3 hours
1
2+
Included
The word boma originally described the enclosures where southern African communities gathered to eat, share news, and celebrate together. At the Boma Dinner in Victoria Falls, that spirit is preserved in full. This is not a tourist show staged in a hotel conference room. It is a living cultural experience – warm, loud, joyful, and entirely genuine – that has been welcoming visitors and locals alike every evening for years.
If you have one evening to spend in Victoria Falls, this is how to spend it.
Your return transfer from your Victoria Falls hotel brings you to the Boma as the evening light softens. You are welcomed at the entrance in the languages of Zimbabwe – Shona, Ndebele, Nambiya, and Tonga – a small gesture that immediately signals you are in a place that takes its culture seriously.
The evening opens with a traditional hand-washing ceremony, a ritual of hospitality and respect that has been practised across this region for centuries. Then comes the first of many culinary surprises: traditional beer and snacks, offered as you settle in and the atmosphere builds around you.
The buffet dinner at the Boma is, by itself, worth the evening. The spread covers an extraordinary range of Zimbabwean cuisine – from slow-cooked game meats and roasted vegetables to classic sadza, muriwo, and freshwater fish prepared in traditional styles. Dishes change with the season, but the generosity never does. International alternatives are always available for guests who prefer familiar ground, and all dietary requirements are accommodated with advance notice.
Eat as much as you like. The Boma believes in abundance.
While you eat, Zimbabwe performs. Traditional dancers move through the space with an energy that is impossible to resist – their costumes, movements, and drumming representing specific cultural traditions from across the country’s many communities. A Sangoma holds court at one end of the venue, sharing stories from Zimbabwe’s oral tradition. At another point in the evening, a witchdoctor reads the future in bones and shells, drawing laughter, gasps, and volunteers from the crowd.
By the end of dinner, most guests are on their feet. The dancing is participatory – this is a feature, not an accident. Zimbabwean culture has always believed that music and movement are not for spectators.
The Boma operates 365 days a year, every evening from 19:00 until late. Whether you are celebrating something, simply looking for the best possible way to end a Victoria Falls day, or travelling with family and want an experience that works for every age, the Boma delivers.
Great trip for families with active kids who want to see the Netherlands. Each day was filled with beautiful scenery…