When people talk about "Botswana Time" they are usually describing how the clock on the wall shares space with other measures of the day. In towns and offices the hands are watched carefully: meetings start, forms are filed and buses have timetables that people learn to respect. Outside those contexts, time is more elastic—defined by the sun, by who has arrived, and by the small ceremonies that precede any business. You can feel the difference in the air: the sharp morning light when tasks are set in motion, the slow, dust-soft afternoons when conversations take their own course. In social life the negotiation of time is as much about courtesy as it is about convenience.
When visitors drop in, the first half-hour is rarely about the stated reason for the visit; it is about greetings, asking after kin, pouring tea and listening. Voices bend into stories and laughter, a kettle hisses, and only after those exchanges does the gathering move toward its practical purpose. That pause is not delay so much as an intentional making of space—an acknowledgment that relationships are a precondition for anything else. Ceremonies and village gatherings show a different rhythm: there is precision to certain parts and latitude to others. A chief’s address or a formal speaker may prompt the clearing of feet from a mat and an attentive, almost ceremonial stillness; the lead-up, however, can be full of preparation and informal visiting that spills into the start time.
In urban settings employers and professionals tend to insist on punctuality, and people adapt; elsewhere, being exactly on the minute can feel abrupt if it skips the small rituals that lubricate social life. What carries across places is a shared sense that time is not just a resource to be measured but a medium for respect. A quick call to say you’re running late, a deliberate greeting, the patience to wait for a story to finish—these are the little courtesies that shape everyday timing. The weather itself—heat that slows footsteps, rain that brings the scent of wet earth, the cool of evening—also marks the day, and people read those cues as much as they read their watches.