Seasons and Climate of South Luangwa

EMERALD SEASON

January - March

Open: Nkwali Camp, Robin’s House, Luangwa Safari House

Bishop in breeding colours The rainy season has always been traditionally known as a time to avoid a safari destination.  Well they have it wrong. We think this is far from the truth and find the rains bring all sort of treasures that the “peak” and dry season do not have.  We opened at Nkwali for the first time in 2006 for these months – only five times did “rain stop play” and the game drives did not go out.

Migratory birds breed

The valley hosts many migratory birds that come, feed, may change into wonderful colours, breed, and fly away again.  The cuckoos arrive and drive us mad with their never ending calling.  The bishops turn from LBJ's (little brown jobs) to the most splendid flashes on wings. We are also in a migratory corridor of many birds and see huge columns of European storks, or hundreds of kestrels flying fast down the river.  A birders paradise.

Huge storms of staggering beauty

Storm We have wide wide skies without mountains, or of course buildings, to interrupt the vision and if you have not seen a storm passing through with all the drama of the building cloud which is constantly changing colour, the lightening which is like experiencing your own high tech light show, the wind blowing the sand up the river, the wall of rain arriving and then water falling like buckets being emptied.  Then thirty minutes later you are in sunshine and blue clear skies.  It is quite spectacular.  Having said that many of the storms come in the evening and we do often have early bed time, where we listen to the storm, safely tucked up.

ele and baby Wild Dog Pups Game viewing

This is the one that everyone misjudges.  The game in the Mfuwe area remains very good.  It is not migratory, and much of the game is resident.  As the lagoons fill, the animals are mostly found on the high ground which is where the roads were built for obvious reasons.  We often have to wait for sleeping lions to wake up and move off the road!   It is wonderful to see the game in the vegetation that is so green it looks like it is vibrant with colour.  And of course around mid February the wild dog packs come out from the hills and we start to have regular sightings through to early to mid April. 

The River

As the English discuss the weather, we discuss the level of the river - endlessly.  Through the three months of the rains the river rises and falls dramatically.  The catchment area is vast and it could be raining hard in the far northern area of Zambia and a couple of days later the river rises considerably although we have had blue skies for a week !  And sometimes we have a lot of rain (at night!) and the river hardly shifts. 

Sunset In March 2006 we had had around 200 mls of rain for 4 nights so the ground was saturated.  Then a huge storm arrived – 210 mls.  Very dramatic.  The next morning the river was rising 10 cms an hour – that is a lot of water.  But two days later it had dropped 1.5 meters.  All very variable when it is being extreme.

And this higher river means we can play with the boats.  And what a great joy it is to have sundowners on the river with pink and purple light bouncing of the 30,000 ft clouds or to spend a day boating up the river, and even boating into the flooded lagoons where we drive in the dry season.  Boating on such a river is a real delight.

The Months and The Moths

Again it is hard to say which month out of the three will have more or less rain and when the river will be at its peak.  They are all great months but usually by mid March the rain is starting to ease off.  And the moths come out to play.  Amazing creatures.

white winged atlas moth moth - type unkown to the webmaster

April