Wild Horizons is a multi-faceted tour company that provides
a large array of activities, operates out of multiple locations, has a huge
fleet of vehicles, 2 luxury bush camps, employs over 400 people and operates at
full tilt, 24/7. So you can imagine, that as a new employee arriving on day-one
of the job, the introduction is both hugely exciting and somewhat overwhelming.
For my first blog post, I thought I would re-count what my first couple of
weeks in the Wild Horizons marketing department has been like!
One of the things that struck me first and foremost was the
friendliness of absolutely everyone. From the gate-guards, to the mechanics, to
the camp managers and the directors – I was instantly made to feel welcome. I
started off with a tour of the main HQ in the industrial sites of Victoria
Falls, the size of which blew me away. Four large wings of offices surrounding
a big courtyard with lush green buffalo lawn and teeming flower beds around the
sides. A large workshop at the back and ample room to park the large fleet of
vehicles and luxury transfer busses. My tour of the HQ was accompanied by mass
introductions to all the staff in every department – around 100 people in total
would be my guess. I admitted to myself that it would be pointless to stress
too much about everyone’s names as I would never remember them first time
round. No doubt I would pick them up one by one as I deal with each
department in due course.
One of my first tasks is to join the marketing team in coming up with a marketing campaign for one of Wild Horizons’ many products - the Vic Falls CanopyTour – the newest of 4 products which Wild Horizons offers from it’s jump site
– “The Lookout”.
The Lookout (#wildhorizonslookout) is a thatched deck
structure, which is perched right on the lip of the Batoka Gorge, just
downstream of the Vic Falls Bridge on the Zimbabwean side. It has a spectacular
view of the bridge, and sits overlooking the first ‘bend’ in the zig-zagging
gorge which occurs below the Victoria Falls. There is even a tame wild goat called Dixon who hangs out there like all the time!
The other 3 products which operate
from The Lookout are the ‘Flying Fox’ – a foofie slide which extends across the
width of the entire gorge; the ‘Gorge Swing’, which is a death defying free-fall
off a platform into the gorge attached to a rope, which then ‘swings’ you as
you reach the bottom; and the ‘zip-line’ – which is a dual-cabled foofie slide
that makes a rather steep downward parabola, but without quite putting you into freefall. Finally, the Vic Falls Canopy Tour
is a series of 9 shorter, low speed cable-slides that criss-cross the inside of
the first bend of the gorge (below the Victoria Falls Hotel) where the vegetation
is thick and very jungle like – with vines and steep drops galore. It offers a
very mild adrenaline rush and is the perfect ‘in-between’ activity for those
who can’t quite bring themselves to do the more intense adrenalin activities
such as the gorge swing, whitewater rafting or the bungee jump.
So off I go with a group of paying clients on the Vic Falls
Canopy Tour. We harness up and set off on a path down the side of the gorge,
and it’s not far before we get to slide no.1. The guide hooks our safety lines
up to a safety rope that runs along the entirety of the course - all the walkways, bridges and even
on the actual foofie slides where is a second steel safety cable which we are
attached to whilst sliding. My first impression is that the safety is being taken
very seriously.
We step up onto a box/platform that overlooks a cliff and the
guide hooks our main & safety lines to the respective cables, and upon hearing a whistle through
the trees from another guide indicating that he is ready to
receive us - we step off the platform and start whizzing down the slide. Now we
have been given thick leather gloves for our hands, and we have been instructed
to hold our harness line which connects us to the cable with our left hand, and
then loosely hold the cable with our other hand, BEHIND the pulley. This allows for
us to squeeze the cable with our hand to slow ourselves down when we start
reaching the end of the slide. It took a few go’s to get the timing right, but
before long I was timing my hand-braking perfectly and was landing gracefully on the
box as is required for the guide to dismount you from the pulley and hook you
back up to the ground safety line.
This carried on for 8 more slides of varying
lengths and speeds, and I looked forward to each slide more than the last – the
views were just spectacular and the ambience of being in the Batoka Gorge
canopy, with the view of the bridge right in front of you, and the Zambezi
roaring beneath you – was just incredible. A really great product indeed, and
it even had really nice boarded walkways and rope bridges for the more
difficult parts. So far, I’m thinking I love my job!
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