the river has been dammed to form Lake Kariba.

A VISIT TO THE ACTUAL FALLS:
Before starting out, it is as well to remember a few basic facts. Probably the most important thing is that the Falls area is a nature reserve . The paths are well surfaced and allow adequate viewing points, therefore it is unnecessary, and in fact illegal, to leave the path at any stage as this could be unsafe, and would certainly be damaging to the plants which are, in some cases, unique to this strip of forest. It is also illegal to pick flowers or remove any plant from the reserve.

Between December and August it is advisable to take a rain-coat preferably plastic, an umbrella, old shoes and a plastic bag to hold camera and guide book..

Viewpoint no. 1:
Towards Livingstone’s statue the visitor obtains his/her first uninterrupted view of Devil’s Cataract and the first section of Main Falls. Devil’s Cataract, the closest fall, is the lowest of the five falls and represents a
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Drifters Lodges, Inns and Camps
Drifters' Lodges, Inns and Camps
Drifters' Victoria Falls Inn

Drifters' Victoria Falls Inn - Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe



Situated on the outskirts of “Africa’s adventure capital”, this Inn is the ideal place to spend your holiday, or to relax after one of our safaris. Victoria Falls has much to offer, from the world’s best white-water rafting to one of the highest bungi jumps at 111m.

For the less active, the surrounding game parks are hard to beat, as are the river cruises and aircraft flips over the Falls.

The Drifters Inn is well located, overlooking a wilderness area, and within easy walking distance of all activities. Accommodation is in twin rooms, some sharing bathrooms, and breakfast is included.

For other meals, a choice of nearby restaurants is available. A swimming pool, garden bar, T.V. lounge, and laundry facility are provided for guests’ convenience.

Drifters Victoria Falls Inn

Victoria Falls Inn:
Single B&B €195.00
Sharing B&B €165.00 per person

VICTORIA FALLS:
"Vic Falls": World Heritage Site - one of the Seven Natural Wonders - Africa's "Adventure Capital" - largest curtain of falling water on earth...
Don't be mistaken by the hype

* 20 years ago Victoria Falls had just less than 100 permanent European residents
* 100 years ago it had just less than 30
* historically "Vic Falls" was only discovered by David Livingstone 5 generations ago
[November 1855].

Today, Victoria Falls remains as evocative a destination as it did to the hunters, surveyors, explorers and missionaries of the 19th Century. Today, the wanderlust is the same, the pursuits are slightly different

* it serves as southern Africa's primary safari gateway
* it has the wildest one day white water rafting trip on the planet
* until recently the highest commercial bungee jump on earth

THE VICTORIA FALLS:

The Zambezi rises in Northern Zambia near Kalene Hill. This watershed is also the origin of one of the tributaries of the Congo. The Zambezi flows south-west into Angola, returning the Zambia where it flows south through the Barotse Plain and on to the Caprivi swamps where it is joined by the Chobe River. From this point it takes an easterly course, forming the border between Zambia and Zimbabwe and on through Mozambique to the Indian Ocean. Its total length is 2 700 kilometres, and it is Africa’s fourth longest river.

At several places in its course it encounters sudden bands of comparatively hard rock through which it must excavate its bed, and at these points, rapids and sometimes waterfalls are formed, marking the uneven erosion of th underlying rock surface. In other areas the river bed is formed of a uniform type of rock and therefore erosion is comparatively even and the river flows smoothly. Usually in such peaceful stretches of the river, the bed is wide, and deposition of material such as sand or gravel, carried along by the river from further up-stream, forms bars or islands. In places where hard rock is encountered, the river tends to narrow and deepen, cutting the easiest course through the barrier, and here erosion rather than deposition is the rule.

In the Victoria Falls area we find both these varieties of river “character” exaggerated to a unique degree. Up-stream from the Falls is a stretch of about twelve kilometres where the river is smooth-running, depositing sand which forms islands, such as Kandahar and Long Islands. About three kilometres up-stream from the Falls, there is a sudden southward bend in the river, the current, becomes faster and more uneven and finally, after a short stretch of rapids, the whole river, here 1 700 metres wide, plunges into a chasm of 108 metres deep which cuts right across its course. Thus a river of nearly two kilometres (over a mile) in width becomes one of only a fraction of that width in a matter of seconds. The river continues through a series of steep, narrow gorges which form a zig-zag pattern for the first eight kilometres and then straighten out into the Batoka Gorge which runs in an easterly direction for about 100 kilometres to the Gwembe Valley where