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Lobamba

city in Swaziland

23km

-26.41666731.166667

Mbabane

capital of Eswatini

27km

-26.32083331.161667

Maputo

capital of Mozambique

145km

-25.96555632.588611
Sights (1)

Mlawula Nature Reserve

Mlawula Nature Reserve is in north-eastern Eswatini (Swaziland), covering an area of approximately 16,500 hectares. The reserve lies within the transitional zone between two biogeographic regions, the dry thorn savannas of the west, and the moister coastal thickets of the east. The reserve consists of three distinct ecological zones, the Ndzindza plateau, the Siphiso Valley and the rhyolite ridges of the western boundary. Although small, the reserve is contiguous with other protected areas (Mbuluzi and Simunye Nature Reserves, Hlane Royal National Park), and other areas of natural vegetation (north bank of the Mbuluzi River, Mhlumeni area, adjacent area in Mozambique).

74km

-26.23432
Nature

we will see

Manzini

Eswatini
Someday we will visit Manzini or begin to dream about going there! However, for now its not on our radar. Let us know in the comments if you think that should change!

Manzini

Manzini is the second biggest city in Eswatini (Swaziland) and the major business centre.

Residential areas radiate outward from the Central Business District. At the western terminous of the city on the highway to Mbabane is KaKhoza Township, a poor neighborhood with the appearance of an informal settlement. North of downtown beyond the Mavuso International Trade Fair (opened 2004) along a bypass road (opened 1994, rebuilt 2004 for the opening of the Mavuso Trade Fair) is Helemesi Estates. Here middle-class dwellings were erected in the early 1990s on the former farm of Sydney Williams, the long-serving Resident Commissioner during British rule. Helemesi is the SiSwati corruption of the name Williams. The housing development is surrounded by Fairview Township, developed in 1964 during the twilight of colonial rule as Eswatini's first integrated residential neighbourhood. 19th century law, reaffirmed by ordinances in the 1920s, forbade Swazis from residing or owning businesses in Bremserdorp. Until the 1960s Swazi business proprietors used Europeans as fronts in order to operate "Native Eating Houses" and other establishments.

A commercial centre from the time a trading post was opened in 1885, Bremersdorp was designated a township in 1898. Arthur Bremer sold his hotel for use as British Colonial authorities who had administered Swaziland since 1894 as their national administrative headquarters, and stipulated that the settlement would bear his name (dorp is the Afrikaans word for "small town"). The name reverted to its original Swazi name, Manzini, in 1960.

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Climate

Average temperatures

Jan

28.2°C17.9
Precipitation: 145 mm

Feb

28.1°C17.9
Precipitation: 133 mm

Mar

27.3°C16.9
Precipitation: 100 mm

Apr

26°C14.3
Precipitation: 54 mm

May

24°C10.5
Precipitation: 26 mm

Jun

22.2°C7.8
Precipitation: 15 mm

Jul

22°C7.3
Precipitation: 15 mm

Aug

23.6°C9.6
Precipitation: 19 mm

Sep

25.3°C12.2
Precipitation: 45 mm

Oct

26.4°C14.7
Precipitation: 84 mm

Nov

26.8°C16.2
Precipitation: 119 mm

Dec

27.9°C17.3
Precipitation: 126 mm
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