Gogo Dube with a woven basket at her homestead
Matobo Hills · Community

A Visit to Gogo Dube's Village

A neighbour's welcome. Thirty minutes to an hour in a living Ndebele homestead, ten minutes from the lodge.

10 minFrom the lodge
30–60Minutes
GuidedWith translation
All agesFamily friendly
PhotosWelcome

The hills are lived in

The Matobo is not a wilderness emptied of people. It is a cultural landscape, one of the three things UNESCO named when it inscribed these hills in 2003, and the people who give it that name are still here: farming the valleys between the granite, walking to the shrines in the dry months, raising children in sight of the same kopjes their grandparents knew.

The communities are mainly Ndebele and Kalanga, and between them they hold a living culture of language, cattle, craft, music and belief that has weathered colonisation, war and independence. A short way from the lodge, you can meet it.

Guests dancing with the family at Gogo Dube's homestead

A morning at Gogo Dube's

Ten minutes from the lodge is the homestead of Gogo Dube (gogo is the Ndebele word for grandmother). Your guide walks you in and translates, and the family show you their world: the kitchen, the houses, the ordinary rhythm of a day. There is a talk, part history and part here and now, on how people really live in these hills.

A villager dancing with a guest at the homestead

And there is dancing

You will not stay a spectator for long. Before you know it there is a basket balanced on your head and you are being shown the steps, to a good deal of laughter on both sides.

Guests with traditional craft and artwork

Real, and on their terms

Nothing is bundled into a price. You go as a guest. If you would like to say thank you, the family make baskets and crafts you can buy, and that small exchange goes straight into the homestead. You are welcome in the kitchen too, to sit, to see how a meal is really done here, and to eat with them.

Go as a guest

No set fee and nothing staged. You are welcomed into a home, not a show.

Support directly

Buy a basket or a craft and the money goes straight to the family.

Photograph freely

This family love photographs. The rare visit where the camera is welcome.

Around the homestead

Drums, dust and good company

Guests and family dancing in a circle
A villager in traditional dress dancing with a guest
A painted Ndebele hut with drummers at golden hour
Children drumming and dancing at the homestead
"The granite, the rhino and the rock art tell you what the Matobo is. Gogo Dube and her family tell you what it means to live here now."

The rock art was not made by strangers but by the deep ancestors of the people still in these valleys. The hills are not a museum but a home. For a lot of guests, half an hour in that homestead is the part of the trip they talk about longest.

Good to know

Duration30 to 60 minutes
Distance10 minutes from the lodge
CostNo set fee; support by buying craft
GuidedYes, with translation
Suitable forAll ages
PhotographyWelcome

Add Gogo Dube's village to your stay

Tell us your dates and we will build it into your time in the hills.

EnquireWhatsApp the lodge