MyZambeziValley If the average person was asked about the Zambezi
Valley, how many would actually have anything to say? From all the
places I have been in the world, the ZambeziValley stands out most in
my mind. The mighty Zambezi River forms the border between Zimbabwe
and Zambia as they lie on the maps in our libraries. Few people have
been graced the opportunity to be in the presence of this majestic silver
python as it carves away at the crust of our earth. There is no better way
to experience this natural wonder than by organizing an expedition and
venturing into the unknown wilderness of the "Dark Continent" for
memories that will last you a lifetime. Unfortunately these days you have
to do it through a Safari company that will charge you an arm and a leg
for a week long tour, only skimming the surface and not taking you into
the darkest of Africa of which you have read in so many adventure
novels. Traveling is a very stimulating hobby, but Africa is part of me.
Darkness overcame all as Mother Earth turned her back on the
center of our solar system. In the heart of Africa everything is sleeping, or
so you are meant to think. The ruler of that kingdom is patrolling his
territory in absolute silence. His bushy black mane casts a shadow in the
pale moonlight. Eyes like those of an eagle penetrate the darkest
shadows of the bush. The soft gray pads of his paws tread along the
game path barely leaving any evidence of his presence. The great beast
strides graciously along before disappearing into black night. He will soon
find either a dense thicket or some tall Buffalo grass swaying back and
forth on the rhythm of the early morning breeze where he can lay his
giant body down and get some rest. Stars begin to fade as a mysterious
yellow glow takes their place in the East. The bush is coming to life. Birds
are singing their songs of joy and hippos are snorting out of pure pleasure
for a new day has come. This will be a day where the fight for survival
2takes over like an uncontrollable urge, nevertheless, little is known as to
who should be feared. Should it be the predators lurking around, wanting
to fill their own stomachs, or will it be the natives searching for food in the
land on which they have lived for thousands of years. Remember that this
is done in an effort to rise above the ever present poverty. It is with a
heavy heart that one is forced to judge who poaches for food and who
poaches for pleasure and other earthly rewards. Taking life to feed your
cubs, is just as important as taking life and feeding your starving children
in a third world country where corruption determines survival. I the
distance a deafening roar overwhelms all the timid sounds produced by
the creatures of the bush. As you approach this seemingly out of place
low frequency humming sound, it transforms into a eardrum banging
thunder. It makes you think the god of thunder has gone angry, very
angry. Here the dry landscape is transformed into a tropical wonderland
resembling that of an equatorial rain forest. Rising above this evergreen
mass is what looks like a cloud of smoke the size of a small skyscraper.
Upon further investigation one realizes that it is not smoke, but a very fine
mist carried by the breeze to nourish the forest. Right there before you
lies the almighty Victoria Falls. The mile wide river suddenly plunges
down several hundred feet into a crack in the earth that it has been
carving since the beginning of time. The Victoria Falls are remarkable. In
many ways it defies description. So vast are these Falls that it is difficult
to grasp their true grandeur and, for this reason, they are perhaps best
see from the air - a privilege not granted to everyone. Downstream from
the great Victoria Falls is Lake Kariba. Kariba is a unique place with
outstanding beauty. A great inland sea, nestled amongst the mountains,
guarded by enormous reserves of game, and made beautiful and savage
by sun and storm, earth and water, life and death. It is unforgettable on a
dust-tasting, hazy-blue September day to watch the game treading its
daily course to the edge of the lake's vast waters, or in the 3rainy season
when the air is crystal clear and the images razor sharp, to watch the
wet-skinned elephants slowly walking across the flood plains that are
carpeted with a new green flush. Most of all, of Kariba you will remember
the smells of Africa. The dust of the day, the moisture of the lake, and the
smell of advancing rain. Or, perhaps ultimate experience, watching the
red sun sliding into dusky blackness as the earth turns beneath it into
night - the dead trees that fill the lake and the blue-black mountains that
slope down to its wooded shore slowly merging with the blackness until
they are gone. The great Zambezi River that flows and plunges into
the depths of the earth, only to emerge through a narrow canyon and
then forming the spectacular Lake Kariba is one of the most breathtaking
wonders in existence. It is only through great care that this treasure will
be guarded for our children's children to enjoy. Although not everybody
will have the opportunity to visit this peace of heaven on earth, it is worth
while to know that it exists. In all the years that I have spent time there, I
cannot imagine the world without it.
. My Zambezi Valley If the average person was asked about the Zambezi
Valley, how many would actually have anything. From all the
places I have been in the world, the Zambezi Valley stands out most in
my mind. The mighty Zambezi River forms the border between Zimbabwe
and