We had to share Relais & Châteaux Africa’s blog with you, featuring our little lodge on the Zambezi. So here it is… our special place, through their eyes.

Lonesome-Gin-1

Home, is where I want to be
But I guess I’m already there
I come home, she lifted up her wings
I guess that this must be the place

– Talking Heads

We all have a place. A simple name on a map that we have traced with our fingers more often than any other name. A place in the country or city, sea or river, jungle or forest, a place of snow or sand, water or rock, concrete or grass. A place that has, over the years, taken on a sort of humanity, an intimacy, a nature beyond how most of us see, well, nature.

It’s not uncommon for such places, these special enclaves that pull on our hearts a little more than others, to be seen as something living, something more like a friend, like family. The Whanganui River in New Zealand and the Yamuna and Ganges rivers in India, for instance, were granted human status and named “living entities”. By law.


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It isn’t only for their significance, their vulnerability and their beauty (all qualities seen in the best of people) that we hold them close. It is also the time we have spent with them, getting to know them. The days and nights spent witnessing their different sides, moods, their ups and downs.

We all have a place that we have bonded with more than any other, that we understand more than another, and for me that place is the Zambezi, as experienced from Royal Chundu. It is a river no less human than the Whanganui or Yamuna or Ganges. A river no different to you and I. An individual that breathes, that ebbs and flows with nature, and that needs protection.

Of course, the Zambezi is vast and I am not familiar with it all. It is the fourth-longest river in Africa and the largest river flowing into the Indian Ocean from Africa. It passes through six countries on the way, a true adventurer at heart. Its journey begins in north-west Zambia, in a marshy black wetland in the centre of the Miombo Woodlands, and continues on through Angola, Namibia, Botswana, Zimbabwe, and Mozambique. If you can, imagine 1,390,000 square kilometres, slightly less than half the basin of the Nile, and you will start to grasp its immensity.


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I’ve played in the lower Zambezi, while white-water rafting over rapids ranging from Grade III to Grade V – the highest commercial grading possible. Rapids with names like The Devil’s Toilet Bowl, The Gnashing Jaws of Death, Morning Glory, Oblivion, and The Ugly Stepsisters. I have helicoptered through the deep gorge, over the great Victoria Falls itself, and swum in the tiny natural infinity pools on the edge of the cascade – both Devil’s and Angel’s Pool. But it is the upper stretches of the river, before it tumbles over the Falls, that I know best. In particular, the 15 kilometres of waterway along which Royal Chundu sits.

Flowing constantly, reliably, past the lodge’s private riverbank, the water changes but its essence never does. I am still greeted by the same sunrises and sets, the same magnificent reflection of cloud upon the water, the same life – the elephant herds and hippo pods, the tiger fish, parrot fish and bream, the crocodiles, the African skimmers, African Fish Eagle, Rock Pratincoles and Schalow’s Turaco, the water buck, ottersbaboons, buffalo, zebras, and even the occasional leopard and lion.

This is my place. And over the years I have come to not only know but to feel deeply for the people in and around Royal Chundu. The local people who understand the Zambezi much more than me, who teach me, with each visit, not only more about the river, its wildlife, birds and plants, but about compassion, patience, loyalty, respect and resilience. Those human qualities I don’t doubt the Zambezi played a hand in refining.


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