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To help you build your own global archive, we've prepared this collection of watercolor studies from our research into Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe. These artifacts are designed to bring the stillness of this corner of the world into your home.

Original Series Decorative Magnet

A personal study of Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe, captured in high-fidelity watercolor and prepared for your collection.

Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe | Original Series Decorative Magnet
Add to Collection / $18
Exclusive Series Artifact

Original Series Gallery Canvas

This high-fidelity canvas is a beautiful way to anchor a room and keep your memories of Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe fresh long after you've returned home.

Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe | Original Series Gallery Canvas detail Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe | Original Series Gallery Canvas detail Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe | Original Series Gallery Canvas detail Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe | Original Series Gallery Canvas detail
Add to Collection / $65

Original Series Hardboard Coaster

A personal study of Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe, captured in high-fidelity watercolor and prepared for your collection.

Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe | Original Series Hardboard Coaster
Add to Collection / $18
Exclusive Series Artifact

The Spirit of the Land

Archival Note: A curated field study of Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe, prioritizing the specific atmospheric stillness of the region. These artifacts have been meticulously sourced from our global archival partners to represent the area’s unique cultural frequency and environmental character. This selection serves as a formal observation for our ongoing global archive, vetted for its visual accuracy and archival merit.

Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe study No. 01
Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe / 01 VIA / Jeremy Boley
The Victoria Falls Bridge spans gracefully over the churning waters below, framing a breathtaking view where nature’s raw power meets elegant engineering. Surrounded by lush, mist-kissed greenery and bathed in soft sunlight, the entire landscape feels alive, peaceful, and utterly timeless. It’s a beautiful reminder of the grand wonders waiting to be explored in our world.
Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe study No. 02
Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe / 02 VIA / Eden Constantino
A majestic elephant stands in quiet confidence, capturing the heart and imagination of a traveler witnessing the magic of the wild firsthand. This serene moment of connection reminds us of the profound, gentle beauty that thrives when we pause to truly see and respect the world around us. There is a deep, comforting peace in knowing such grand and soulful creatures share this planet with us.
Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe study No. 03
Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe / 03 VIA / Tanner Marquis
The sheer curtain of water cascades endlessly into the gorge, caught in a magnificent display of nature's timeless rhythm. Golden sunlight gently warms the rugged rocks in the foreground, creating a striking contrast with the cool, ethereal mist rising from the falls. Standing before such a breathtaking spectacle fills the soul with a profound sense of wonder and peaceful stillness.

Where to wander

Archival Note: A curated field study of Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe, prioritizing cultural relevance and archival merit. While we haven't touched down here yet, we’ve meticulously vetted these locations through our global network of contributors to ensure they represent the most authentic atmosphere for your own expedition.

Local Cuisine Spotlight
A vibrant buffet plate comes alive with the rich, inviting colors of a freshly prepared meal, celebrating the universal joy of sharing good food. Every flavorful serving reflects a warm sense of hospitality and community, bringing people together in a moment of pure comfort and connection. It’s a beautiful reminder that nourishment goes far beyond the plate, feeding both the body and the spirit.
Credits: Dennis Ojenomoh
Local cuisine study in Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe

☕︎ Local Flavor

The Boma: Dinner & Drum Show

Rating: 4.8★ | Price: $$$ | Coordinates: 17.9243° S, 25.8572° E

Enter a torchlit boma enclosure where the rhythmic cadence of ceremonial drums anchors a rotating feast of game meats and traditional Zimbabwean relishes. The evening is structured as a living archive of southern African culinary heritage, presenting dishes from nyama choma to mopane worms alongside craft demonstrations by local artisans. It functions as an anchor for the region's cultural identity, documenting the continuity of communal fire-cooking traditions that predate colonial contact.

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In Da Belly: Local Food & Market Tour

Rating: 4.9★ | Price: $$ | Coordinates: 17.9310° S, 25.8290° E

Navigate the concrete corridors of the local market to encounter the precise taxonomy of dried fish, groundnut stews, and sadza preparations that form the daily nutritional architecture of Zimbabwe. The guide decodes the social function of each vendor station, from the roasting women selling maputi to the butchers operating on ancestral credit systems. This tour is a vital field study of the Zambezi valley food economy, documenting how subsistence agriculture survives in the shadow of one of the world's great tourist destinations.

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Lookout Café: Gorge-Edge Dining

Rating: 4.7★ | Price: $$$ | Coordinates: 17.9267° S, 25.8521° E

Occupy a cantilevered timber platform suspended above the first gorge of the Zambezi, where the mist from the falls drifts through the open deck and deposits a fine film of moisture on every surface. The menu centers on game proteins — warthog bacon, crocodile tail, and Zambezi bream — sourced from sustainable bush operations within a two-hundred-kilometer radius. The setting is a geological classroom, offering unobstructed views of the basalt gorge formations that record sixty million years of river erosion.

