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Victoria Falls Travel Guide
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Victoria Falls Flights

Get cheap flights to Victoria Falls. Airports in the area include Livingstone Airport (LVI) and Victoria Falls Airport (VFA). Check flights to Victoria Falls when you want to visit these nearby places: Livingstone Game Park and Livingstone.


Cheap Victoria Falls Flights (LVI)

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  Livingstone Airport (LVI)
  Victoria Falls Airport (VFA)
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Flights by OneTime.com

PSA-----flysaa
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  • SAA BA offer joburg to vic falls daily both ways
    the SAA has tow flights everyday the first leaves at early morning bout 9:00 or so the other leaves at 14:00 but BA only serves one flight per day it leaves at 11:00 both of the airways operates this route on boeing 767-200 aircraft
    personlly i like SAA better for no reason maybe in my own opinion SAA is the best in Africa
    for other travelers you can also go on Air Namibia or Air Zimbabwe the former leaves from Windhoek via Botswana whlie the later leaves Harare ( which is a domestic flight )

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  • Website: www.flysaa.com
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    South African Airways
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  • The plane from Victoria Falls to Johannesburg is not full, so we can spread out. Just as we are about to take off, the captain announces that there is a problem with the plane. A seal is broken and it is leaking hydraulic fluid. He is concerned, and after further checks, orders us off the plane while they try and repair it.

    More time passes and he decides that the plane cannot be flown in its present state, so he will have to arrange another plane. Unfortunately, the airport closes in half an hour, so we won't be going anywhere until tomorrow.

    SAA hastily arranges transport (the only two large buses in Victoria Falls) to take us to the Kingdom Hotel for the night.

    The next day, everything goes smoothly, apart from the fact that there is no food on the plane. Instead we are given a voucher to spend at Jo'burg airport, a much better idea in my opinion.

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    Air travel to Vic Falls
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  • We flew to Vic Falls on South African Airways from Johannesburg. This airline also flies to Vic Falls from Cape Town. The flights are much cheaper if you book through a South African travel agent and get a package deal that includes the hotel. Our air/transfer/hotel package cost less than the flights alone would have if we had booked them separately.

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  • Theme: Airplane
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    Microlite Aircraft
    This is the vehicle that takes you to one of the best possible views ever of the falls, a microlite airplane. Just you, the driver, some wings, a moter and the air that surrounds you. A bit of a thrilling way to see the falls it is, but it is the best form of transportation if you want to get up close and personal with the falls. See my must see and do activities...

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  • Theme: Airplane
  • Phone: + (260) (3) 320 058
  • Website: www.batokasky.com
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    Interesting
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    Patience is needed
    Arrival at Victoria Falls airport is quite pleasant, but it takes at least an hour to clear 120 passengers. There is no difference whether you have a visa or not. Both queues most just a slowly. A visa for Europeans is US$55 or US$60 depending on your nationality. make sure that you have something to drink as there is nothing in the airport and it can be warm.

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    Elephant back riding
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  • Before going off on the safari, we meet Rasta, a playful babay elephant that we can pet and feed. They have 14 in total; most of them are quite young, orpahned elephants. African elephants are regarded as too aggressive to be tames, so the keepers are slightly concerned how the males will behave once they reach sexual maturity.

    The maturity of the elephants are named after characters in the soap opera Dalls, and David and I ride Jake and Jock. Two other elephants are taken along for the walk, as well as the one that the ranger rides. One poor animal has an injured pad on his foot from a snare, but is well on the mend now.

    The elephants are mighty big, even if they are young, and at first I feel a little wobbly sitting high on the back of such an enormous animal. The saddle is surprisingly comfortable, it is actually better than horse riding. You sit aside the elephant on a padded saddle that raises you from the elephant a further foot or so, with stirrups for your feet.

    The whole experience of walking with the elephants is absolutely magical. Richard, my Nduna (elephant handler) is very talkative and knowledgable, especially about birds. He also knows when to keep quiet for us to saviour the feeling of being at one with these magnificent beasts and nature in general.

    It is not a true game-spotting safari, but we do see a herd of impala, some monkeys, kudu and wathogs.

    The last leg of the walk is wading across a lake, where the rangers take the two cameras to film/photograph us on the elephants. They do surprisingly well, the rsults are worth having.

    Back at camp we are given more Zambezi beer and hot snacks, before being allowed to feed the elephants by hand. It is not like we've previously done elsewhere, this time the elephant opens his mouth and you stick your hand almost down his throat with a pellet on it. A great experience.

