- 旅行を表示する
- 死ぬまでにやっておきたいことリストに追加死ぬまでにやっておきたいことリストから削除
- 共有
- 日134–138
- 2025年5月17日 15:00〜2025年5月21日
- 4泊
- ☀️ 27 °C
- 海抜: 979 m
ジンバブエVictoria Falls Municipality17°55’39” S 25°49’34” E
Victoria falls, Zimbabwe by Kev and Mel

Hello from Zimbabwe,
We arrived here on the 17th of May and will only stay here for 4 days. This is just a quick trip to see the other side of the Mosi-oa-Tunya fall (the smoke that thunder) and to do a few adrenaline activities for Andrew (and us too, but mainly Andrew!)
We are in Victoria fall, which is a small town just on the other side of the border from Livingstone in Zambia. This town is very much designed for the tourists who came here to see Mosi-oa-Tunya. You mostly see shop which sell local craft and places where you can book tours and activities and expansive restaurants!
One thing that make me angry is there is a lot of offers for cheetah or lion or elephant experiences. You get to walk a cheetah or take pictures next to a sleepy lion or feed and wash elephants… Really, don’t we know better. Is it how those animals are supposed to live? No! It is not!!!!
I understand that the people from country like Zimbabwe need money to get a better life and will sell what tourists buy. It is our job as travellers to not give money to this kind of activities. Go do game drives, find the animals in the wild, where you get the excitation and pleasure to find them and admire them where they should be! Please think twice about where you spent your tourist money, it matters to the welfare of animals. Rant over!
We arrived here in the afternoon, settled in the house we rented (with 4 people it is sometimes cheaper to get a house than a family room or a couple of rooms!). I got a migraine so rest for me, while Kev go to a shop to get some food, so we don’t spend too much money eating out as Zimbabwe seems pretty expansive. Kids and Kev watch a movie while I nurse my migraine in bed. It will be better by the morning.
The next day, I was all better. We went to see Mosi-oa-Tunya, from the Zimbabwe side. It is beautiful no matter which side you see it. You can see more from that side. There is a pathway that took you all along the fall (on the opposite side obviously). We got ponchos this time! Did I mention that Zimbabwe is expansive?! The entrance to the falls is more expansive and we paid 15usd (around 22 Australian dollars) to rent 4 ponchos with holes in them! Anyway!
We were still better protected than with nothing. We walked all the way, getting wet, admiring the fall: well, what you can see of it! Halfway, there was so much mist that we could not see the fall on the other side at all! This was, as on the Zambia side, a wonderful experience. The sound is still very present and make you realised the size of this beautiful landscape. This is no surprise that it is one of the wonders of the world.
After that we bought some postcards, bought a little more groceries (coffee and beer for Kev mainly!) and went back to ‘home’ to do some blogging and schoolwork.
The 19th was adrenaline day!
Andrew love zipline and activities like that. There is bungee jumping here, but you have to be 16, so he was very disappointed. But no worries, I found more activities he can do, and us too while we are at it (well some of them!). We started the day with a canopy tour, which is basically 9 smallish ziplines between trees on the side of the gorge on the Zambezi river. It was Emma’s first time doing ziplines. Up until now, she was very scared to do them. We talked about it several times and she agreed to try to do one. And she did all nine of them! It was a good thing to start with that, to ease her into it!
After that Kev and Andrew did a flying fox 120m high! You are on the horizontal, which make you feel like you are flying! It looks fun, but being scared of height, I didn’t try, neither did Emma.
The next activity, was the one Andrew was the most excited and scared about. The giant swing! You start on a platform 120m high, then step of it and drop for 70m and swing for around 90m. It looked terrifying! They were supposed to do it on their own, but at the last second, Andrew asked to do it as a tandem with Kev, which is completely fair! They got strapped together and they were off! I screamed when they dropped because it is something to see your son and husband dropping down like that! They had a great big smile when they came back up. Andrew was a bit shaky, but he loved it!!
The last activity was the zipline: 120m high, 425m long and going over 100km/h. Kev did it, then Andrew did it and then I was supposed to do it with Emma, but when she came on the platform and saw how high it was, she froze and there was no way, she was going to do it. I tried to talk to her, but the panic was in, and she couldn’t do it. And that was fine. Andrew was very happy to take her spot and do it one more time!!!
I will admit that I wasn’t that proud myself. It was high and scary, but the feeling of the wind and speed was awesome. I’m very glad I did it. It was also a nice moment to share with Andrew. I hope one day, I will do one with Emma.
After that, we got a couple of drinks to settle my jelly legs at the Lookout cafe, which is looking over this beautiful gorge on the Zambezi river.
We went back home after that for a bit more schoolwork, as the kids haven’t done much lately.
Tuesday the 20th, was a lazy day. We went in the town centre to post our postcards, went back to the Lookout café to pay for pictures from the day before. On the way, we saw elephants; normally when we see elephants, we are inside a car! More protected! It was a bit unnerving to be our small self on the other side of the road to a massive big elephant!! After that, we did a little bit more shopping (cheese, can’t live without, and yogurt) and went back to do blogging and a bit more work.
Wednesday the 21st we are flying to Namibia. A new country, a new adventure!
See you then!
