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Zimbabwe Safari Tours & Holidays

Be prepared for an exciting journey full of surprises when going on safari in Zimbabwe. Go for a game drive in search of the Big Five in Hwange National Park. Push up the heat with a canoe or walking safari in Mana Pools National Park on the mighty Zambezi River. Search for ancient rock art on the balancing boulders in Matobo National Park, and get drenched in the spray of Victoria Falls (Vic Falls), one of the Seven Natural Wonders of the World. Wherever you go, you’ll be charmed by the friendly people you meet along the way. Slow down and make time for a conversation here and there. Once back home, you might find that these moments are among the most precious memories of your trip.

6-Day Zimbabwe Amazing Private Tour

6-Day Zimbabwe Amazing Private Tour

$3,388 pp (USD)

Zimbabwe, Botswana & Zambia: Private tour Mid-range Lodge

You Visit: Bulawayo (Start) , Matobo NP, Hwange NP, Victoria Falls, Victoria Falls Airport (End)

Zambezi Expedition Travel and Tours   Tour operator has an office in Zimbabwe

5.0 /5  –  81 Reviews

13-Day Luxury Zimbabwe Safari

13-Day Luxury Zimbabwe Safari

$16,815 to $23,941 pp (USD)

Zimbabwe: Private tour Luxury Lodge & Tented Camp

You Visit: Victoria Falls Town (Start) , Hwange NP, Lake Kariba, Matusadona NP, Mana Pools NP, Victoria Falls (End)

Tour operator has an office in United States

4.9 /5  –  149 Reviews

11-Day Very Best of Zimbabwe Luxury Safari

11-Day Very Best of Zimbabwe Luxury Safari

$6,648 to $8,162 pp (USD)

Zimbabwe: Private tour Luxury Tented Camp & Hotel

You Visit: Victoria Falls (Start) , Hwange NP, Lake Kariba, Mana Pools NP, Victoria Falls Airport (End)

Off2Africa Travel   Tour operator has an office in Zimbabwe

5.0 /5  –  94 Reviews

5-Day The Victoria Falls and Hwange National Park

5-Day The Victoria Falls and Hwange National Park

$1,595 pp (USD)

Zimbabwe: Shared tour (max 20 people per vehicle) Budget Lodge

You Visit: Victoria Falls (Start) , Hwange NP, Victoria Falls Airport (End)

Escape to Adventure Safaris   Tour operator has an office in Zimbabwe

5.0 /5  –  75 Reviews

shamiso tours zimbabwe

6-Day Mana & Chitake Glamping in Pop-Roof Cruiser + Chef

$2,708 pp (USD)

Zimbabwe: Shared tour (max 7 people per vehicle) Budget Camping

You Visit: Harare (Start) , Mana Pools NP, Chitake Springs (Mana Pools NP) , Harare (End)

Mana Pools Tourism Services   Tour operator has an office in Zimbabwe

5.0 /5  –  29 Reviews

shamiso tours zimbabwe

3-Day Victoria Falls and Hwange National Park Tour

$1,045 pp (USD)

Zimbabwe: Shared tour (max 10 people per vehicle) Mid-range Lodge & Hotel

You Visit: Victoria Falls (Start) , Hwange NP, Victoria Falls Town (End)

Wanderlust Safaris   Tour operator has an office in Zimbabwe

4.9 /5  –  37 Reviews

shamiso tours zimbabwe

5-Day Victoria Fallls and Hwange National Park Package

$1,722 pp (USD)

Zimbabwe: Shared tour (max 20 people per vehicle) Mid-range Lodge

Africa Zim Travel & Tours   Tour operator has an office in Zimbabwe

5.0 /5  –  116 Reviews

shamiso tours zimbabwe

5-Day Victoria Falls Rafting with Hwange NP Safari Trip

$1,650 pp (USD)

Zimbabwe: Shared tour (max 10 people per vehicle) Budget Lodge

Victoria Falls Serious Fun Tours and Travel   Tour operator has an office in Zimbabwe

4.6 /5  –  17 Reviews

shamiso tours zimbabwe

7-Day Zimbabwe Adventure Fly-in Safari

$5,035 to $6,635 pp (USD)

Zimbabwe: Private tour Luxury Tented Camp & Tented Bush Camp

You Visit: Victoria Falls Town (Start) , Hwange NP, Mana Pools NP, Harare Airport (End)

Kingfisher Safaris

4.7 /5  –  51 Reviews

shamiso tours zimbabwe

5-Day Victoria Falls and Hwange National Park Safari

$1,375 to $1,485 pp (USD)

Zimbabwe: Shared tour (max 6 people per vehicle) Budget Lodge

Africa Uncovered Safaris   Tour operator has an office in Zimbabwe

4.9 /5  –  32 Reviews

3-Day Hwange NP Safari Staying at Khulu Bush Camp

$1,640 to $1,869 pp (USD)

Zimbabwe: Private tour Luxury Tented Camp

You Visit: Victoria Falls Town (Start) , Hwange NP, Victoria Falls Airport (End)

Customise Travel & Tours   Tour operator has an office in Zimbabwe

4.9 /5  –  28 Reviews

shamiso tours zimbabwe

10-Day Victoria Falls Tour and Somalisa Main Camp Hwange

$6,292 pp (USD)

Zimbabwe: Private tour Mid-range Lodge & Tented Camp

Cultural Vibes Travel & Tours   Tour operator has an office in Zimbabwe

4.9 /5  –  112 Reviews

shamiso tours zimbabwe

7-Day Mana Pools Trail Hike

$1,914 pp (USD)

Zimbabwe: Shared tour (max 6 people per group) Budget Camping

You Visit: Chirundu (Start) , Mana Pools NP, Chirundu (End)

Khangela Safaris   Tour operator has an office in Zimbabwe

4.9 /5  –  14 Reviews

shamiso tours zimbabwe

3-Day Victoria Falls and Hwange National Park

Zimbabwe: Shared tour (max 8 people per vehicle) Mid-range Lodge

You Visit: Victoria Falls Town (Start) , Hwange NP, Victoria Falls Town (End)

