

Zimbabwe is a beautiful and usually safe country to visit. Currently, however,
Zimbabwe's cities are bright and well-organised. With a little planning and
a lot of healthy caution, now may be a good time to visit often jam-packed
Victoria Falls and the country's other popular tourist destinations. Whether
you're lying in a tent listening to hippo snuffle in the river nearby or shaking
your booty at an all night percussion jam, there's enough elbow room to raise
a bucket of chibuku to your lips and toast your good luck in being there.
Full country name: Republic of Zimbabwe
Area: 390,000 sq km
Population: 11.2 million
Capital city: Harare (population 1.6 million)
People: Shona (76%), Ndebele (18%), Batonka (2%),
Shangaan (1%), Venda (1%), European, Asian
Languages: Shona, Ndebele, English
Religion: Christian, Mwari
Government: Parliamentary democracy
Major industries: Mining, agriculture, clothing,
tourism
Major trading partners: South Africa, UK, Argentina,
US, Japan
Facts for the Traveler
Visas: Most visitors are not required to obtain
a visa for stays of up to 90 days.
Health risks: Bilharzia, cholera, malaria, rabies,
yellow fever
Time: GMT/UTC plus two hours
Electricity: 220V
Weights & measures: Metric
Tourism: About 500,000 visitors per year
When to Go
The dry winter months (May to October) are the most comfortable for travelling,
but you'll miss the green landscapes that characterise the hotter and wetter
summer season (November to April). In winter, night-time temperatures can
fall below freezing but the days are best for wildlife viewing because animals
tend to concentrate close to water holes and are therefore easily observed.
National parks are most crowded during South African school holidays, so to
avoid the throngs, avoid mid-April to mid-May and mid-July to mid-September.
There's a secondary rush around the Namibian school holidays in December and
early January.
Events
The most pleasant cultural events will be those you run across incidentally:
a rural fair, a primary school theatre production, a traditional wedding or
a town anniversary. You'll almost certainly be welcomed to share in local
festivities.
There are also several fixed events. On 18 April, Independence Day festivities
are celebrated around the country, and in late May, Africa Day commemorates
past independence struggles. On 11 and 12 August, the Zimbabwean military
forces are feted and heroes of the independence movement are honoured. There's
also the enormous Zimbabwe Agricultural Society Show, held at the Harare showgrounds
around the end of August, and the Houses of Stone Music Festival, a celebration
of traditional Zimbabwean music that takes place in Harare on a different
date each year.