Mel
18.5.2025. Today we're heading back to Victoria Falls, or as the locals call it Mosi-oa-Tunya, which means “the smoke that thunders”. I think that sounds way better than being named after a queen. They celebrate Dr Livingstone here, he apparently discovered the falls. Yeah, ok, “he” discovered it. All the locals who have lived here forever must have just been wandering past it with no clue as to what all that noise was. Some British missionary comes along and says “I found! It was me! I did that!” Probably got led there by the locals. Anyway, yay for Dr Livingstone. Ah that's right we visited the falls, this time from the Zimbabwe side. There's a lot more falls to look at on this side, though it was very misty and we didn't see that much in lots of places. The Zimbabwe side is also more expensive, costing $60usd more just to get in. Onto the falls. The Zimbabwe side apparently has 75% of the falls, so there was quite a lot to look at. We had hired ponchos again, way more expensive than the Zambia side, but we're glad to have them. We went out onto lots of viewing points, some we skipped, lots of mist so couldn't see much. We walked around to the bridge area and saw beautiful rainbows. We got another look at the boiling pot, from a different view point. We walked back past the entrance, to head up the river a bit. We found another viewing point, looking out towards “the devils cataract”. An area where you can see the falls and river, rainbows and water crashing. Mist, but not too much, rising up the walls of the gorge. It was in my opinion, the best spot to watch the falls, and we stayed there for quite awhile. We headed back to the entrance, bought some postcards, and exited. We walked back towards Victoria Falls (the town) and went into the supermarket. I needed coffee, badly. We bought some supplies and headed back to our stay. We then had a restful afternoon blogging. I had coffee now, so all were safe. I also bought some cans of Zambezi beer, made in Zimbabwe and pretty tasty. We then had a slow evening, and went to bed.
19.5.2025. Today is about ziplines. A small fortune was spent the other day for today's fun, and fun it was. We got picked up at our stay and driven to The Lookout Cafe, where Wild Horizons operate all their zipline business. We checked in, got marker on our hands to say what activities we're doing, harnessed up and set off. We started with a canopy tour, a series of ziplines spanning one point of the gorge. Emma had so far not been able to do ziplines, she was booked in and had been adamant she was going to do it today. There was a little hesitation, but she stepped off and did her very first ever zipline. So proud of my girl. Em even copped a rope across the face, that didn't stop her. Took some bark off her left eyelid, we got pictures to prove it. According to Andrew there were 9 ziplines all up, I never counted. After that we walked back, Andrew and I had our harnesses turned around and we did the flying fox. We walked back to the other side of the restaurant to where the BIG stuff was. We had to wait a little as there was other people, but no long. They have a gorge swing, Andrew and I had opted in on that. You get strapped up, walk out on a platform 120m high and step off, freefall for 70meters before swinging out, just above the water. I was going first, I was getting close to jumping, when Andrew asked if he could do it with me. Absolutely mate. We were supposed to do it by ourselves, but he recognised his limits and thought maybe he couldn't do it by himself. We got strapped together, and to 4 ropes, walked slowly towards the edge while getting instructions, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1. I can't explain the feeling properly, but it is something I have never experienced before. Thrilling, terrifying, exciting and unfortunately, over way too quick. Andrew was shaking just before we walked off, I felt bad about that and made sure to check on him as soon as I could. He was tucked in holding on tightly, but he was ok, talking to me straight after. I swore a fair bit, we caught a bit of that on camera. Would I do it again? Yes I would! Andrew tells me he would do it again to, not by himself tho. After the swing we had another zipline to do, this one a big one, 425m long and going over 100klm/hr. I went first, it was awesome and you got a fantastic view of the gorge. Andrew was next, he seemed a little worried, stumbled a little but was never not doing it. Mel and Emma were next, this is where it got too much for Em. Even with lots of encouragement from us and others, she couldn't do it. It was just too high and scary, she had found her new limit. Emma came back down, Andrew harnessed back up and went for a second ride with Mel, he was super upset about that. Mel was happy not to do it alone. I spoke with Emma, who was very upset with herself. I reminded her she had already pushed her limits today and done something she'd never done before, and that we were super proud of her. We watched Mel and Andrew do their zipline, Mel screamed the whole way just about. When we were all done, we headed back to the office and looked through all the photos and videos they had taken of us. We didn't know they did this, and had left most of our money and wallets back at the stay, the website said not to have anything in your pockets you're not willing to lose. We sorted out what we wanted and organised to get a pay link through WhatsApp. After that we headed to the restaurant, a couple beers and wines, drinks for the kids and a plate of chips and we were done. We got dropped back at our stay and had some down time. We had a late lunch I cooked, did some blogging and schoolwork, then later watched a movie and went to bed.
20.5.2025. We've got postcards to send, after breakfast we went for a walk. We found the post office, had a mini heart attack when they said $43usd to send 7 bloody cards, have told you Africa isn't cheap for tourists. Anyway, got that done, now off to where we did all the ziplines yesterday again. They were going to send us a link to pay, but we thought eh, we're out anyway let's just walk. We were nearly there, just a short dirt road to walk now and we were there. Just one thing, not far from the road were 4-5 elephants. I don't know how close is too close to an elephant, but I wasn't ready to find out. We stood in a little market area and watched them. They moved a little further away and some other people started walking through, so off we went. Once at the office, we sorted out which photos/videos we wanted, payed and made our way back. Now blogging and schoolwork while I make lunch. Nothing else planned for the day, dinner later, that's about it.
21.5.2025. Our last day in Zimbabwe. We packed our bags and got dropped at the airport.
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