5.0 /5  –  6 Reviews

shamiso tours zimbabwe

4-Day Safari in Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe

$550 pp (USD)

Zimbabwe: Shared tour (max 20 people per vehicle) Mid-range Hotel

You Visit: Victoria Falls Town

Tamuka Travel   Tour operator has an office in Zimbabwe

4.3 /5  –  6 Reviews

shamiso tours zimbabwe

7-Day Fly-in Kruger Park and Victoria Falls Combo

$4,021 pp (USD)

South Africa & Zimbabwe: Shared tour (max 6 people per vehicle) Luxury Lodge

You Visit: Johannesburg (Start) , Kruger NP, Victoria Falls, Johannesburg (End)

4.7 /5  –  186 Reviews

shamiso tours zimbabwe

13-Day Eco-Safari in Cape Town, Kruger & Victoria Falls

$6,226 pp (USD)

South Africa, Zambia & Zimbabwe: Private tour Mid-range Tented Camp & Hotel

You Visit: Cape Town (Start) , Cape Winelands, Greater Kruger, Timbavati NR (Greater Kruger) , Victoria Falls, Cape Town Airport (End)

5.0 /5  –  41 Reviews

shamiso tours zimbabwe

½-Day Moonlight Safari near Victoria Falls, 2 Hours

$77 to $83 pp (USD)

Zimbabwe: ½ Day tour Shared tour (max 10 people per vehicle)

Savannah Adventures   Tour operator has an office in Zimbabwe

5.0 /5  –  21 Reviews

shamiso tours zimbabwe

1-Day Hwange Full Trip

$330 pp (USD)

Zimbabwe: Day tour Shared tour (max 10 people per vehicle)

Afro Dawn Safaris   Tour operator has an office in Zimbabwe

4.9 /5  –  23 Reviews

shamiso tours zimbabwe

2-Day Bomani Tented Lodge Experience

$638 pp (USD)

Zimbabwe: Private tour Mid-range Tented Camp

East Cape Tours

4.8 /5  –  60 Reviews

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6 Questions About Zimbabwe Safaris

Ariadne van Zandbergen

Answered by

Ariadne van zandbergen.

shamiso tours zimbabwe

What are the best parks to visit in Zimbabwe?

“There are lots of great national parks in Zimbabwe. Hwange, Mana Pools and Matobo are highly recommended, but so too are the more remote and little-known likes of Matusadona and Gonarezhou National Parks. Zimbabwe is best known for the magnificent Vic Falls, which, at 1.7km wide, is one of the world’s largest waterfalls. A beautiful feature of Victoria Falls National Park is the rainforest, nourished by the spray of the waterfall. Although the forest is home to many small mammals and birds, this isn’t a real wildlife-viewing destination. For a real safari experience, Hwange NP, Zimbabwe’s biggest and most popular Big Five destination, is only three hours’ drive from Vic Falls. The waterholes provide great viewing in the Dry season, when elephants are particularly abundant. Hwange is well-equipped for self-drive visitors, but the surrounding private concessions provide high-end five-star luxury and exclusivity. Mana Pools NP, with 70km of Zambezi River frontage, offers a true wilderness experience. Best explored on foot or by canoe, the park is home to huge numbers of buffalo and elephant, while predators include lion, leopard and African wild dog. Matobo NP is less densely populated with animals, but it’s a good place to track white and black rhino on foot. The ‘balancing rocks’, which dominate the dramatic landscape, are home to some superb rock art sites. For repeat safari-goers who want to get off the beaten track, Matusadona or Gonarezhou are highly recommended. Matusadona lies on the shore of Lake Kariba, while Gonarezhou is a very scenic park focused on the Same and Runde Rivers and spectacular Chilojo Cliffs. Wildlife densities, though relatively low after years of poaching, are swiftly recovering in both parks under dynamic new private management.”

What is the best time of the year for a safari in Zimbabwe?

“The best time of the year to visit Zimbabwe is from June or July to October. This is the middle and end of the Dry season, which is most favorable for wildlife viewing. As the water dries out in the bush, animals gather around waterholes and rivers, which makes them easier to spot. The lush vegetation shrivels as the Dry season progresses and this also makes viewing easier. Note though that the Dry season is the southern hemisphere winter, and it will be cold at night and in the mornings, particularly so on early morning and later afternoon game drives. The optimum time to see Vic Falls is from February to September. It’s most powerful up to June, when the Zambezi River flows at its highest, but views are clearer as the flow decreases from July. The waterfall is less spectacular from October to January but emphatically still worth visiting.”

Is it safe to go on safari in Zimbabwe?

“Although the country has had a turbulent past, it is basically safe to visit. On an organized tour, your guide will take care of your well-being at all times. You’ll only stay at reputable hotels and lodges where safety isn’t a concern. The political situation has improved a lot since the death of former president Robert Mugabe in 2019, and while there is still a lot of poverty, you’re very unlikely to get into any trouble when visiting parks and other tourist hot spots.”

How much will this safari cost?

“There are a lot of factors that determine the cost of a Zimbabwe safari. As a guideline, you can expect prices for a 7-day mid-range private tour to start at about US$2,200 per person, while luxury packages start at around US$3,300 per person. Most budget friendly is a supported self-drive safari. You’ll be kitted out with a sturdy 4x4 and camping gear, and all bookings will be made for you. While this might be appealing to people wanting full independence, most visitors prefer a guided tour. There are plenty of different tours available in different price brackets. You have the choice of joining a group tour, where some costs are shared, or booking a private holiday. However, the biggest cost difference between tours is the level of accommodation. The cheapest option is a camping trip. Going up from camping are different kinds of lodgings ranging from budget no-frills parks accommodation to five-star luxury lodges in private concessions. Road safaris are great as they give you a chance to see the countryside away from the parks, but more costly fly-in safaris are more comfortable and time-efficient. I recommend getting a few quotations before booking a safari in Zimbabwe.”

