{"id":578,"date":"2026-03-26T03:30:37","date_gmt":"2026-03-26T04:30:37","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/tristateinternet.info\/?p=578"},"modified":"2026-04-10T15:17:26","modified_gmt":"2026-04-10T15:17:26","slug":"zimbabwe-safari-beyond-the-obvious","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/tristateinternet.info\/index.php\/2026\/03\/26\/zimbabwe-safari-beyond-the-obvious\/","title":{"rendered":"Zimbabwe Safari: Beyond the Obvious"},"content":{"rendered":"
It starts, perhaps, with something familiar: the name Victoria Falls, the mental picture of spray rising in great plumes, the idea of a dust-cloaked country with little more to offer. But when Rhino Africa Travel Expert Candice McCarthy<\/a> travelled through the country to better understand the destination she sells, she found something far more layered: a country shaped by water, contrast, and safari experiences that shift meaningfully from one region to the next. It was a journey that made Zimbabwe harder to simplify, and far more rewarding to understand. <\/p>\n<\/div>\n The Rhino Africa Zimbabwe group take to the skies, Image Credit: Savannah St Claire<\/p>\n<\/div>\n Being proudly South African, Candice thought she had Zimbabwe<\/a> roughly mapped in her mind: dry, dusty, and defined above all by Victoria Falls. What she had not accounted for was how much of the country would be shaped by surprise<\/a> \u2013 not in the sightings, but in the feelings. The sensations evoked by each unusual landscape, and the weird and wonderful creatures that called them home.<\/p>\n As Candice travelled through Victoria Falls, Mana Pools, Lake Kariba, and Hwange National Park, Zimbabwe revealed itself not as one experience, but many.<\/p>\n \u201cI love that Zimbabwe is a multitude of different experiences in one.\u201d \u2013 Candice McCarthy.<\/em><\/strong><\/em><\/strong><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<\/div>\n Experiencing Zimbabwe from a new perspective, Image Credit: Savannah St Claire<\/p>\n<\/div>\n While Zimbabwe may be defined in many minds by the force of Victoria Falls<\/a>, it was water elsewhere that completely altered the texture of Candice\u2019s safari.<\/p>\n In Mana Pools, the Zambezi drew wildlife into close, river-led encounters; in Kariba, the lake opened out into a safari of shoreline movement, hippos, and swimming elephants. It was this water-shaped rhythm that made the journey feel so different \u2013 less about driving through the bush, and more about watching life gather at the edge of it.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n Lake Kariba holds every shade of blue imaginable, Image Credit: Laura Paterson<\/p>\n<\/div>\n Set along the Zambezi River, Mana Pools<\/a> is still very much safari country \u2013 dry, dusty, and sun-bleached in places \u2013 but here, that familiar bush is softened by water. Floodplain and forest sit against the dust, while albida trees throw green across the landscape in a way that feels striking against the pale earth and blue of the river.<\/p>\n That contrast is part of what makes Mana Pools so distinctive. And it was here that Candice saw one of the most extraordinary things: an elephant standing on its hind legs to feed. This unusual sighting is part of the almost surreal Mana Pools magic. Certain bulls have learned to rise to reach the nutritious pods and leaves high in the trees, making the area famous for this behaviour.<\/p>\n \u201cI\u2019ve never seen that in my life. I\u2019ve always wanted to see it, and it was pure goosebumps.\u201d \u2013 Candice McCarthy.<\/em><\/strong><\/em><\/strong><\/em><\/strong> <\/p><\/blockquote>\n As a guest, the whole safari experience feels slower and more intentional. And for Candice, Mana Pools showed her a softer side of Zimbabwe \u2013 one where the safari is shaped by the Zambezi itself. <\/p>\n<\/div>\n Elephants stand on their hind legs in Mana Pools<\/p>\n<\/div>\n Lake Kariba brings with it another version of Zimbabwe entirely. Where Mana Pools feels intimate and riverbound, Kariba opens everything out. The shoreline stretches, the horizon loosens, and safari turns into a water-based dimension. <\/p>\n Here, you can drift across the lake by boat as elephants feed at the water\u2019s edge, watch hippos surface and disappear in the shallows, or move quietly through channels where birdlife and shoreline movement heighten your attention. The pace is slower and more suspended than a classic game drive.