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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

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

HELP US CREATE A FUND TO CONTROL ZIPOLITE'S DOG AND CAT POPULATION ...


Dutch hardstyle live February 5th, 2013 @ 11:40pm EST dutch hardstyle dj live ! Event DJ Redje Dragon Fan 2


February 5th, 2013 @ 11:40pm EST
dutch hardstyle dj live !
Event DJ
 
2

. . . carry out two campaigns of sterilizations.


Terre Xtra

Terre Xtra





hola amigos
hasta ahora tenemos, con un poco mas de 16’000 pesos, la mitad del monto necesario para realizar dos campañas de esterilizaciones. les pido un esfuerzo con sus amigos, clientes y otros conocidos, a introducir este proyecto, para tener suficientes recursos para los dos campañas de esterilizaciones después de la semana santa y en diciembre. de antemano les agradezco la voluntad de cooperar.
zipol proyecto 2013: http://terrextra.npage.ch/fondo-esterilizaciones.html
lista de donaciones: http://terrextra.npage.ch/bild-boxes-spanish.html
rediseño de la pagina de terrextra: http://terrextra.de.to/
saludos
tintin
Hello friends so far have, with a little more than 16'000 pesos, half of the amount necessary to carry out two campaigns of sterilizations. I ask an effort with your friends, customers, and other acquaintances, to introduce this project, to have sufficient resources for the two campaigns of sterilizations after Holy week and in December. in advance thank you willingness to cooperate.
zipolite project 2013: http://terrextra.npage.ch/fondo-esterilizaciones.html list of donations: http://terrextra.npage.ch/bild-boxes-spanish.html redesign of the website terrextra:http://terrextra.de.to/ greetings tintin (Translated by Bing)

Buyer beware: 10 common travel scams Tom Hall and Kylie McLaughlin 10 July, 2012




http://www.lonelyplanet.com/themes/big-trips/ten-common-travel-scams/?intaffil=lpemail


Buyer beware: 10 common travel scams

Tom Hall and Kylie McLaughlin 

While you’re often safer overseas than you are in your hometown, a few scams seem to pop up all over the world. Repeat the mantra: if it looks too good to be true, it must be too good to be true…

1. Fake police

Sometimes also the real police, they’ll demand to see your passport and find something wrong with your visa, but then suggest your troubles will all be over if you pay a fine. To them. In cash. Right now. Standing your ground and offering to accompany them to the station will usually see the error ‘excused’.

2. Gem or carpet deals

On entry into a store, often prompted by an enthusiastic taxi or rickshaw driver, you will be offered a deal so preposterously lucrative that refusing it seems unthinkable. Think again – those gems are going to be worthless and the carpet you buy may not make it home at all. There are legitimate traders selling both jewels and rugs, and they don’t act like this.

3. Airport taxis

Drivers taking you into town might try every trick in the book, from asking you for an inflated fare to driving around the streets to raise the price higher. This is usually harmless, but you should only travel with licensed taxis and, if you can’t pay in advance, agree on a fee before starting out and don’t pay until you get where you want to be.

4. Timeshares

You’re approached by an extremely genial young man who offers you a scratchie card, no strings attached. He’s friendly, so you accept the scratchie card and, lo and behold, you’ve won some sort of prize, which could be anything from a t-shirt and cash to a holiday. What’s the catch? The local insists you must accompany him to a hotel (which might be an hour’s drive away) to collect your prize. If you haven’t smelled a rat by now, you need your senses tested.
The penny drops, you start staring at the ground and shifting your feet uncomfortably, the seemingly-genuine local says that if you don’t come with him, then he won’t get paid for his job. However, if you do end up going with him, on arriving at the hotel you’ll be shuffled into a room with a bunch of other tourists and forced into watching an hour-long presentation about timeshare apartments, which you are pressured into buying at a very special discounted price by slick Westerners. If you come out of it with your wallet intact, at worst you would have wasted an entire afternoon you could have spent lying on the beach.