Which animals can I expect to see?

“Zimbabwe offers excellent wildlife-viewing opportunities. The country’s most popular and accessible Big Five destination is Hwange NP. The elephant numbers are phenomenal in the Dry season and predator sightings are usually good too. Lions are most easily seen. Hwange is home to one of Africa’s biggest wild dog populations and sightings of these endangered sociable animals are very special. The antelope diversity is another drawing card. Aside from common species such as impala, greater kudu and waterbuck, you might see rarities such as roan and sable. The Zambezi River has incredible numbers of crocs and hippos, and the best place to see them is in Mana Pools NP. This exquisite wilderness is also known for big herds of elephants, buffalo, all three of the big cats and healthy numbers of wild dogs. Your best bet to see rhinos in Zimbabwe is in Matobo NP. White rhinos are quite easily spotted, provided you arrange a foot tracking excursion with a local guide, but black rhinos are notoriously shy and tend to stick to the thickets.”

What type of accommodation can I expect?

“Zimbabwe offers a wide range of accommodation styles suiting different budgets. The cheapest accommodation inside the parks (aside from camping) are the government national parks’ chalets and cottages. These are basic self-catering units, often in need of some maintenance. For better service and ambience, there are usually several privately owned lodges and camps available too. Top safari lodges tend to be fully inclusive of guided activities, meals and even drinks. There is plenty of accommodation in the towns too, especially in tourist hot spots, such as Vic Falls. There you’ll have the choice between owner-managed B&Bs, big luxury hotels, friendly guesthouses, safari lodges and backpacker hostels.”

Zimbabwe Safari Reviews

shamiso tours zimbabwe

Sue is an award-winning writer who specializes in African travel and conservation. She writes for national newspapers, magazines, Rough Guides and Lonely Planet.

Zimbabwe: A Country on the Cusp…

If I had only one chance to go back to Africa and could choose only one country, it would be Zimbabwe. I first visited, going to Victoria Falls, at the height of the country’s toughest times back in 2004, when a trillion-dollar note...

Full Review

shamiso tours zimbabwe

Anthony is a photographer and writer for travel magazines and Lonely Planet, including the guides to Kenya and Botswana & Namibia.

Zimbabwe: The Next Big Thing in Safaris

Forget everything negative you’ve heard about Zimbabwe. This is one of my favorite safari destinations. Hwange, in the country’s east, belongs among the elite of African national parks. I especially love it for its elephant and lion...

Spain

It has a natural beauty, the local people are friendly, the wildlife good but the roads terrible.

We used Serious fun tours for our 4 days in Zim. we wanted to do Victoria falls and a game drive. We got so much more. What a pleasant experience! They communicated well from the start. They offered the biggest variation of things to do...

United States

Zimbabwe is a beautiful country with amazing scenery, great animal sightings, & friendly people!

Our family (four adults) had an amazing time on our trip to Zimbabwe. We loved the scenery on our drive from the Vic Falls airport to our first accommodation stop (Robins Camp). We saw so many wild animals just on that drive alone including...

Fantastic place to visit and knowledgeable guides

Zimbabwe is a beautiful and peaceful country. We had an amazing time visiting Victoria falls and Chobe. All guides were very knowledgeable. I would recommend anyone wanting to visit Zimbabwe not to hesitate.

New Zealand

Wonderful wildlife, but poor conditions for its people

Victoria Falls was amazing - the sound and power of the water was incredible. Hwange National Park was a wonderful experience, numbers and variety of animals was fantastic. Elephants, giraffes, impalas, baboons, zebras, lions, spider...

Rewilding Magazine

How we’re rewilding: Shamiso Mupara, Environmental Buddies Zimbabwe

Deforestation has brought drought and hunger to Zimbabwe’s Marange district. Here’s how one activist is planting food forests to change things for the better.

Indigenous woodlands housing naturally occurring food forests used to cover Zimbabwe’s Marange district – until the 1920s, when European encroachment to harvest native timber sparked a wholesale destruction of woodland that has worsened to today.

Now, Marange is one of the country’s driest districts, a place of severe climate droughts where misplaced political priorities mean precious hardwoods such as mahogany and teak are finding their way into international markets without efforts to replant them or communities benefiting from the proceeds.

Environmentalist Shamiso Mupara wants to change this. That’s why in 2013 she created Environmental Buddies Zimbabwe , a movement to replant native food forests and help solve the region’s blighting hunger. She began by sinking a 65-metre water borehole and rallying her community to regrow lost native food forests: ecosystems that include edible and medicinal plants and trees and that provide breeding or feeding opportunities for wildlife such as bees. Crucially, the deep roots and shrubs of food forests resist drought and provide protective shade for smaller plants growing underneath them.

Two people on their hands and knees planting a young tree into the soil.

Rewilding efforts have picked up steam across southern Africa in the past two decades with an emphasis on natural flora and fauna, tree species, edible plants and aquatic life systems in protected forests, and human settlements near natural forests. The most prominent effort is the so-called Peace Parks initiative, which aims to establish 18 trans-frontier, sustainable conservation areas that will take up 10 million hectares in 17 countries. Environmental Buddies Zimbabwe’s work is one small step toward these gigantic goals.

Here, Shamiso shares her inspiration, her projects – and her dreams for the future.

“I’m Shamiso Mupara. I am a 37-year-old female environmentalist from Zimbabwe. I hail from a rural district called Marange. I was educated to the level of a Master’s of Science in Environmental Science at University of Botswana.

My search for so-called formal jobs went on so poorly that at one moment I became an economic refugee in a neighbouring country. I eventually lost hope that I would ever find a job as an environment scientist. In 2013 I decided to take matters into my own hands. I founded Environmental Buddies Zimbabwe Trust (EBZ). I told myself, if they can’t employ me, I will employ myself.

In Marange district of Zimbabwe, from as far back as 1991 the village has been experiencing severe droughts every five years. Big trucks carrying American donated food aid was the usual thing. Malnutrition, kwashiorkor in kids was rampant. Families would marry off their daughters as young as 12 to very old men to be able to put food on the table.

