The falls are more than 300 feet high and almost 150,000 gallons of water go over the cliffs each minute. You can see the falls from the nearby bridge, take a Victoria Falls Helicopter Tour, or get closer to them in a ferry.
The town on the Zimbabwe side is called Victoria Falls, and on the Zambian side, the town is called Livingstone. Each has a busy international airport, good infrastructure and many hotels and lodges to choose from. Just downstream of the falls, the bridge over the Zambezi River connects Zambia to Zimbabwe.
Video: Crocodile relocated from Victoria Falls Bridge
The Matabeleland Zambezi River Water Project that has been on the cards for 100 years is yet to get off the ground due to the unavailability of funding.When complete, the water project will bring to an end Bulawayo's water challenges while creating a green irrigation belt in the region.The project's Advisory Council Chairman, Mr Donald Khumalo expressed worry at the failure to do meaningful work but said they are in talks with the Ministry of Environment, Water and Climate to ensure work is done on the sites.He also said it is pleasing to the council that the project has been given priority status in the country's economic blueprint, ZIMASSET, saying it will ensure resources are channeled towards it.The Senior Minister of State in the President's Office, Cde Simon Khaya Moyo said the government has given the project top priority as espoused in the economic blueprint.The project is expected to be done in three phases, starting with the construction of the Gwayi-Shangani dam, construction of a pipeline from Gwayi-Shangani to Bulawayo and some areas in Matabeleland South and North provinces, and the construction of a pipeline from Zambezi river to Gwayi-Shangani dam.Source: Zambezi water project, 100yrs still on paper - Bulawayo24 (04-06-14)Posted byVFBNBat14:09Email ThisBlogThis!Share to TwitterShare to FacebookShare to PinterestLabels:bulawayo,victoria falls,water extraction,zambezi,zimbabweNo comments:Post a Comment 2ff7e9595c
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