5. ‘This is closed’

In some countries everyone from touts to taxi drivers will try to tell you that your chosen hotel, restaurant or shop is closed…but there’s another, even better one you should visit, where they can pick up a commission. This is more annoying than harmful, but always insist on having a look for yourself.

6. Motorbike scam #1

Living out your dream of riding a scooter for a day around the countryside quickly turns into a nightmare when the bike you’re riding breaks down or you have an accident. The owner of the motorbike is quick to escort you and your damaged bike (which doesn’t look in that bad a state) to the repair joint of their choice, where the mechanic makes a grossly overinflated estimate of the damage costs. The owner of the motorbike insists you cover the costs, otherwise no customers will want to rent his bike. You shell out hundreds of dollars to cover the costs of the damage you possibly made, plus cosmetic improvements to the bike that you have now also covered for the owner.
More than likely, you’ve just lined their pockets with more cash than the locals would earn in a month. Take photographs of the bike before you start riding, preferably with the renter in them, so they can’t blame you for imaginary damage costs to the vehicle. And don’t rent from companies that are attached to hotels or guest houses.

7. Motorbike scam #2

The motorbike you have hired comes with a lock and two keys: you have one, and your rental company has the other. When you park the scooter and wander off, an enterprising person from the rental company arrives and ‘steals’ your scooter, thus later requesting you pay a large sum of money to replace the ‘stolen’ scooter. As you handed them your passport and you signed a contract, you’re obligated to pay for it. Carry your own lock and key and an old passport to avoid getting sucked into this scam.

8. Bird shit

The surprising splat of bird shit landing on you from a great height is followed by the swift appearance of a stranger who towels you down. In the confusion, valuables are removed from your person, never to be seen again. Another variation on the same scam has someone ‘accidentally’ spilling mustard or other condiments on you.

9. Bar/tea shop scam

Notoriously aimed at male travellers, young local girls approach a tourist and, after gaining trust with some idle chit-chat, you agree to accompany them to a local bar/tea shop. Thrilled at the opportunity to converse with a couple of local lasses, you offer to buy them a drink. On receipt of the bill, the girls are gone, and all you are left with is a massive shock when you glimpse the sum total, which can amount to hundreds of dollars.

10. Hotel scams

As you hop off the train or bus into a strange town and into a waiting taxi, you ask them to take you to a specific hotel. You’re dropped off, hand over the money for several night’s worth of accommodation, you’re persuaded to sign up for a number of day tours then escorted to your hotel room. The hotel’s unusually quiet and it doesn’t seem like the advertised atmosphere. Alarm bells ring: you’ve been duped by the friendly local who talked to you on the bus, and the quick phone call he had to make was to the awaiting taxi, whose driver was very quick to escort you to the hotel of their choice.
Like a well-oiled machine, they worked together to ensure you handed over all your cash immediately, and fleeced you for a couple of tours while they were at it. Many hotels trade on the names of popular hotels and are rarely of the same standard, so make sure you check the name and address of the place before you’re shuffled in to sign your life away.


Read more: http://www.lonelyplanet.com/themes/big-trips/ten-common-travel-scams/?intaffil=lpemail#ixzz2K5h3uUO4

Travel with Kevin and Ruth: RV Parks in Puerto Escondido


Travel with Kevin and Ruth: RV Parks in Puerto Escondido
Puerto Escondido, Oaxaca, Mexico. Where are Kevin and Ruth going next? Huatulco, Oaxaca. Hope to arrive around February 6. Follow @KevinandRuth ...
www.travelwithkevinandruth.com/.../rv-parks-in-puerto-escon...

Where are Kevin and Ruth now? Puerto Escondido, Oaxaca, Mexico.

Where are Kevin and Ruth going next? Huatulco, Oaxaca. Arriving February 6th!



Tuesday, February 5, 2013


RV Parks in Puerto Escondido

We've been to Puerto Escondido with our 28 foot class A motorhome several times. But we've never had to find somewhere to park because we've always stayed with friends. We noticed the other day that one of the larger trailer parks on the main road didn't seem open this year so we decided to check out all of the possibilities here.

And it turns out there are still quite a few possibilities here, and for all sizes of rigs...but none of them are ideal!