I knew I had to do something. Our problem was water.

A group of children in blue school uniforms, with some adults, in a field with trees behind. Some are holding saplings.

In 2014 my older brother paid for a 65-metre borehole at our family plot and the community food security journey started. We scaled up our reforestation efforts, raising more fruit trees, mostly indigenous. Three years ago we started a food forest, organic gardens where we have planted both fruit trees and defied the odds by growing vegetables such as bell peppers, carrots, cucumbers, okra, eggplants, cassava, beetroots, in addition to our usual leaf vegetables.

Food forests have a massive diet-enriching role across rural Zimbabwe. The most popular feature is the annual mushroom picking season, which provides protein and income for rural households. Over the last 100 years, community food forests have had a protected status in Zimbabwe’s culture; burning food forests could attract traditional criminal fines of one cattle bull payable to a rural chief.

A woman stands next to a one-year-old leafy tree.

We started as a mere pilot project, but it has turned out to be a perennial source of food. Massive deforestation has been a menace in our district in the last 100 years. But in recent times the situation has become quite dire due to extractive mining of alluvial diamonds, which were discovered around 2004.

The discovery prompted a diamond rush that lasted for three to four years and attracted national, regional and global attention in my Marange district. By 2008, an estimated 40,000 artisanal miners thronged the local diamond fields. This came with massive land degradation characterized by unregulated digging, cutting down of trees and pollution of water sources as diggers searched for precious stones via crude ways.

Forests were already vanishing due to community demands for firewood, but mining brought a new devastation of entire forest ecosystems. When artisanal mining was banned, hungry local youth turned to wood poaching in order to feed their families. For example, the felling of bird’s plum (Nyii) tree accelerated as city sculpture carpenters demanded fine wood. We had to act.

A group of people posing for a photo outdoors, with trees in the background.

Right now, we are even branching out of our district to work with 20 schools in four provinces across Zimbabwe in food forest regrowing efforts. The idea is to make communities the custodians of sensitive local forests. Regrown food forests here are making more sense. Locally grown food is what communities need.

Our food forest remains a reliable source of food as we continue to promote what we call the Marange Food Revolution. Anyone who plants a tree knowing very well it’s likely to produce fruit after 30 years, they have a mind to invest in the future.

Hands surrounding a seedling planted in the ground.

Native trees carry the culture of Zimbabweans. This culture includes our diets, history of our ancestors, rain-making ceremonies, medicinal plants, etc. Take the example of mutiti, lucky-bean tree. A wonder tree it is, its uses ranging from protecting soils to dyes. Traditionally it is used to treat earache.

All that information is lost with deforestation. Most exotic trees do not survive or produce desired fruits in most Zimbabwean climates. They also bring new pests and diseases, and they are of little benefit to us.

Forests contain one-quarter of plants used in medicine production. Health practitioners at local clinics in my district have an understanding of this, and they took part in planting several indigenous trees with medicinal values. They included mutiti, munondo , miuyu African tree species.

A black carpenter bee foraging on a flower.

Zimbabwe now has a long list of trees and plants that are on the extinction list and pod mahogany [a tree whose seeds are used in musical instruments and whose pods and leaves can be used as cattle fodder] is one of them. Most native trees are slow growing and this discourages most people from planting them. But in the long run, they have longer-lasting benefits than exotic trees.

We continue to propagate plants already listed on the IUCN Red List to ensure they don't go extinct. We are adding information to already existing community knowledge. During the nomadic days, our ancestors used to survive on food forests. Modern agriculture introduced monoculture, which only encourages growing of one crop. The drawback is, during crop failure the community suffers from hunger. But food forests are a cushion to hunger: If one crop fails, another may succeed.

A woman holds up an upside-down seedling as a demonstration to a group of schoolchildren.

My work has been applauded globally in numerous ways. For example, in 2018 I had the honour of being invited to attend the Global Water Justice Summit in Michigan as a keynote speaker and had the chance to speak with primary school students in the U.S. to give them a perspective of what we are doing in Zimbabwe. In the same year, the Global Landscapes Forum in Bonn, Germany, showcased my work to delegates and nominated me as a global Landscape Hero .

The challenge of rewilding food forests in Zimbabwe is led at the community level by residents, like we are doing at EBZ. Waiting for international donor funding is a waste of precious time, because resources are scarce but the climate emergency is accelerating.

For aspiring heroes looking to start out – my advice is don’t wait for the perfect funding, weather, or getting a university degree. Look at the state of forests within your neighbourhood and see if food forests are flourishing. If they are under strain, experiment with growing edible plants. When you have a demonstrable project going on, the community and funders will notice.”

This interview has been condensed and edited for clarity. All photos courtesy Shamiso Mupara.

How to plant a tree

How rewilding can help boost food security, in w̱sáneć territories, removing invasive english ivy makes way for indigenous plants, “we rewilded our yard diy style – and got the neighbours on board too”, how the yorkshire rewilding network is building connections and community – and hope, the landscape architects making singapore wilder, how squiirrel is addressing the need for seed, “we have to protect the mangroves so they can protect us”, restoring the soil beneath our feet, the community beating drought with tree-based farming.

The Entrepreneurial Magazine

The Entrepreneurial Magazine

Quality content you can't afford missing

shamiso tours zimbabwe

Our Favourite Top 10 Zimbabwe Female Entrepreneurs

Our Favourite Top 10 Zimbabwe Female Entrepreneurs

Celebrating Female Business leaders

‘Women belong in all places where decisions are being made’

Afra challenges the male dominated transport industry

shamiso tours zimbabwe

ACCORDING to research, women contribute to the transformation of mobility, they frequently remain invisible and their contribution to safer, more inclusive and more sustainable transport is insufficiently acknowledged. One Dr Afra Nhanhanga chose to challenge the narrative and led from the front, transforming the transport industry in the country.

