User:Obvious Makoni/sandbox

ZANA 2 Village 26 To the east lies a small range of hills covering a considerable stretch of land. An exciting view that would resemble a spectacular dawn in the eastern highlands would dress the early morning mist in an interesting manner, which draws various deceptive comments of 'the famous rotating sun' belief often thought as associated with new years day in the neighbourhood. Oh, how interesting! Interrupting the gentle undulations of the heathered hills is a single pile of huge oblong rocks perched on one of its summits. They look like a tumbled pillar of an ancient edifice but seem, on closer inspection to be so eccentrically shaped as to have been, quite by hazard, strewn there thru some geographical accident. One isolated hill is quite fascinating, with blocks of boulders balancing in what looks like a dangerous snare, yet such existence has history dating beyond my knowledge! If it were by the river side, Matupki (Mutupwi as famously known) would form a famous precipice, with rocks overhanging precariously, jutted as if to decorate an infamous place. The west is well known for plantations, with rows of trees spaced to suit the popular climate of Region 2A.

In the dry season, sunset would be masked by a cloud of dust emanating from herds of cattle wading in the west-east direction. When it is partly cloud, streaks of sun's rays during would beam over the clouds and hit the face of the Ngoma Dzehumbwa range in the east. The north is a lofty range of undulating plains bisected by intermittent streams-an area commonly known as a grazing land. In late summer, the rime covered green grass forms a fascinating carpet that signifies the end of the rains. 9km straight south is Wedza Township (where one would find Wedza High School), the place where a once wide gravel road that passes thru the village to Marondera diverts from the Wedza-Harare narrow tarred road. Village 26 (or Zana 2 as famously known) itself lies on the watershed of two small streams that flow southwards, the western one into Chinyika River and the eastern one, better known as Mutorahuku, feeds into Ruzawi River.