<\/p>\n For Candice, that difference came into focus when she watched an elephant move deeper and deeper into the lake until only its trunk remained above the surface, lifted like a submarine, before it emerged again on the opposite bank. That moment did more than astonish her. It turned the shoreline into one of the most dynamic parts of the safari. <\/p>\n<\/div>\n Zimbabwe is one of the few places where elephants swim<\/p>\n<\/div>\n If Mana Pools and Lake Kariba moved like water, Hwange National Park<\/a> feels grounded, like the bush drawing itself back into sharper lines.<\/p>\n The landscape tightens. The lushness falls away. In its place comes teak woodland, mopane, grassland, dust, and the dry hush of a place where everything seems to be waiting for something. Here, safari feels more charged.<\/p>\n Zimbabwe\u2019s largest national park is known for its vast elephant herds and large predator presence, all unfolding in a steady, classic game-viewing rhythm. It\u2019s akin to a theatre, one that gathers around waterholes and spreads out between hardy foliage. Spoor thickens in the mud. Elephants arrive in numbers. Lions are never far from the logic of thirst.<\/p>\n That is what Candice enjoyed most \u2013 not as a repeat, but as a revelation \u2013 the next layer, the cycle completed.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n Candice keeping it cool with the big cats of Hwange National Park, Image Credit: Savannah St Claire<\/p>\n<\/div>\n Of course, the perfect safari is never complete without the right accommodation. These spaces become your anchor, the rooted sanctuary you return to that frames your experience. Two camps in particular stood out for Candice: Kariba\u2019s stillness at Bumi Hills, and the close-up wildlife drama of Somalisa Acacia Camp. <\/p>\n<\/div>\n The elephants visiting Somalisa Camp, Image Credit: Savannah St Claire<\/p>\n<\/div>\n At Bumi Hills Safari Lodge<\/a>, above Lake Kariba, the lake’s magnitude stood out. Candice described the location of the lodge as a \u201cpinch me moment\u201d, and it\u2019s easy to understand why.<\/p>\n Here, bliss came wrapped in stillness: the green canopy pressing close around camp, the pool reaching out towards the blue of Lake Kariba, the wide deck drawing the eye straight to the horizon, then seemingly spilling into it. Then there’s that palpable hush that settles from the sheer beauty of a space.<\/p>\n With the lake lying below like another world entirely, the lodge seemed built not to compete with it, but to complement it.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n A breathtaking view from every angle, Image Credit: Bumi Hills Safari Lodge<\/p>\n<\/div>\n And from the water into the grasslands, Hwange’s Somalisa Acacia Camp<\/a> brought Zimbabwe back into a thrillingly close perspective.<\/p>\n This intimate tented camp is set behind a bustling watering hole, with the main deck providing an uninterrupted open view and the nearby hide an intimate one. Canvas, wood, and open space keep the experience rooted in the landscape, so that wildlife becomes part of the rhythm of camp itself.<\/p>\n Here, one of the defining features is the waterhole just in front of the camp. And yet again, Candice experienced another memorable image: elephants arriving at camp, drinking and playing right in front of her as she sipped her morning coffee.<\/p>\n \u201cA highlight of the whole trip was the elephant sightings; they were just incredible.\u201d \u2013 Candice McCarthy.