Between mall runs and restaurant hopping, Gaborone families are hunting for something different. Enter fruit picking, the countryside-style experience turning orchards into weekend playgrounds, sparking both excitement and eye-rolls in equal measure Somewhere between overpriced brunches, endless coffee dates, and the annual struggle to answer “what are we doing this weekend?”, Gaborone stumbled onto an unexpectedly juicy solution: fruit picking. What once sounded like a chore people survived in the farms has suddenly become one of the city’s most talked about family activities.
Every weekend, cars packed, selfie sticks, and children in oversized hats roll out toward orchards where people pay to pick oranges straight from the trees. In a city often accused of having “nothing to do,” fruit picking has landed like a fresh squeeze of energy into Gaborone’s lifestyle scene. Families see it as wholesome.
Friends see it as Instagram content. Couples see it as simple dates with rustic aesthetics. “What a simple but wholesome activity.
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The city needs more of these activities,” said one fruit picker over the weekend. For many parents, it is also about reconnecting children with food beyond supermarket shelves. Fruit picking offers something increasingly rare in urban life: dirt under fingernails, fresh air, and an actual reason to put phones down even if only briefly. And unlike packed restaurants or noisy entertainment spots, orchards offer room to breathe.
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