If you’re feeling adventurous and ready to throw caution to the wind, this lost gem of southern Africa is worth considering for sure, Zimbabwe:
In this list we remember why Zimbabwe was in the glory of tourism once, and why it should be again:
harare
A myriad of steel-clad skyscrapers soar from its CBD, the country’s economic hub, and First Street and downtown are bustling with traffic and purring shoppers from morning until night.
And there is also history, notably the great preservation of the National Gallery, the National Archives and the Queen Victoria Museum, not to mention the wealth of old colonial buildings.
Hwange National Park
Hwange National Park is one of the best attractions Zimbabwe has to offer, covering an area of over 14,651 km, it was founded in 1928 and built near the Kalahari desert. It is located between Bulawayo and Victoria Falls.
Hwange National Park
Hwange National Park is one of the best attractions Zimbabwe has to offer, covering an area of over 14,651 km, it was founded in 1928 and built near the Kalahari desert. It is located between Bulawayo and Victoria Falls.
Bulawayo
It has swaying trees dotting its old avenues, and the occasional Anglo-Saxon tavern occupying the arcades.
But this second city is more than a historical relic.
It’s also an industrial and economic hub, once known for its smoke-belching factories, and still crisscrossed by more rail lines than you can imagine with a Ndebele tribal trinket.
Nyanga National Park
Clad in groves of msasa and cypress trees that are rare in these regions, the habitats here can be home to a variety of truly otherworldly creatures.
Many are endemic, like the Old World Samango monkeys with their white-painted throats that can only be found in these parts.