Budget, Backpackers, Surfers, Beach Lovers, Naturalist, Hippie, Sun and Sand worshipers, Off the Beaten Path Paradise! Everyone is welcome at Zipolite!
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A little about Playa Zipolite, The Beach of the Dead . . .
Playa Zipolite, Oaxaca, Southern Mexico, on the Pacific Ocean. A little bit about my favorite little get-away on this small world of ours.Zipolite, a sweaty 30-minute walk west from Puerto Angel, brings you to Playa Zipolite and another world. The feeling here is 1970's - Led Zep, Marley, and scruffy gringos.A long, long time ago, Zipolite beach was usually visited by the Zapotecans...who made it a magical place. They came to visit Zipolite to meditate, or just to rest.Recently, this beach has begun to receive day-trippers from Puerto Angel and Puerto Escondido, giving it a more TOURISTY feel than before.Most people come here for the novelty of the nude beach, yoga, turtles, seafood, surf, meditation, vegetarians, discos, party, to get burnt by the sun, or to see how long they can stretch their skinny budget.I post WWW Oaxaca, Mexico, Zipolite and areas nearby information. Also general budget, backpacker, surfer, off the beaten path, Mexico and beyond, information.REMEMBER: Everyone is welcome at Zipolite.ivan
Zipolite Blog Links
- Playa Zipolite
- Zipolite Entertainment, Party, Sports, Dance, Clubs, Music - - - Zipolite Entretenimiento, Fiesta, Deportes, Baile, Discotecas, Música
- Zipolite Food, Drink, Sunrise, Sunset - - - Zipolite Comida, Bebida, Amanecer, Atardecer
- Zipolite Nudist - - - Zipolite Nudista
- Zipolite ... Rentals, Camping, Hammocks, Apartments, House - - - Zipolite ... Alquileres, Camping, Hamacas, Apartamentos, Casa
- Zipolite Tours - - - Tours en Zipolite
- Zipolite Transportation and Rentals, Taxis, Bike, Moped, ATV - - - Zipolite Transporte y Renta, Taxis, Bicicleta, Ciclomotor, Cuatrimotos,
- Zipolite Yoga, Relax, Meditation, Temazcal - - - Zipolite Yoga, Relax, Meditación, Temazcal
- Budget Backpackers Off The Beaten Path - - - Mochileros económicos fuera del camino trillado
- Just For Fun ... by iVAn - - - Solo por diversión... de iVAn
- Near Zipolite - - - Cerca de Zipolite
- Travel Mexico - - - Viajes México
- ALL Playa Zipolite Blogspot Dot Com - - - TODO Playa Zipolite Blogspot Dot Com
Thursday, February 28, 2013
Topic - Playa Zipolite
Topic - Playa Zipolite
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Pochutla to San Agustito MEXICO | WEDNESDAY, 20 FEBRUARY 2013
Life Love & AdventureFOLLOW MY FIRST JOURNEY AROUND THIS LITTLE BLUE PLANET AS I TREAD WEARILY INTO UNKNOWN WATERS, SIPPING ON THE NECTARS OF ANCIENT FRUIT TREES, GRAPPLING LINGUISTICS WITH FOREIGN TONGUES, AND BATHING IN EXOTIC SENSATIONS ...
Pochutla to San Agustito
With more shopping to do for Tuesday's fiesta, Bambo wanted an early start to go to Pochutla again. So after a quick coffee we headed off to the 'big smoke'. Pochutla is still a small town but compared to San Agustinillo, it's a veritable metropolis. It seemed busier this morning, people rushing around, cars packing the streets, vendors yelling out their wares. The markets were packed. The cars with loudspeakers that push the hard sell with advertising or political messages mix in with the blaring trumpet music from the local CD shop, and creates a cacophony that unsettles your mojo! Hehe.
The lads took me to a small upstairs kitchen where we had a more traditional Mexican breakfast - three pork tacos with a choice of salsas and a fruity water. Starting the day with a chilli hit is one way to add a spring in your step :). It took a little while to find some shops they wanted, but all was done by lunch time. I also ended buying myself a new belt to replace the one I broke in Mexico City (not that I need it here!)
So after a refreshing swim and some hammock time, I enjoyed a ceviche de pescado and a cerveza. Tomorrow will be a busy day setting things up for the San Agustito fundraiser, but for now, it's chill-out time, hehe.
