done’ Southern Africa but want more! Some exceptional parks and untouched wilderness.

Must Sees and Do’s:

  • Victoria Falls

  • South Luangwa

  • Lower Zambezi 

  • Kafue National Park

  • Busanga Plains

  • Africa House & Kapishya Hot Springs

Travel Details:

  • Numerous airlines fly to Lusaka or connect to Victoria Falls

  • Easy to combine Luangwa with a visit to Lake Malawi

  • Some camps and lodges are only operational during the dry season