The largest National Park in Zimbabwe is the Hwange National Park, which covers an area of more than 14 000 km² .
The area was declared a game reserve in 1972, by which time its game population had been nearly wiped out by hunters and settlers.
Now the park can boast as being one of the most pristine and well-managed areas in the world, with the abundant numbers of wildlife as testimony to this fact.
The park has about 90 species of animals, 413 species of birds and approximately a 1000 species of trees and shrubs.
The vegetation ranges from savannah grassland and acacia scrub to grassy vleis and mopane woodlands. 482 km of game viewing gravel roads enable the visitor to some of the world's greatest concentrations of game.
Many viewing platforms have been erected close to waterholes and numerous safari operators offer day and moonlight trips to observe the animals' behaviour. A great Safari experience is guaranteed.
Hwange's accommodation is as abundant as its wildlife - from basic self-catering national parks chalets to the more luxurious hotel and safari lodges.
For those who want to fulfil a childhood dream of sleeping in a tree house, then Sinamatella Camp is the obvious choice.
In the lowveld lies the Gonarezhou National Park and the Save Valley Conservancy. Gonarezhou is one of the wildest parks in Zimbabwe, set against the incredible backdrop of the Chilojo Cliffs.
As part of the Great Limpopo Park, it has joined together with National Parks from the neighbouring countries of Mozambique and South Africa, to create a single large trans-border park.
The catalyst for the Save Valley Conservancy was the collapse of the black rhino population in the Zambezi valley.
An emergency evacuation of the remaining rhinos was needed, and the area of the Save Valley was ideal.
The Conservancy is home to 600 elephants that needed to be relocated from a drought-ridden Gonarezhou in 1992.