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After a fun-filled day at Dubai’s Atlantis Water Park, we
took an overnight flight from Dubai to Zimbabwe via Qatar and
Johannesburg. Our flight took us 6,000
miles south and we went from frolicking in the water park one afternoon to
cruising alongside hippos and crocodiles on the Zambezi River the next.
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Victoria Falls forms the border between Zambia and Zimbabwe
and claims to be the largest waterfall in the world, spanning 1km across by 100
m high (there are numerous competing claims for largest waterfall - height, volume, width, etc, etc). The Falls put so much moisture
in the air that they create their own weather system and rainstorms come in
waves around the Falls despite the sun shining a short distance away. The spray and mist make it challenging to
take pictures and keep your camera and yourself dry. It literally feels as if you are in a strong
rainstorm!
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In 2000, President Mugabe enacted land reform, forcibly redistributing land from white farmers to Africans. That transition went poorly as the new farmers did not know how to farm and run businesses, causing Zimbabwe’s GDP and exports to plummet and inflation to skyrocket. The resulting hyperinflation led Zimbabwe to print one hundred trillion dollar notes ($100,000,000,000,000) and Luke managed to buy an old $10 billion note for his collection. The country has since adopted the US dollar and 8 other world currencies as its currencies, which has stabilized inflation, but with an estimated 80% of the population unemployed the situation seems pretty hopeless. No immediate economic or political improvements seem imminent. As we travelled around Victoria Falls, the situation was made apparent by the huge number of young men constantly trying to sell you the same selection of carvings or other items. In one makeshift covered market near our hotel, about 40 vendors were competing for the same customers with the same items. It's hard to imagine how they were surviving on the few tourists that came there way. We will be keeping an eye on Zimbabwe. Even before we knew the unemployment statistics, we knew something was wrong by the sheer number of men in their late teens, 20's and 30's that seemed to be hanging around idle in the streets. That kind of environment is not one that seems to be sustainable as idle young men are a dangerous constituency.