    On the way back to town a couple of jackals cross the lane in the semi-darkness.

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    Canoe
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  • The open safari trcuk that picks us up at 07:00 has provided blankets against the early morning chill, which is a really nice touch.

    On the banks of the river, we are provided with a full fry-up breakfast before we get on board the canoes.

    The whole scene is very romantic - the early morning sun twinkling in the river and casting eerie spells of long shadows on the water.

    Life jackets are provided, but I squash my glasses as I try to put mine on and decide not to wear one. They won't protect you against hippos or crocdiles anyway!

    We glide silently through the still waters, effortlessly moving up river. The atmosphere is lovely, such a realxing experience. We try our hand at paddling, but it isn't required, apart from when we inadvertently get too near a hippo and have to move away rapidly.

    Drifting downriver, we see the odd elephant in the distance and hippos wallowing on the river's edge. On one of the islands we are so lucky to see over 20 elephants frolicking in the river, playing, washing and drinking. There are babies too, enjoying an early morning swim. You feel really quite vulnerable being within feet of wild African elephants in a small canoe. They appear to take no notice of us whatsoever though, and we stay watching them for ages. In fact we moor on an island opposite for our picnic lunch. A meal with a view! Everything here is so well organised with beer and soft drinks, rolls, salad, ham, quiche, chutney, fruit and crisps. All the excursions seem to include food and drink.

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    Use your feet
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  • Colin and Ellis pick us up at 06:15 for the game walk in Zambezi National Park. The walk starts from Victoria Falls Safari Lodge, a super place out in the bush, with a lovely veranda overlooking a water hole.

    Colin is armed with a 375 rifle and Ellis brings up the rear. The walk is more about the interaction betweem animals, plants and humans and the consequences of an imbalance, than it is a game spotting outing.

    We are shown how to recognise trackes and droppings of different animals, whether they'd been running or walking, the age of the animal etc. The medicinal uses of various plants are explained to us, and how saving the elephant has caused untold damage to the fragile ecology.

    The ranger picks up a wild almond from some elephant dung, cracks it open and we all have a taste!

    On the way we see warthog, impala, baboons and crocodiles by the water hole. We also hear the roar of a lion - thought to be about a mile away.

    Colin explains that on a walk a few days earlier, a tourist had been attacked by a buffalo when he ventured a little too near it in order to take photographs. He is still seriously ill in hospital.

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    Jet boat
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  • Elephant on the river bank - Victoria Falls
    Elephant on the river bank
    by grets
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    For this trip there are only the two of us and Future, the guide. It isn't a jet boat trip like we know it from New Zealand and Fiji, this is more of a wildlife cruise than an adrenalin trip.

    With its shallow hull, the jet boat can navigate narrower channels than any other river craft, thus getting closer to wildlife.

    The area is full of colourful birds, and we see some monkeys frolicking in the trees. I desperately want to see a crocodile, and right on cue there are three resting on the banks of the river. Hippo can be seen everywhere in the river. It used to be that hippos kill more people in Africa than any other animal, but these days that title goes to the mosquito.

    On one of the islands there is a herd of five elephants drinking down by the river's edge. Future navigaes the boat right up to the bank to get really close to them - so close that we can almost touch them - but in my eagerness to climb on to the front of the boat to get even closer, I make a noise and scare them away. Fortunately there are a few more around the corner, and they seem totally oblivious to our presence as they are ahving a drink and a sand bath on the banks.

    Lunch is provided for us - with Zambezi beer of course - on an island in the middle of the river. Chicken, ham, rolls, salad, potato salad and fresh fruit for dessert.

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    More Victoria Falls Tips
    Overview
     
    General Tips
    Tips: 26 - Photos: 25
    Restaurants
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    Hotels and Accommodations
    Tips: 42 - Photos: 42
    Things To Do
    Tips: 170 - Photos: 232
    Nightlife
    Tips: 10 - Photos: 6
    Off the Beaten Path
    Tips: 19 - Photos: 18
    Tourist Traps
    Tips: 9 - Photos: 8
    Warnings or Dangers
    Tips: 19 - Photos: 15
    Transportation
    Tips: 22 - Photos: 19
    Local Customs
    Tips: 8 - Photos: 5
    Packing Lists
    Tips: 4 - Photos: 2
    Shopping
    Tips: 8 - Photos: 6
    Sports Travel
    Tips: 6 - Photos: 6
    Flights
    Tips: 10 - Photos: 0

    Victoria Falls Hotels



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