ABOUT MALAWI

There is no country in all of Africa that has its geography so sculptured and determined by Africa’s Great Rift Valley, the largest single geographical feature on Earth. Towering mountains, lush, fertile valley floors and enormous crystal-clear lakes are hallmarks of much of the Rift Valley – and Malawi displays them all.

Aside from open water, the unique bio-geographical province of the Lake harbours a wide range of underwater habitats including sandy, weedy, rock-sand interface and reed beds. Lake Malawi holds a one-of-a-kind ecosystem, which over 400 species of fish found nowhere else in the world. There are also a number of islands dotted across the Lake, separated from the mainland by sandy flats and deep water. Much of its astounding underwater diversity is protected within the Lake Malawi National Park at Cape Maclear in the south.
Aside from open water, the unique bio-geographical province of the Lake harbours a wide range of underwater habitats including sandy, weedy, rock-sand interface and reed beds. Lake Malawi holds a one-of-a-kind ecosystem, which over 400 species of fish found nowhere else in the world. There are also a number of islands dotted across the Lake, separated from the mainland by sandy flats and deep water. Much of its astounding underwater diversity is protected within the Lake Malawi National Park at Cape Maclear in the south.


Between these two main high altitude areas and as the country slopes towards the Luangwa River in neighboring Zambia, the high ramparts of the mountains morph into the undulating plains of the Central African Plateau. This landscape is generally cultivated and supports a large part of Malawi’s rural population.
At its southern extremity the Shire River drains Lake Malawi and flows through the country’s lowlands en route to its confluence with the Zambezi River. In the densely populated southern reaches of the country lie Liwonde and Lengwe National Parks and the Majete Game Reserve, subtropical contrasts to the protected areas further north. This is where the bulk of the country’s elephant population occurs and it is only here that the secretive nyala penetrates into Malawi.
MALAWI
ADDRESS
Root to Fruit Ltd.
C/O Chintheche Inn
P.O. Box 9
Chintheche, Nkhata Bay,
MALAWI
TELEFON
+265 11 193 1045
EPOST
info@roottofruit.se