PASSION PURSUITS
Guiding the Future
How Beks Ndlovu is Transforming the African Safari
By J.R. Patterson
The Scene
Crouched in red dust behind a scrim of mopane woodland, Bekezela “Beks” Ndlovu raises a hand for silence as a great bull elephant pads past. “It’s Boswell,” he whispers. The massive animal suddenly rears onto his hind quarters, stretches his trunk into an acacia, and snaps off a spray of branches. Ndlovu chuckles softly. “Good old Boswell.”
Such is the practical magic of safari in Zimbabwe’s Mana Pools National Park, where familiarity never dulls the thrill. Fifty-year-old Ndlovu has been tracking elephants since boyhood, when a wandering herd trampled into his family’s garden in his home village in western Zimbabwe. Today, Ndlovu channels that same rush into his work as a guide and as the founder of African Bush Camps (ABC), which operates camps in 17 locations across Zimbabwe, Botswana and Zambia.
The Backstory
Beneath that dreamy vision of safari, the industry reckons with a past founded on colonial and sectarian principles that often deter and inhibit local advancement. When Ndlovu opened his first camp in 2006, he set out to shift that model. Under his leadership, ABC has emphasized cultural immersion alongside wildlife viewing.
He remains one of only a handful of black safari owners whose presence and guidance offers critical support to what he calls the decolonization of the safari: all of ABC’s 700 employees are from nearby communities in which they work, camp designs reflect local heritage, and cultural nights provide traditional insight into each camp’s unique connection to its surroundings.
The Hits
Each of ABC’s camps is situated in distinctive locations with unique experiences, including canoeing and fishing on the Zambezi River, walking safaris in Botswana’s wildlife-rich Linyanti Wildlife Reserve, and viewing rare white rhino in protected reserves in Zimbabwe’s remote Hwange National Park.
The Take Away
All stays at ABC help fund the African Bush Camps Foundation, which sponsors over 70 programs across three countries, bolstering employment, education, healthcare, and human-animal coexistence projects. “The idea of wildlife versus people is a paradox,” says Ndlovu, and he adds, “There is a place for both, once we transfer value from ourselves to local communities and their relationship with the land.”
Two programs, Precious Lives and Female Guides, provide critical education and work experiences for women interested in careers within the conservation, safari, and tourism industries. Guests staying in particular camps have the opportunity to visit villages that benefit from these programs, and see the direct impact their contributions have on local lives.
Must See
At ABC’s Bumi Hills lodge, guests have the opportunity to stay aboard Lady Jacqueline, a multi-story houseboat on Zimbabwe’s Lake Kariba.
Travel Planner
ABC safaris take place year-round. International carriers, including Air Canada (seasonally) connect via Johannesburg. africanbushcamps.com