Destination Guide

Lower Zambezi National Park

Lower Zambezi National Park covers 4,092 square kilometres along the northern bank of the Zambezi River in southeastern Zambia, facing Zimbabwe's Mana Pools National Park across the water — together forming one of the most spectacular and least-developed river wilderness areas in Africa.

The park's defining character comes from its relationship with the Zambezi: a broad, island-studded river flanked by towering winterthorn (Faidherbia albida) forests, backed by the dramatic wall of the Zambezi Escarpment. The canoe safari is the Lower Zambezi's signature experience and one of Africa's most unique wildlife encounters. Paddling a two-person canoe downstream through channels between vegetated islands, guests pass within metres of elephants drinking on the bank, hippo pods submerging with thunderous snorts, Nile crocodiles sliding off sandbanks, and fish eagles perching in the riverside trees. The perspective from water level — quiet, low, and slow — produces an intimacy with wildlife that no vehicle-based game drive can replicate. Beyond canoeing, the Lower Zambezi offers excellent game drives along the river terraces, walking safaris through the winterthorn forests, and catch-and-release tiger fishing on the Zambezi — the river's fighting tiger fish provide some of the finest freshwater sport fishing in Africa. The park supports large elephant herds that swim between the Zambian and Zimbabwean banks, lion prides that specialise in hunting buffalo along the river floodplain, and leopard in the dense riparian vegetation. The combination of water, wildlife, and the escarpment's dramatic geology creates a safari experience that is genuinely distinct from the walking-focused Luangwa — making a South Luangwa and Lower Zambezi combination one of Africa's most compelling safari itineraries.

Lower Zambezi National Park covers 4,092 square kilometres along the northern bank of the Zambezi River in southeastern Zambia, facing Zimbabwe's Mana Pools National Park across the water — together forming one of the most spectacular and least-developed river wilderness areas in Africa.

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When to Visit

Best Time to Visit

May to October for the dry season. Canoeing is best from June to October when water levels are manageable. Tiger fishing peaks from September to November. Most camps close during the wet season (December to March).

Wildlife

What You'll See

Large elephant herds (swimming across the Zambezi), lion, leopard, buffalo, hippo, Nile crocodile, African wild dog, tiger fish, carmine bee-eaters (huge colony), trumpeter hornbill, Pel's fishing owl, 400+ bird species.

Travel

Getting There

1-hour charter or scheduled flight from Lusaka to Jeki or Royal airstrips. 4-hour road transfer from Lusaka via Chirundu, followed by a boat transfer to camps. Often combined with South Luangwa (inter-camp flights approximately 1 hour).

Location

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