Afra is the Director of CAG Travellers Coaches operating a fleet of 115 buses— which are CAG Tours, Galaxy, Golden Heritage and Edlux. She possesses more than 20 years’ experience in transport business and is a recipient of Businesswoman of the year Award in the Transport Sector for 2020, while her company was honoured with the Bus and Transport Services Company of the Year Award.

When her father Golden Nhanhanga founded CAG Travellers Coaches in 1997, Afra started out as a conductor for the buses while her brother sold tickets with their father Nhanhanga as the driver.

“At the time, it was taboo to be a woman conductor but my father allowed it because I was his first-born child and my young brothers were still at school and would help here and there,” Afra recalls. “When the business commenced in 1997, I was asked to even attend meetings but the men would heckle and demand that I leave meetings because they did not believe that she could run a successful transport business.”

While violence and lack of respect for women in the transport sector is widely acknowledged as one of the most important “push” factors that lead to involuntary quits, Afra stood her ground and today she leads one of the biggest fleets of buses that ply various routes across the country.

“The transport industry needs more grace and wisdom since it involves people’s lives. It is the passion that drives me and the zeal to reach great heights that pushes me to compete with men in this industry,” she said.

Apart from the transport sector, Afra is also into farming cash crops like tobacco and other market gardening vegetables like cabbages, onions and potatoes at her farm in Karoi. She was recently honored with another award in South Africa for helping less privileged people and empowering women through self-help projects. #Choose2Challenge

Shamiso and Tsitsi takes on the Home Designs and construction industry

shamiso tours zimbabwe

WORLDWIDE, the construction industry is still largely regarded as a male domain where women are not taken seriously as professionals and society, tradition, organisational culture and sexist attitudes play a major role when appointing women in construction. A United Nations study further shows that infrastructure projects are gender blind with women being the least represented in employment in the construction sector with only 3,5 percent women and 96,5 percent men.

However, for Shamiso Machaya and her sister Tsitsi Heslop, changing this narrative is inevitable. The duo threw caution to the wind and co-founded C & R Home designs and Construction Pvt in 2018. “Research indicates that women in construction are underrepresented and we have taken it upon ourselves to push this underrepresentation and bring change for tomorrow through an increased capability of women within challenging industries,” Shamiso said.

“Although construction is still largely regarded as a male domain, change should take place in the industry to rectify this specific train of thought and culture, and those women equally deserve to participate in construction even though it may be considered as a place for men only.”

Shamiso believes that founding C & R Home designs and Construction was an ultimate goal of creating employment for the unemployed skilled youths within Zimbabwe. “The services that we provide are home improvements, construction, including specialist works such as architectural, plumbing, installation of solar systems and electrical works,” she said.

C&R Home Designs & Construction offers services for Zimbabweans living in diaspora by helping them to rebuild a modern Zimbabwe and has started introducing its services to the local communities in Zimbabwe.

The company started after Shamiso had identified talent in her cousin who was into joinery. She then advertised the cousin’s services in a Facebook Community which brought attention of the audience and some months down the line, they got their first contract of kitchen renovation and the rest is history.

She is so glad to have managed to maintain this vision within the pandemic, when most small businesses are crumbling. To her, the entrepreneurial journey has been like a roller coaster, as she has encountered numerous challenges such as discrimination, since the sector is male-dominated. The spirit of continuing with the vision has however kept her going in such difficult times.

Shamiso is passionate about women economic empowerment through the stimulation of entrepreneurial tendencies via training, coaching, mentorship and community cohesion activities. She has an interest in eliminating barriers that deter women from achieving their full economic aspirational goals. #Choose2Challenge

Chef Nyasha shines her light in Culinary Business

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NYASHA Mbizvo-Mangwiro is a contemporary, vibrant and creative chef with experience from various parts of the world. She is the founder and executive chef of Chef Studios and Bespoke Cakes ZW. The 26year old started her professional journey around 2013 when she was pursuing her studies in International hospitality and hotel management at Vatel International Business School in Mauritius, which also had its main campus in Southern France.

During the course of her training, she acquired a lot of knowledge that’s when she discovered that she wanted to work in the culinary field, not the management part of the Tourism and Hospitality Sector. She worked in various Five Star Hotels and Restaurants in Mauritius, France, Zanzibar and finally UEA where she worked at the Emirates Palace as chef and personal butler to royal families. She was offered a job in the Emirates Palace before she could finish her training, she however turned down the offer and that was the beginning of her entrepreneurial journey.

She came back to Zimbabwe and decided to work on her catering company that she had registered in 2014 and it now includes cooking classes that took off in 2017. She first advertised her cooking classes on her Instagram page and had 14 participants in her first class. Now on a yearly basis, she takes more than 200 people for her classes and due to covid-19 they have shifted to virtual classes.

The main inspiration behind Chefs Studios was to introduce home cooking, that is bringing restaurant quality food to the family table. Bespoke Cakes ZW specialises in simple anytime delicious cakes. Nyasha also offers catering Services for various events.

Like any other entrepreneurs, Nyasha has also faced some challenges in her journey which includes doubt from clients, if she can deliver as young as she is. Self-doubt whether she could meet the customer’s expectations. Customers at sometimes doubt some of the meals she posts online and in some scenarios she had to recook the meals to prove herself. However, the support she gets from her parents, brothers and husband has always inspired her not to give up as well as feedbacks she gets from customers.

The talented master chef encouraged women “to own their crown” in every way possible and follow their hearts in pursuing their life goals. To aspiring young entrepreneurs, she reiterated the need to be passionate, unique, compete with themselves and be wide researchers. #Choose2Challenge

Women in Enterprise: Sympathy takes the lead

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SYMPATHY Sibanda-Mazuruse is a 33-year-old multi-award-winning entrepreneur who has broken the glass ceiling in the world of business. She founded Amandla Brands and co-owning Esteem Communications at a young age.

Amandla Brands is a local digital marketing, public relations and brand development company that specialises in organic foods like peanut butter, a variation of nuts and raisins, brown rice and brown rice flour as well as snacks. The company has maintained a steady growth since inception.

