Safari Lodge Hwange Zimbabwe
Hwange Safari Lodge is situated on the border of Hwange National Park and overlooks a busy waterhole. Just a two hour drive from Victoria Falls and you are in big game country.
As a leading wildlife reserve, Hwange is home to elephant, buffalo, sable, lion, cheetah, kudu, impala, wildebeest, zebra and more.
Accommodation at Hwange safari lodge offers a good range of choices from suites to standard rooms.
On site the lodge has two restaurants and two bars. Activities are centered mainly around game viewing which can be done on early morning, day or night game drives.
Accommodation at Hwange Safari Lodge
Choose from standard double rooms, twin suites to de luxe or executive suites.
Guest Rooms feature
En-suite bathroom with Shaver socket, toilet, bathtub and shower.
Mosquito net
Hairdryer
Air conditioning and overhead fan
Smoke detectors and Sprinkler system
Telephone
Tea and Coffee making facilities
Coffee table
Lounge chairs
Facilities & Activities
Outdoor Swimming Pool
Tennis Court
Table Tennis
Day and Night Game Drives
Guided Walks
Wildlife Talks
Indoor Games on request
Restaurants
Dingani- Main Restaurant and Pool Area.
Buffet Breakfast, Lunch, Barbeque Lunch & Dinner
Table d´hôte Dinner – Bush Dinners available
Paradise on earth Hwange National Park
There can be few experiences on this earth so gratifying as to sit at one of Hwange’s viewing platforms by a waterhole, watching an endless procession of “Gods gifts” engaged in the timeless dance of survival.
Hwange has amongst the highest diversity of mammals of any National Park in the world with over 108 species and over 400 types of birds including 50 raptors.
A 482 km network of game viewing roads leads the visitor to some large concentrations of game.
As one of Africa’s premier elephant strongholds. Hwange boasts more than 30,000 of them.
Although Hwange Park has little natural water, water is pumped through boreholes into the pans and troughs.
Dry season game-viewing is assisted by sixty man-made waterholes which give much needed water during the hot parched winter months when everything else dries up. Several waterholes have raised wooden hides in which you can spend many hours observing animals and the interactions between them.