I went down to San Agustito at sunset to see if the boys were doing any prep for the party. It was good to start helping out by sweeping up and moving rubbish, and generally cleaning up the site. Bambo described his ideas for the new layout of the place, and we came up with a tentative place for 'La esquina de Mattias' (Matt's corner), heheh. Thea and Jiody came by and offered pizzas for dinner, so we set up some tables and chairs and had an unofficial opening of the new San Agustito. But even so, a band of people just turned up to rehearse their music which they'll play at the party. It was fabulous listening to some flamenco style guitar and singing, flute and hand-clapping, and wooden beat box from this random gypsy combo. After a few beers it felt like the party had already started :). And in the midst of all this, some other guys loaded in all the parts to a marquis that they set up out the front!
So by the end of the night, I stumbled back along the beach to my cabana happy to have had such an unexpected but rewarding day :)
Gracias por todo San Agustinillo! MEXICO | WEDNESDAY, 27 FEBRUARY 2013
Life Love & AdventureFOLLOW MY FIRST JOURNEY AROUND THIS LITTLE BLUE PLANET AS I TREAD WEARILY INTO UNKNOWN WATERS, SIPPING ON THE NECTARS OF ANCIENT FRUIT TREES, GRAPPLING LINGUISTICS WITH FOREIGN TONGUES, AND BATHING IN EXOTIC SENSATIONS ...
Gracias por todo San Agustinillo!
MEXICO | WEDNESDAY, 27 FEBRUARY 2013 | VIEWS [49]
I owe it to everyone reading this blog, and to myself of course, to write one last chapter. I think I've had a great escape from my monotonous, suburban life back home, and I've tried to make the most of everything San Agustinillo offered me. The endless rumble of the surf, the glorious temperatures for this time of year, the super-relaxed vibe, the smiles and laughter of everyone in town, the great variety of restaurants and bars, and probably above all, the time to unwind, to clear out the clutter in my mind, and the opportunity to get back into the 'now'.
Notwithstanding that however, life throws you opportunities that, in reflection of the life I lead back home, I wonder in which direction I should go. I guess it's all about the eternal search for happiness within one's self, and avoiding the doubts, the regrets and the worries. I came to SA to 'bum on a beach for a month' but found I got a whole lot more. There's a spirit here of community, of friendships, of taking care and looking out for each other, and I have to thank Bambo and Alving for showing me that. Everywhere you go there are the 'slide and punch' handshake greetings amongst the men, and the kisses on the cheeks and hugs amongst the women, you become personally attached to people in a very short space of time.
There's ample opportunity for the artistic mind to dream, design and create, but I wonder where someone like me would fit in. It's very easy to become enchanted by this patch of paradise, and its magnetic charm has attracted people from all over the world. Of course I've only been exposed to a snapshot of life here, and I know the wet season would spawn another whole series of tales. Hmm, so when was San Agustito re-opening Bambo? ;)
I spent the last couple of days hanging out at Mexico Lindo and on the beach contemplating the trip home, so rewiring my brain for schedules and time frames has put a bit of a damper on my holiday spirit. But that's all an inevitable part of the journey so you just have to go with it. However, there was one more trip to Pochutla and an awesome lunch on the beach at neighbouring Zipolite to affirm that I was still in Mexico!
Now if I can only guarantee that the boys will get me to the airport in time, hehe. The blues man David Rotundo is playing a gig in Zipolite, and I have a feeling it could be a late night. Wish me luck!
Gracias por todo San Agustinillo!! Fueron muy amables!!
Wednesday, February 27, 2013
Mexico's hippie haven of Zipolite Published February 26, 2013 Associated Press
Mexico's hippie haven of Zipolite
Published February 26, 2013
Associated Press
ZIPOLITE, Mexico – "You're going to like it here in Zipolite," Daniel Weiner, the owner of Brisa Marina hotel said with a wry smile as he handed me the keys to my quarters. "You're not going to want to leave in five days."
A few lazy days later, I began to realize why so many guests rent their rooms by the month. Whether it's the laid-back vibe or the tranquil setting, Zipolite has a way of making people stay longer than expected.
A sleepy town with one main street and no ATMs, Zipolite is one of many tiny coastal pueblos that dot the Pacific in Mexico's Southern state of Oaxaca. Stretching from Puerto Escondido to Huatulco, the region is sometimes called the Oaxaca Riviera.
The hippie crowd discovered Zipolite in the 1960s and since then it has slowly evolved into an offbeat tourist spot popular with a certain type of visitor. Its pristine beach stretches two kilometers (1.2 miles) between two high cliffs at either end, and the crowd is fairly evenly split between middle-class Mexicans and free-wheeling liberals from across the globe. Old hippies, young adventure-seekers, and locals all mingle with a flower-child type harmony.
It feels light years away from the areas of Mexico that tourists now avoid due to drug violence. Not only has the U.S. State Department spared Oaxaca from its travel warnings about Mexico, but Zipolite in particular seems lost in time, a place where visitors think nothing of leaving their belongings unattended on the beach and backpackers sleep in hammocks strung along the coast.