<\/em><\/strong><\/p><\/blockquote>\n That\u2019s something you can\u2019t stage or emulate. It only occurs when the wild leads, and you\u2019re in a position to witness it in all its glory. Now that is a true Zimbabwe safari. <\/p>\n<\/div>\n A sighting that will stay in Candice’s memory forever, Image Credit: Savannah St Claire<\/p>\n<\/div>\n For all the wildlife and scenery, some of Candice\u2019s strongest memories of Zimbabwe were shaped by people. At Somalisa, what stayed with her was the atmosphere the staff created around her. There was a lightness to it, an ease. People were genuinely happy to have guests there, and that feeling settled over everything. Nothing felt forced. Nothing felt rehearsed. It just felt warm.<\/p>\n Evenings seemed to open people up. Conversations flowed without much effort, and Candice found herself speaking to people she might never have met in any other setting, yet somehow it all felt natural. That sense of welcome became part of the destination itself. It made the camp feel comfortable and deeply human. And when the more nitty-gritty details of a journey begin to blur, that is often what remains most clearly: the feeling of having been received with real kindness.<\/p>\n For Candice, Zimbabwe left that behind not just sights and landscapes, but connection.<\/p>\n “The team’s genuine warmth and kindness was a true experience of care and connection that enhanced every wildlife encounter and made us feel completely at home.” \u2013 Candice McCarthy.<\/em><\/strong><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<\/div>\n A kindness you carry with you long after you leave, Image Credit: Savannah St Claire<\/p>\n<\/div>\n There was one word Candice kept coming back to: raw. <\/p>\n \u201cWhen it comes to safari experiences, Zimbabwe is a lot more RAW<\/em><\/strong>.\u201d \u2013 Candice McCarthy.<\/em><\/strong><\/p><\/blockquote>\n Here, Candice is not talking about the usual kind of comparison of quality, quantity or ranking one experience against another. Instead, she was talking about sensations. Rhythm.<\/p>\n Zimbabwe felt different. Wilder in mood. More atmospheric. Less eager to explain itself and not especially interested in what you make of it. It’s doing what it does best, and you’re simply there to witness it.<\/p>\n The sightings still mattered, of course, but they were folded into something broader: the sensation of being in a landscape that was not performing for you. It morphs and materialises into something unknown, unusual, and utterly unforgettable, while remaining unmistakably Zimbabwean. <\/p>\n And it made Candice pay attention in a different way.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n Candice snapping the Zimbabwe wilderness on a safari walk, Image Credit: Savannah St Claire<\/p>\n<\/div>\n Victoria Falls will always draw attention. But beyond it lies something more layered: a safari destination shaped by water, wildlife, contrast, and atmosphere. One where the experience shifts meaningfully from region to region. One where the rawness Candice felt was not a lack of something, but instead a depth to everything. <\/p>\n If Zimbabwe has stirred something in you, the good news is that this journey is entirely possible to recreate \u2013 and tailor to your travel style. Whether you want to pair Victoria Falls with the river-led magic of Mana Pools, the wide-open stillness of Lake Kariba, or the classic game viewing of Hwange, our Travel Experts can curate the right version of Zimbabwe for you.<\/p>\n Learn more about Zimbabwe<\/a> and explore our destination guides<\/a>, lodges<\/a>, and itineraries<\/a> to see what this remarkable country could look like for you.<\/p>\n
<\/span><\/p>\nA Familiar Name, An Unfamiliar Place<\/h2>\n
<\/span><\/p>\nFollowing The Water<\/h2>\n
<\/span><\/p>\nMana Pools: The River-Led Heart of Zimbabwe<\/h3>\n
<\/span><\/p>\nLake Kariba: The Surprise Few Travellers Expect<\/h3>\n
<\/span><\/p>\nThe Classic Pulse of Safari<\/h2>\n
<\/span><\/p>\nThe Places That Framed the Wild<\/h2>\n
<\/span><\/p>\nA View Worth Falling Silent For<\/h3>\n
<\/span><\/p>\nWhen Elephants Came to Camp<\/h3>\n
<\/span><\/p>\nThe Kindness That Lingered<\/h2>\n
<\/span><\/p>\nA Safari With a Different Pulse<\/h2>\n
<\/span><\/p>\nExperience the Many Shades of Zimbabwe<\/h2>\n
How You Can Do It<\/h3>\n