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Victoria Falls Hotel: The Stanley Room

Rating: 4.6★ | Price: $$$$ | Coordinates: 17.9220° S, 25.8495° E

Dine beneath the pressed tin ceilings of a 1904 colonial dining room where the silverware, the starched linens, and the view of the spray cloud over the falls have remained essentially unchanged for a century. The kitchen executes a menu of Edwardian-inflected Zimbabwean cuisine, pairing local proteins with classical French technique in a room that functions as a physical manuscript of the British imperial presence in central Africa. The wine cellar documents the parallel history of South African viticulture.

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🛌︎ Boutique Stays

Victoria Falls Hotel

Rating: 4.7★ | Price: $$$$ | Coordinates: 17.9220° S, 25.8495° E

Inhabit the colonnaded verandahs of a 1904 Edwardian grande dame hotel where the spray from the falls is visible from the garden terrace and the sound of the Zambezi is a permanent feature of every room. The property represents the most complete surviving example of early twentieth-century imperial hospitality architecture in southern Africa, with its Flemish gables, terracotta roof tiles, and formal rose gardens preserved as a functioning heritage site. It stands as a physical manuscript of the Rhodesian railway age.

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The Elephant Camp

Rating: 4.9★ | Price: $$$$ | Coordinates: 17.9158° S, 25.8347° E

Ascend to a private suite on a raised wooden platform in the mopane forest above the Zambezi gorge, where the architecture prioritizes framed views of the spray column and the movement of wild elephant through the surrounding bush. Each of the twelve tented suites is connected by elevated walkways that allow guests to observe the precise behavioral patterns of the resident elephant herd at close range from within the property boundary. The camp functions as a vital field station for understanding the ecology of the Zambezi National Park.

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Stanley & Livingstone Boutique Hotel

Rating: 4.8★ | Price: $$$$ | Coordinates: 17.9044° S, 25.8196° E

Settle into a private estate of six thousand acres of game reserve where the fourteen colonial-style suites are positioned within walking distance of resident white rhino, sable antelope, and giraffe. The architecture employs local teak, river stone, and thatch in a vocabulary that references the Victorian explorer aesthetic without reproducing it literally. This property serves as an anchor for understanding the conservation economics of privately held game land adjacent to a major UNESCO World Heritage waterfall.

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The River Club

Rating: 4.9★ | Price: $$$$ | Coordinates: 17.8931° S, 25.7844° E

Occupy one of ten colonial-style cottages positioned on a private bend of the Upper Zambezi, where the river is braided through islands of papyrus and the hippo pools are accessible by canoe from the lodge's private launch. The property sits upstream from the falls within the protected Mosi-oa-Tunya corridor, offering a counterpoint of stillness to the thunder below. It functions as a field study in the hydraulics of the Upper Zambezi, documenting the transition from broad floodplain to the narrow basalt channel of the gorge.

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📍︎ Field Study

Victoria Falls: Guided Rainforest Walk

Rating: 4.8★ | Price: $$ | Coordinates: 17.9243° S, 25.8572° E

Traverse the permanent spray forest on the Zimbabwean rim of the falls where the perpetual mist sustains a microclimate of ferns, wild banana, and ebony trees that exists nowhere else in the surrounding savanna. A specialist guide decodes the geology of each viewpoint, identifying the successive gorges carved by the Zambezi as it migrates westward through the basalt plateau over geological time. This walk is an essential archival exercise, providing the spatial and hydrological framework for understanding why the falls are classified as the largest single curtain of falling water on earth.

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Helicopter Flight: The Smoke That Thunders

Rating: 4.9★ | Price: $$$$ | Coordinates: 17.9243° S, 25.8572° E

Ascend above the gorge in a glass-fronted helicopter to observe the precise geometry of the falls from an altitude that resolves the full one-mile width of the curtain into a single frame, with the column of mist rising to cloud height above the basalt canyon. The flight path follows the sequence of gorges downstream, each one a record of a previous course of the river, documenting the westward migration of the falls over the last 150,000 years. This is the definitive cartographic study of one of the most dramatic geological formations in the southern hemisphere.

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Zambezi River Sunset Cruise

Rating: 4.7★ | Price: $$$ | Coordinates: 17.9158° S, 25.8347° E

Board a double-deck river vessel to drift through the braided channels of the Upper Zambezi as the equatorial sun descends behind the Zambian floodplain, illuminating the papyrus beds in amber light and silhouetting the dense concentrations of hippo and elephant along the bank. The cruise operates within the protected Mosi-oa-Tunya corridor, providing unobstructed access to one of the highest densities of large mammal biomass per river kilometer in southern Africa. It serves as a vital ecological transect, documenting the function of the Zambezi as a corridor between the Hwange hinterland and the floodplains of the Caprivi.

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Bungee Jump: Victoria Falls Bridge

Rating: 4.8★ | Price: $$$ | Coordinates: 17.9317° S, 25.8594° E

Drop 111 meters from the mid-span of the 1905 Victoria Falls Bridge, a steel arch structure that marks both the Zimbabwe–Zambia border and the precise point where the Zambezi enters its second gorge. The fall places the body within the spray cloud of the falls for a fraction of a second before the rebound, offering a sensory encounter with the hydraulics of the gorge that no other platform can replicate. The bridge itself is a significant piece of the Cape to Cairo Railway archive, representing Cecil Rhodes's ambition to connect the continent by rail.