Zipolite also has a few claims to fame. The climactic beach scenes in the Mexican blockbuster movie "Y Tu Mama Tambien," were filmed here. And it's gained notoriety as one of Mexico's few nude beaches, although the majority of sunbathers remain clothed. (Farther east, past an outcropping of rocks is the cove known as "Playa de Amor" where nudity is more openly practiced.)
Mike Bolli, a retiree from Vancouver, Canada, says he has been visiting the area for the last 10 years without "accident, issue or injury."
"I have only ever met the nicest and friendliest eclectic mix of locals and visitors — it's a great throwback to the '60s," Bolli said. "So it's all good and safe from my viewpoint."
Zipolite has no high-rise hotels. Many of the beachfront structures are thatched-roof palapas, umbrella-shaped huts with no walls. Brisa Marina itself started off as a wooden structure with a palm roof, but after a major fire in 2001 that destroyed 23 buildings, Weiner rebuilt it with cement.
Visitors expecting a party-all-night Cancun-like atmosphere with fishbowl-sized margaritas and waitresses in bikinis passing out shots of tequila will be disappointed. There is a night life here, but it's nothing like that. Instead, folks gather on the beach in an end-of-day ritual to watch the brilliant sunsets. Many restaurants and bars offer live music and entertainment. And the only paved road in town turns into a carnival-like scene at night, with artists and jewelry makers selling their wares, while musicians, jugglers and fire dancers perform for tips in the street.
"Zipolite after six is awesome," Bolli said, "with all the dreadlocked kids hoping to sell their creations along with a great choice of different restaurants. It's not overcrowded but you can find a crowd if you want."
Some of the most interesting diversions can found at Posada Mexico, an oceanfront restaurant. One night I watched a Cirque du Soleil-like acrobatic performance and another night I rocked out to Cainn Cruz, an amazing child guitar prodigy who brought the house down with his covers of Pink Floyd, Led Zeppelin and AC/DC.
Adding to the groovy ambience is Shambhala, a spiritual retreat perched high on a hill in a bucolic setting. Tourists are welcome to hike up the resort*s stair pathway where a meditation point sits atop a cliff overlooking the Pacific. Shambhala advertises the "Loma de Meditacion" as a sacred location where visitors may experience a higher consciousness and oneness with nature. The center rents rustic cabins and hosts visiting artists and healers.
The name Zipolite is said to derive from indigenous languages. Some sources say it means "bumpy place," a reference to the local hills, and other sources translate it as "beach of the dead," a reference to strong ocean currents. The beach has volunteer lifeguards and areas with dangerous currents are marked with red flags.
Weiner, who has a deep tan, a working uniform of board shorts and flip-flops, and a crusty, carefree sense of humor, splits his time between California and Zipolite. He's owned his hotel since 1997 and estimates that about 50 percent of his guests are repeat customers.
"This gets us through swine flu times, protests, drug war scares, etc.," he said. "People come back knowing we are OK, and they tell their friends too."
And sometimes they have a hard time leaving. As Weiner predicted, after a few days in Zipolite, I called the airline to change my flight. I had to stay another week.
___
If You Go...
ZIPOLITE, MEXICO: Beach town in Oaxaca on the Pacific, http://mexicobeaches.net/zipolite/
GETTING THERE: The closest airports are Puerto Escondido, an hour's drive west, or Huatulco, an hour south. You can take a bus or taxi from either airport. The closest bus station is in Pochutla, 20 minutes away by taxi or shuttle.
MONEY: The closest ATM is in nearby Puerto Angel, 10 minutes by taxi. The nearest bank is in Potchutla. Most hotels will accept and/or exchange U.S. dollars or euros.
LODGING: Brisa Marina offers oceanfront rooms with balconies and hammocks as well as less expensive courtyard options. Guests can also relax on the large beachfront ramada (shaded outdoor area). Nightly rates range from 200-650 pesos ($16-$51) depending on the season, http://www.brisamarina.org . A spiritual retreat, Shambhala, offers lodging on the hill at the western end of the beach, http://shambhalavision.tripod.com/id2.html .
DINING: Zipolite is home to an impressive variety of quality restaurants with many beachfront choices, including several authentic pizzerias and trattorias, thanks to a number of Italian expats residing locally. For a romantic candlelit experience on the beach with entertainment, try the restaurant at the Posada Mexico inn. You can enjoy the entertainment without dining there by spreading your blanket on the sand nearby.
Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/travel/2013/02/26/laid-back-beach-lost-in-time-in-carefree-hippie-haven-zipolite-mexico/#ixzz2MALC35wy
WELCOME TO SHAMBHALA VISION
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