“It was natural for me to choose peanut butter production as a business because my mother taught me how to make it while I was in high school and I knew how to operate all the machinery. Even though it all started out as a joke, it outgrew me,” Sympathy said. “The reason I chose the particular food business was because peanut butter making came so naturally to me and it is the same peanut butter business that my mother did that contributed to the money that took my siblings and myself to school and also fed us.”

Being at the helm of Amandla Brands, a company that has become a good reference point for many marketing clients, Sympathy has managed to maintain stability in an unfriendly economic environment and her company is still growing bigger.

“Amandla Brands was born out of the desire to demonstrate our brand development acumen by way of building a company of our own from scratch,” she said.

Symapthy added that she is also engaging in trainings to mentor women who would like to get in business but have no idea what is needed. Amandla Brands has become a creative hub for women to share experiences and push each other to run profitable businesses.

The young entrepreneur also co-owns a marketing and branding company, Esteem Communications, with her husband, which was born out of a combination of the love for writing and marketing.

Sibanda-Mazuruse is the winner of the 2018 CBZ Youth Entrepreneurship Programme (YEP) award, 2019 1st Runner-Up award under the manufacturing sector at the Zimbabwe National Chamber of Commerce Women in Enterprise award and 2020 awards.

Karen Nyenga, the Real Estate boss

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KAREN Nyenga is an experienced Real Estate Agent in Zimbabwe with experience in Local, Regional and International Real Estate Markets. She owns the Zimbabwe License for Fine & Country, which is a part of the renowned global brand with a network of over 300 offices worldwide.

She is also the Director of Industry Girls Network (IGN), an association which is focused on assisting women in business solidify their positions, collaborate and be profitable. She also enjoys being involved with initiatives that change and inspire people’s lives, and has recently through Fine & Country Foundation, become an active supporter of the local initiative Eat Out Movement, which works diligently against the plight of homelessness and hunger.

Recalling on how she started, at the age of 33 she gained the courage to leave a company she had been working for and venture into the franchise world and she is the sole owner of the Fine & Country license here in Zimbabwe.

She admitted that it was not an easy experience for her and she calls some of the experiences “the battle scars” obviously where she did walk out victorious.

With their offices located at 20 Maasdorp Avenue, Belgravia in Harare. Her Real Estate Company offers sales and rental services, Interior Design and Architectural Services, Construction and Consultancy Services.

Speaking of some challenges she has faced in her entrepreneurial journey, the first being lack of confidence to leave her formal job in a shrinking economy, where lines of credit were not being extended and most of the strategic plans required significant finances to execute. The matter of existing competitors in the industry was another challenge she faced, how to grow their market, remaining relevant and executing their service mandate to clients profitably. The inspiration to keep going came internally from family, friends and obviously the team of employees. #Choose2Challenge

Joseline, one of the top influencers in the SMEs Sector

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JOSELINE Sithole is the founder of Southern Africa Development Consultants and Gosseberry (SODECO), who was born and bred in the Eastern Highlands. Taking inspiration from her late mother, who was a go getter, Joseline lives to empower other women through business training. Her passion lies in developing grassroots and unreached women throughout Africa with business skills. She is also a passionate writer and reader in various publications and she currently writing a book on Women Entrepreneurship in Zimbabwe and another one on Surviving Divorce.

SODECO is a company that conducts a wide array of research and is well known for leading in SME research. The company also conducts capacity building workshops and entrepreneurial skills training for women and youths, it also runs teen’s Entrepreneurial capacity building workshops. Gooseberrywas solely formed to conduct research within the advertising Sector

Recalling on how she started, Joseline highlighted that a friend of her always appreciated the hustle-preneur in her. She then attended a Women’s Business Expo in South Africa where she met women like Basetsana Kumalo that then inspired her to start SODECO in 2016. Speaking on challenges she has faced in her entrepreneurial journey, she referred Zimbabwe as a highly patriarchal society where women experts find it very hard to break into the corporate arena. Secondly, SEDECO targets the SMEs community, who to her does not understand the need to hire consultants and furthermore pay Consultants fees. However, the desire to leave a legacy for her daughter has always kept her going. Her advice to aspiring entrepreneurs was start! #Choose2Challenge

Forget Shareka, The lady behind Chashi Foods

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FORGET Shareka, who is an agronomist engineer by profession and also pursuing MSc in Entrepreneurship and Innovation at the University of Edinburgh in Scotland, is an ardent entrepreneur who enjoys contributing to the community and economic development by using her skills to contribute to innovative business development and the exciting technological advances in the food processing industry.

Driven by her passion for making a positive social impact and bringing about change in the agriculture and food sectors, she Co-Founded Chashi Foods in 2018 after realising that postharvest losses are a big challenge facing farmers in Zimbabwe and Africa at large, hence her focus on food processing.

After becoming a Thought for Food (TFF) ambassador due to her participation in the Food Solution Challenge in 2018, she interacted with farmers and vendors in Chinhoyi and Mbare Musika, which revealed that farmers lose up to 45% of their incomes in postharvest losses and almost 40% of their produce goes into waste. This then made her come up with a team to work with and start Chashi Foods, with zero amount in the Bank. Money came later when they had developed their projects prototypes.

Having started commercial operations in February 2020, an unfortunate time that coincided with the global pandemic, Covid-19. You can imagine the damage that this brought to a start-up’s supply chain. Lack of capital and collateral security to get loans from commercial banks has been another challenge for her, she has since resorted to personal funding and seed capitals from different organisations.

Forget is also a humanitarian who does rural community development work in Mbire District through Life Hope Future Association which she founded in 2017. #Choose2Challenge

Women taking the lead in Digital Communications

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GERALDINE Eve is the founder and CEO of 143 Communications, a digital Media Company that offers services such as: Social Media Platform Creation, Management, Advertising and Marketing, Website Development and Management as well as App Development.