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Typography

Archival Note: A formal technical study of Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe—archiving the coordinates, elevation, and environmental data that define the region. This data serves as a vital record for our ongoing global field study, allowing us to reconstruct the regional atmosphere with archival precision before our physical arrival.

Botanical and pigment specimen study for Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe Colors of Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe
Coordinates
17.9243° S, 25.8572° E — Zambezi River on the Zimbabwe-Zambia border, southern Africa
Historical Epoch
Kololo people name Mosi-oa-Tunya before 1850. David Livingstone's European documentation in 1855. Zimbabwean independence in 1980.
Elevation
900 m / 2,953 ft. The falls lip sitting on the broad Zambezi basalt plateau above the gorge below.
Atmosphere
Tropical Savanna (Aw). Hot wet season November through April with full flood peak in April and May, warm dry season May through October.
Observation Hour
07:00 AM. Eastern light enters the gorge directly, illuminating the full curtain of water and generating the famous double rainbow.
Primary Pigment
Zambezi Jade (#2D6B4A) and Basalt Terracotta (#C1714A)
Best Time to Visit
July through October. Clear skies, manageable spray and the best conditions for adventure activities, gorge views and wildlife at the river.
Avoid Visiting
February through April. Peak flood produces so much spray that most viewpoints are obscured and some platforms are completely inaccessible.

The Local Tongue

Language is the invisible architecture of Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe. These entries document the regional vocabulary—capturing the "texture" of local speech that standard translations often miss. Hand-curated expressions reflecting the specific spirit and daily rhythm of the region.
Archival study of Shona cultural texture

via / Anna Sullivan

Primary Language Shona
Regional Dialect Karanga Shona

Mosi-oa-Tunya (mɔːsiːoʊəˈtuːnjə)

The Kololo name for Victoria Falls meaning The Smoke That Thunders. It predates Livingstone's arrival by decades, is now the official Zambian name for the falls and is the most accurate description of what you're actually standing in front of.

Maita basa (maɪtə ˈbɑːsə)

Thank you for your work in Shona, and the correct register for thanking a guide, a driver or anyone who has looked after you well. Spoken by about 70% of Zimbabweans, maita basa lands with genuine warmth at every level.

Bvuma (ˈbvuːmə)

Accept or acknowledge in Shona, carrying a philosophical weight that goes beyond just agreement. At the edge of the falls where the scale and sound exceed any prior experience, bvuma is the correct internal posture.

Wait! before you go...

Before you head over to Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe, we’ve audited the essential data points for this corner of the world. These notes cover the logistics—from currency ratios to transit hubs—to help you navigate the landscape with clarity.
🚲 Getting Around The town is compact and genuinely walkable to the falls entrance which is one of its great charms. Transfers to lodges are easily arranged and taxis handle everything else comfortably so you won't need a rental car unless you're planning the Zambia border crossing.
⚖️ Cash or Card Most lodges, restaurants and activity operators accept Visa and Mastercard so a roughly 50% card and 50% cash split works well here. Keep small USD bills on hand for entrance fees, tipping and local purchases.
☁️ Good to Know Book bungee jumping, white-water rafting and helicopter flights well ahead during peak season from July through October since the good operators fill up fast. The falls are most dramatic at full flood in April and May but the spray can be so intense that some platforms are completely inaccessible so low water in September and November is actually better for seeing the gorge geology.
🏧 ATMs ATMs are at the airport, on Livingstone Way and at major hotels, with Standard Bank and FBC Bank both dispensing USD reliably. International Visa and Mastercard work well here and it's always worth carrying a few small USD notes for tips and local purchases.
💳 Currency Zimbabwe uses the US Dollar (USD) as the primary transaction currency following dollarization so you won't need to exchange anything if you're coming from the States. ZiG notes also circulate but USD is universally preferred and accepted everywhere.
🔌 Plugs Zimbabwe uses Type G plugs, the three rectangular flat-pin socket shared with the UK, at 220V. A UK adapter or a universal adapter is all you need and you'll be perfectly set.
🛡️ Safety Victoria Falls town is safe and friendly for visitors in the main areas. Exercise standard awareness after dark and always follow operator safety briefings carefully for bungee jumping, rafting and gorge swing activities since the gorge below the falls is genuinely world-class white water.
✈️ Airports Victoria Falls Airport (VFA) is just 18 km from town with direct flights from Johannesburg (1.5 hrs), Cape Town, Nairobi and Addis Ababa making it very well connected. The Zambia side has Livingstone Airport (LVI) just a 20 minute drive via the border bridge which offers additional routing options.

Behind The Scenes

Nathan

Note from the Founder

Hey, did you know this fun fact about Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe? Victoria Falls generates so much permanent mist that the surrounding rainforest receives over 2,000mm of precipitation every year despite sitting in a region that normally gets fewer than 700mm and the spray column is visible from 50 kilometers away on a clear day!
Thank you for exploring the Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe series with us. We hope these notes have inspired you to add this incredible destination to your own passport—we are so glad you’re here. — Nathan

The Magnets

The Coasters

The Canvas