Featured Destinations

The area which is now the Republic of Zambia (formerly Northern Rhodesia) was initially inhabited by hunter-gatherer tribes for thousands of years and something of a crossroads in the migrations of Bantu and specifically Nguni peoples. This explains the fact that Zambia has nine major ethno-linguistic groups. There are 72 languages and 13 distinct additional dialects spoken in the country. Babel babble!

The Okavango Delta is created by the Okavango River, the third largest in Southern Africa, spreading out on reaching Botswana....

The Sabi Sand is home to some of the world’s oldest, newest, finest and most exclusive private game lodges and frequently plays host to celebrities and politicians from around the world.

The Calendar Lake

Lake Malawi is known on its Mozambiquan side as Lago Niassa and is also commonly called The Calendar Lake, being 365 miles long and 52 miles wide. It is the southernmost of the lakes in the Rift Valley system and the second-deepest after Lake Tanganyika. The lake also reputedly contains the highest number of different fish species of any body of water in the world including several hundred endemic species of cichlid, a brightly-coloured fish popular with collectors around the world. Indeed it has become a popular hobby amongst fish-fanciers to recreate a Lake Malawi biotope in an aquarium. Bad luck cichlids – I am sure they’d rather live in a lake 365 miles long!