First registering a company at 17, Geraldine later forgot about the entrepreneurship in her whilst working for a local newspaper company, only to get back to track after being fired. 143 Communications came as a result of her being fired from a local newspaper company. Being fired rejuvenated the spirit of having her own business.

Diving into the digital space in 2014, which the Zimbabwean market was not yet ready for, was one challenge Geraldine faced. However, persistence later brought the break through. Geraldine has been featured in the Top 100 Young African Entrepreneurs Trailblazer in the TYI 2018 Awards, won an award as one of the finalists in the CBZ Youth Entrepreneurship 2019 Program, appeared in the lists of the young entrepreneurs to look out for in the year 2019 and being nominated in the top 100 young business women in Africa 2020. She also currently sits in four boards, some being LASACCO and PAICTA.

Inspired by her semi-literate grandmother and hard-working mother, she grew up knowing that one day she was going to be an entrepreneur.  

Being a woman came with some disadvantages in her journey as some men thought that she would be willing to go through the red-carpet interview to get the contracts, and at one point because her answer was a no she lost a big contract. However, the stubbornness in her and the support she got from family, friends, business colleagues and husband kept her going.  #Choose2Challenge

Samantha’s SkinAdore Holistic Skincare business

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Samantha Samkange is the Owner and Director of SkinAdore Holistic Skincare, a wellness brand that focuses on helping skin heal itself through use of wild crafted products they make from plant extracts, herbs and essential oils. She is a qualified Aestheticians and also holds qualifications related to management, marketing and dermatology.

The desire to give everyone who came through her hands beautiful skin “skin yekuchando” is what gave birth to Samantha’s brand. Her major challenge was infiltrating the skin care industry in a time when Zimbabwe was and still experiencing high inflation rate, in these conditions, she finds it difficult for one to recommend after-care products to clients. Also the culture of Zimbabweans has been a threat to her business, as they classify skin care and wellness under luxury. However, passion makes her motivated in all difficulty times.

SkinAdore offers various skin treatments services, from an in-depth skin analysis that goes as far as testing the skin, water content, overall skin barrier function to electrical facial treatments and clinical grade peels. Their vitamin and plant based products are also available in leading pharmacies and other spas. Their spa offers African themed treatments derived from Moroccan culture, savannah environment and different African traditions.

Her advice to aspiring entrepreneurs is to practice saving from an early stage, pursuing their passions like it’s the last “ZUPCO” of the day and also to network with likeminded individuals.

Women in food processing: Shumbakadzi Investments

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Blessing Machiya, who believes that being a first born and growing up around boys helped her in becoming a resilient and hardworking business leader she is today.

She started her company around 2017, when she was a single mother and her only stream of income was from the job she had at a local seminary as a secretary. Driven by the desire to do great things, during lunch hours she would go on Facebook, that’s when she followed Dr Strive Masiyiwa and the first post that she read asked her a challenging question on starting, “What do you have?” this changed her mentality towards starting a business. One day as she walked past a vegetable and fruit market, she saw a pile of rotting products and she knew that she had to come up with a solution to that and the idea of sun drying frits came in her mind. Trying to dry some fruits was not easy for her till she went on to research on how to do it better and that gave birth to Shumbakadzi Investment.

Shumbakadzi now offers dried fruits and a few vegetables. She also has a lot of new products she is set to introduce before the end of this quarter and operations are currently in Bulawayo.

Speaking on challenges she faced, she described Entrepreneurship as a difficult and lonely journey. Though her business had started receiving orders from the early stage, her efforts to raise money from borrowing from family and friends were not successful and she had to save from her small salary. At some times, it could rain and that would ruin a whole batch and this she responded with getting a dehydrator in 2019 and now considering bigger machines this year. #Choose2Challenge

This article was first featured in the March Issue of The Entrepreneurial Magazine. In the month of women.

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Caroline chiimba, you may like this --.

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Average rating, 2 thoughts on “ our favourite top 10 zimbabwe female entrepreneurs ”.

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Family-Owned Business with a Community Focus

We are a partner of the Zimbabwe Agricultural Growth Program (ZAGP).

We support new farmers by providing them with finisher animals, breeding stock as well as financial and technical training.

Community support initiatives are at the heart of our meat business and we do this through donations to local community programs such as local police parades.

We believe in empowering women and we have a bias towards hiring women as casual workers and our MD is a woman.

We also can schedule visits and tours for schools or individuals who have an interest in farming or our business

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SHAMISO FARM

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IMAGES

  1. Shamisotours Campingsafaris

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  2. Shamisotours Campingsafaris

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  3. Shamisotours Campingsafaris

    shamiso tours zimbabwe

  4. Shamisotours Campingsafaris

    shamiso tours zimbabwe

  5. Shamiso Mupara, Environmental Buddies Zimbabwe

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  6. Shamisotours Campingsafaris

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COMMENTS

  1. Shamisotours Campingsafaris

    Homepage von Shamisotours Campingsafaris. Wir bieten Campingsafaris durch die schönsten Gegenden des südlichen und östlichen Afrika. Sie können mit uns einmalige Eindrücke aus Botswana, Namibia, Südafrika, Zimbabwe, Zambia, Malawi, Tansania oder Mozambique erleben.

  2. Zimbabwe Highlight, 27.07.

    Shamiso Camp, ca 300 km. Fahrt über Karoi und Chinhoyi, einst schöne Farmerstädtchen, jetzt sehr verwahrlost, und Harare zum Shamiso Camp. Ihr bekommt rustikale Gästezimmer. Do, 03.08.: Vumba, ca 270 km. Fahrt gen Osten, über die im Talkessel gelegene Stadt Mutare, in den letzten Bergregenwald Zimbabwes.