The one on the main highway, the Villa Las Brisas, has sold off the main section of it's trailer park and it's no longer open. However the area where the swimming pool is still has a parking lot big enough for a couple of large RV's so we went in and spoke to them.

Located at the south end of the main highway. GPS coordinates 15.85197 -97.05194

The girl said yes, they still accept RV's and they'll string electricity for you and a water line. They charge 200 pesos ($16.50) per night. They do have a sort of a hole in the ground dump station, so you can empty your tanks but you'll have to move your rig to do so. 

This area is a bit run down and not the most scenic. It's also located on the main highway so you'll likely get some road noise. But you're welcome to park here.

But this area is better. One big rig could park up against this wall and be fairly level. Another parked beside it would have a difficult time getting level, but we've seen two big rigs parked in this area before, so it is do-able. No shade though!

They do have a half decent swimming pool area.

The only other option for larger rigs is the Hotel Villa Relax. Not a bad spot, but again no shade. At least you would be able to park your rig so that the rig itself provides your shade. Still, it's not the best...

Located at the north end of the main highway, near the airport entrance. GPS coordinates 15.86667 -97.07731

Definitely lots of room for any size rig...as is evidenced by these two buses parked here.

They do have an interesting swimming pool, although the water was a little cloudy the day we visited.

And even a tennis court!

Lots of parking...but again, no shade.

We visited this place twice, and both times there was nobody around to talk to! I did find a website, but not sure how up to date the info is. It says between 170 pesos ($14) and 230 pesos ($19) per night depending on the size of your rig. http://www.comerciosyhotelesenpuerto.com/news/hotel-villa-relax2/

There is another option, the Neptune Trailer Park, right on the beach. But it's a dump, and there's no way we would stay there.

Can't recommend this place, but if you really want to check it out it's at GPS coordinates 15.86199 -97.06178. The guy wanted 300 pesos ($24.60) per night!

The other places are all for smaller rigs or camper vans. There is one more that we could fit into, and I'm sure we could do it, but maneuvering would be tight. It's really the nicest spot though of all the ones we visited.

Cabanas El Eden is beside the Oxxo store on the main tourist section of Playa Zicatela. No sign or anything on the road and the entrance is kind of squeezed between the Oxxo store and a restaurant.

It's a tight fit, but I think Sherman could do it! GPS coordinates are 15.85365 -97.05592

Once you're in there, it's actually quite homey. They charge 60 pesos per person per night, so for a couple you would be 120 pesos ($10) which is not bad for being so close to the action. You can get a wi-fi signal from the place next door. Make sure you have a decent extension cord if you want electricity!

We bumped into fellow Mexican RV'ers Whit and Jan here! We've ran into them several times since we started RV'ing in Mexico!

The other options are only suitable for small van types of campers. There's thePalmas de Cortes...

GPS coordinates 15.86145 -97.06264

And Cabanas Edda at GPS coordinates 15.85860 -97.05803, but again only for van type campers. They charge 100 pesos ($8.20) per night.


5 comments:

  1. Guess we will drive on past to Puerto Angel! Better choices there for us.
    Reply

    Replies


    1. Yes, I agree Contessa. However it is a LONG drive from Acapulco to Puerto Escondido and there is not much in the way of "big rig" parking available along the route. I would stop in here for a good night's rest just to break up the drive even though Puerto Angel isn't that much further.
  2. So there is some options there, just not great ones. Like you said could be doable.
    Reply
  3. Hi Kevin and Ruth, I am very new to your blog and decided to start reading from the start. I just finished 2007. Why didn't Kevin drive with Ruth to Mexico and fly instead? Very curious on that. Really enjoy your blog. My husband and I travel about 6 months out of the year in our motorhome. I can't bring myself to let our house go......maybe someday we will fulltime like you guys. I am tempted to read ahead but I'm going to get caught up on your wonderful adventure in the order it happens. Travel Safe! Leslie from California +_+
    Reply

    Replies

    1. Keep reading Leslie...it's all explained in there somewhere along the way! Ultimately, it was because the U.S. government decided that they didn't want me in the country because of an old arrest record from when Kevin was 18 years old. That has all since been fixed, but at the time, we had no choice but to do it that way to get to some warmer weather!




