Our traditionally decorated room faced Victoria Falls. In the local language Victoria Falls is known as mosi-oa-tunya meaning the cloud (or smoke) that thunders. |
As seen from our room the bridge in the distance connects Zimbabwe with Zambia over the Zambezi River. We didn't walk that far. White spray appears cloud-like near the left of the bridge. |
The Zambezi River was at full flood during this time of year and water moves powerfully downstream. Spray from water movement was visible from the airplane as we approached. |
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At nearly every lookout point, there was a rainbow, sometimes two. Water erosion over two million years created deep zigzagging chasms. |
I rented a brand new slicker and flipflops for US$3 near the entrance to Victoria Falls. It was worth every penny, even if I looked silly. |
With the bridge in the distance, this view of Gorge #2 shows the depth of erosion. |
This life-size sculpture stood guard near a restaurant overlooking Gorge #2. Visit www.kerrybradfordartist.com. |
Warthogs cleverly kneel on their front legs to graze, sometimes walking on their knees to get to the next sweet spot. There were several on the path from the hotel to the Victoria Falls. These were female. |
This male warthog was near the entrance to Victoria Falls National Park. Two sets of triangular warts distinguish him from females with one set. The warts are a delicacy but we didn't get to eat them. This boy was so ugly he was cute. I love warthogs. Cool haircut too. One of our guides taught us that a group of warthogs is called a sounder. |
For dinner, Tien ordered the Herb-crusted Warthog fillet. I had the Venison goulash pictured below. Happy! |
Animals we saw during our stay: baboons, warthogs, butterflies, Livingstone's turaco (bird), bushbuck deer, and elephant dung (not really an animal, is it?!).
2 comments:
Absolutely gorgeous!
where's your 100 billion???
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