  3. Shamiso Tours Camping Safaris

    Shamiso Tours Camping Safaris. 1,057 likes. 1990-92 We traveled through Africa 1992-now We are operating in 8 different African countries,based in Zimbabwe.We welcome you to explore the real Africa

  4. Reisen durch das südliche und östliche Afrika

    2. Tag: Shamiso Camp (F/M/A), ca.60 km. In einem nahe gelegenen privaten Tierpark unternehmen Sie eine ca 2 stündige Wanderung in herrlicher Landschaft. 3. Tag: Shamiso Camp - Juliasdale / Eastern Highlands (F/M/A), ca.190 km. Panoramafahrt in den "Schwarzwald" Zimbabwes in Richtung Nyanga NP. Benutzung eines alten englischen Cottages mit Camping.

  5. Shamisotours Campingsafaris

    3 Laender - 3 Welten. 21 Tage ZIMBABWE - MOSAMBIK - SUEDAFRIKA - MOSAMBIK - ZIMBABWE. Traumstraende am Indischen Ozean - Gamedrives - Grandiose Tierwelt und Landschaft. Start und Ende: Harare, ca.3400 km. Reiseprogramm: (Änderungen vorbehalten) 1. Tag: Shamiso Camp, ca. 100 km. Ankunft in Harare, Empfang am Flughafen und Fahrt gen Osten.

  6. Reisen durch das südliche und östliche Afrika

    Nachmittags Bootsfahrt auf dem Zambezi mit Tierbeobachtungsmöglichkeiten und afrikanischem Sonnenuntergang. 16. Tag: Lake Kariba N.P. (F/M/A), ca 210 km. Über die kleine Grenze beim Kariba Staudamm reisen Sie nach Zimbabwe ein zu Ihrem 2 tägigen Camp am Seeufer des riesigen Stausees.

  7. 206 Zimbabwe Safari Tours (Offered by 33 Tour Operators)

    13-Day Luxury Zimbabwe Safari. $16,779 to $23,890 pp (USD) Zimbabwe: Private tour Luxury Lodge & Tented Camp. You Visit: Victoria Falls Town (Start), Hwange NP, Lake Kariba, Matusadona NP, Mana Pools NP, Victoria Falls (End) Wayfairer Travel. 4.9 /5 - 149 Reviews. Best Seller.

  8. 'Rural women in Zimbabwe are in constant contact with climate change

    by Derick Matsengarwodzi on 20 January 2022. According to Shamiso Mupara, founder and executive director of Environmental Buddies Zimbabwe, climate change, droughts and food shortages are having a ...

  9. Shamiso Mupara, Environmental Buddies Zimbabwe

    Aug 17, 2021 6 min. Deforestation has brought drought and hunger to Zimbabwe's Marange district. Here's how one activist is planting food forests to change things for the better. Shamiso Mupara, surrounded by seedlings. Photo by Israel Nyika. Indigenous woodlands housing naturally occurring food forests used to cover Zimbabwe's Marange ...

  10. Our Favourite Top 10 Zimbabwe Female Entrepreneurs

    Afra is the Director of CAG Travellers Coaches operating a fleet of 115 buses— which are CAG Tours, Galaxy, Golden Heritage and Edlux. ... Shamiso and Tsitsi takes on the Home Designs and construction industry ... & R Home designs and Construction was an ultimate goal of creating employment for the unemployed skilled youths within Zimbabwe ...

  11. Freelance Guide/Driver

    Zimbabwe. 341 followers 341 connections. Join to view profile Shamiso Safari Tours. Hillcrest College. Report this profile Report. Report. Back ...

  12. Shamiso Farm

    Shamiso Farm, Ruwa. 6,692 likes · 81 talking about this · 3 were here. Located in Ruwa, 15 minute drive from CBD. Pork Abattoir and Porkers and pork...

  13. ABOUT US

    We are a partner of the Zimbabwe Agricultural Growth Program (ZAGP). We support new farmers by providing them with finisher animals, breeding stock as well as financial and technical training. Community support initiatives are at the heart of our meat business and we do this through donations to local community programs such as local police ...

  14. Shamiso J Nyakuwa

    Program Director. Pangaea Zimbabwe. Oct 2023 - Present 6 months. Harare, Zimbabwe. I lead the design, implementation and monitoring of a PEPFAR/CDC funded projects focusing on key and priority populations in Zimbabwe. My role includes overall guidance on projects deliverables, operations including human resources, finance and administration ...

  15. shamiso karen ngwerume

    View shamiso karen's full profile. Experienced Travel Consultant with a demonstrated history of working in the leisure, travel & tourism industry. Skilled in Negotiation, Management, Business Travel, Marketing Strategy, and Leisure Travel. Strong operations professional with a IATA FOUNDATION IN TRAVEL AND TOURISM CERTIFICATE focused in ...

  16. Shamiso Farm

    Connect with Shamiso Farm, Farming in Ruwa, Zimbabwe. Find Shamiso Farm reviews and more. www.eazifind.com - EaziFind Marketplace. Eazifind Marketplace Get listed, stay connected with businesses & customers around Zim. (+263) 782 629 843; Contact Us; Member Login;

  17. Shamiso Tours Camping Safaris

    Shamiso Tours Camping Safaris. 1.057 suka. 1990-92 We traveled through Africa 1992-now We are operating in 8 different African countries,based in Zimbabwe.We welcome you to explore the real Africa Shamiso Tours Camping Safaris

  18. Reforesting a Brighter Future in Zimbabwe

    Words by Jodie Stempel, GGF UK Intern. Meet Shamiso Mupara: local activist with a vision for change for her village in Zimbabwe. Shamiso and her family grew up in Marange, an area affected by large-scale diamond operations.The village has experienced many political and environmental consequences as a result of diamond mining - including polluted water sources, ailments in local livestock and ...

  19. Shamiso photography

    Shamiso photography, Harare, Zimbabwe. 2,815 likes · 2 were here. The family people,

  20. 4. Shamiso's big trip

    Shamiso and her family had been waiting for months for the school holiday. They were going to visit their family in Zimbabwe. On the way, they were making a stop at a place called Great Zimbabwe. Shamiso looked up 'Great Zimbabwe' on the Internet. She learned that it was a great city and palace from long ago. ' Wow! How cool!' she thought.