

Fly by light aircraft to Mana Main Airstrip (charters from Harare, Victoria Falls or Kariba), then a game-drive transfer of roughly 30 minutes to the riverside camp, included in the rate.
Six canvas tents strung along the Zambezi beneath mahogany and acacia, each with a double bed (separable to twin), an en-suite bathroom with a hot-and-cold chip-boiler shower and flush loo, and a private canvas veranda right over the water, with a Family Luxury four-sleeper for families.
Fully inclusive and generous, with freshly prepared breakfast, lunch and dinner, snacks and nibbles between, and warm beverages, soft drinks and house alcoholic drinks (premium and imported excluded), served in the communal tented dining and bar area over the river, with varied bush meal set-ups out in the wild.
Neutral safari clothing with a warm jumper, beanie and gloves for cold early mornings (June–August), lighter layers for hot October nights (tents now have fans), sturdy closed shoes for walking safaris, sun hat, high-factor sunscreen, insect repellent and antimalarials, swimwear for the plunge pool, binoculars and a headlamp, and note there are no hairdryers or air-con, plus a soft bag (~15 kg) for the light aircraft.
Pair Mana River with its inland sister Ingwe Pan to experience the full sweep of Mana Pools, river and floodplain plus the inland pan and wilderness. Take a canoe safari on the Zambezi among the hippos, and make the most of the walking, Mana is one of the few parks where you can walk among big game, though under-16s can't walk in Zimbabwe's national parks.
Designed to tread lightly, Mana River Camp runs on a hybrid of solar power and a backup generator with low-energy appliances and lighting, uses separate bio plants to manage kitchen, laundry and staff-village waste, and is built without permanent fixtures so the site can be rehabilitated within about eighteen months, all within the protected wilderness of Mana Pools, alongside Machaba's community employment and guide-training commitments.