Kazuma Pan National Park is one of the most remote and least visited protected areas in Zimbabwe, situated in north-western Matabeleland tucked on the Botswana border. It is a small but prime and unique Park, being only 33,500 hectares in extent, and is surrounded by Kazuma Forestry, Panda Masue Forestry and the Matetsi Safari Area. The Park is almost in two sections – the Kazuma depression in the west, and the Katshetshete River Drainage system (Katshetshete Catchment) in the east.
The Kazuma Depression is a unique open grassland area, which in the rains can fill up, attracting an incredible waterfowl variety and numbers, while during the dry season the grasslands attract herds of animals including rarities such as oribi, roan, sable, Tsessebe, eland and many more. As the area dries up, the wildlife tends to concentrate on the artificial pumped waterpoints at Corner Pan and Insiza.