Mazunte 2

Mazunte

DF 13

Duty Free at the Airport - Huatulco Message Board - TripAdvisor

Duty Free at the Airport - Huatulco Message Board - TripAdvisor
Can you buy duty free at the airport? If so what is the selection like? Arriving Feb 5 and cant wait !!
www.tripadvisor.co.uk/ShowTopic-g150789-i740-k6087126-...



St. Albert...
posts: 4
 Duty Free at the Airport 
Can you buy duty free at the airport?
If so what is the selection like?
Arriving Feb 5 and cant wait !!
21 replies

toronto
posts: 43
reviews: 4
11. Re: Duty Free at the Airport
I keep seeing posts that there is no duty free at airport. Just left there on Tuesday and there is still one there. Not a great selection, vodka,tequila, some other liquor, vanilla, coffee etc. It is in the air conditioned area after you go through all security, they package it for you and tag it.

Vancouver BC
posts: 4,009
reviews: 79
12. Re: Duty Free at the Airport
Destination Expert   What's this?
for Vancouver
The confusion is not over whether there is a store after security, but whether is is a tax free store. It is not a tax free(duty free) store. It is simply a store selling at non duty free prices that are higher than the shops in town.

Alberta
posts: 21
reviews: 11
13. Re: Duty Free at the Airport
There is a duty free kiosk at the airport and the prices are not that bad

Vancouver BC
posts: 4,009
reviews: 79
14. Re: Duty Free at the Airport
Destination Expert   What's this?
for Vancouver
So there it is. Different opinions. I am absolutely certain it isn't "duty free" but we will let the investigation continue.

Nova Scotia
posts: 1,359
reviews: 12
15. Re: Duty Free at the Airport
We bought a couple bottles at this store. It is the only one available after you pass security and the prices were higher than in town. We paid $20 for 1L of Oro de Oaxaca Mezcal. Not much selection. They also sell chips and snacks to take on the plane.
That bottle of mezcal has a little burlap bag hanging from it. Anyone know what that is?

Ontario
posts: 75
reviews: 20
16. Re: Duty Free at the Airport
the little burlap bag contains chili worm salt. it is good with the mezcal.
Also I have to agree with Alegre, the little shop with in the departures area (after security) is NOT a Duty Free shop. It is a handy little shop for very last minute purchases.
In The Mexico City airport they have a chain of Duty Free stores called Dufry. Alcohol prices tend to better depending on what you want to buy, they also have a huge selection of perfumes, cosmetics, cigarettes, etc. You have to show your passport and boarding pass to complete a purchase.
Hope this helps.

Dubai...
posts: 28
17. Re: Duty Free at the Airport
Interesting discussion, does it matter if the kiosk is duty free or not, isn't the price and the range the most important factor?
Depending on your flight path, the airline will probably have a range, but not a big one for Tequilas, probably only Patron, if that. Likewise and as stated if there is a transit stop in Mexico City, there are plenty of shops there.
Sounds like buy domestically and put in your checked baggage is the best option.

minnesota
posts: 1,483
reviews: 28
18. Re: Duty Free at the Airport
The kiosk in the departure lounge has at least one sign that says it is "duty free". It did puzzle me as I don't think they handled the purchase with as much paperwork as past "duty free" places have, but I didn't declare it and there was no problem in Minneapolis (it was a non stop flight).

berwyn...
posts: 211
reviews: 1
19. Re: Duty Free at the Airport
I definitely remember a sign saying "duty free", and they require a boarding pass (and ID I think?) to make any purchases then seal up your bag just like they do at the other aiport duty free shops. Yes, it is small and overpriced and also doubles as a snack bar, but I am pretty sure it is a "duty free" kiosk.

minnesota
posts: 1,483
reviews: 28
20. Re: Duty Free at the Airport
I paid less than $2 more for the same bottle of Mescal, which was worth it to me because my luggage would have had a $25 surcharge if it would have been packed.