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
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Friday, June 15, 2012
How to get to Puerto Escondido
By plane
| www.aeromar.com | www.vivaaerobus.com |
By car
Approximate time to puerto escondido road
By bus
bus line
PUERTO ESCONDIDO GOES OFF: WOULD YOU GO? Jun 14, 2012
Jun 14, 2012
PUERTO ESCONDIDO GOES OFF: WOULD YOU GO?
Undoubtedly, a wave like Puerto is tempting when it breaks so beautifully. However, not everyone has the ability to dominate a beast like that. Our team rider Igor Lumertz is one of those crazy guys in pursuit of the perfect one. They just love to be challenged. It looks like the waiting was worth it, don't you think?
Labels: BIG WAVE, EPS, IGOR LUMERTZ, KEAHANA, MEXICO, PUERTO ESCONDIDO, Surfing
TOPIC: ACCOMODATION & BUYING BOARDS IN PUERTO ESCONDIDO
Hey hows it going! i fly into mex city and busing to puerto escondido on the 8th of august to start a 5 month backpacking/surfing adventure through central and mex.
just wondering of any recommended places in puerto escondido to stay that are cheap! im travelling solo so looking for somewhere with a little bit of atmosphere close to the beach but still cheap.
also, i will be looking to buy some boards. is puerto the place to do it?
if anyone is planning the same thing or going to be in the area, add me on facebook.
Sam Shillingford.
just wondering of any recommended places in puerto escondido to stay that are cheap! im travelling solo so looking for somewhere with a little bit of atmosphere close to the beach but still cheap.
also, i will be looking to buy some boards. is puerto the place to do it?
if anyone is planning the same thing or going to be in the area, add me on facebook.
Sam Shillingford.
ON GLOBALSURFERS
ABOUT GLOBALSURFERS
Castillo Oasis ... NEW Calle del Amor 97, Zipolite, Mexico
Castillo OasisNEW
Address: Calle del Amor 97, Zipolite, MexicoAverage rating: No ratings received
Rooms from: US$ 16.51
Castillo Oasis
You will find the Castillo on the southern pacific coast of Mexico. It is located at the entrance of playa del amor, 80 meters away from the main beach of Zipolite.
Like the name lets you know, you find the Castillo Oasis in the middle of a tropical Palm- and Plantoasis with the benefit of having shade all year long with our" natural" airconditioning system (the oasis).
All rooms have fans, mosquitonets and safe- boxes. There are beautiful quarz- stones in the walls. It makes for a good atmosphere and magical energy.
There are little stores and public transportation nearby.
Last but not least, we hope you will enjoy your stay!
Please note:
Cancellation policy: 72 hours
Minimum Stay: 2 nights
Check in: 14:00
Check out: 12:00.
Breakfast not included.
Credit cards payment accepted upon arrival.
Taxes included.
The Castillo Oasis is located on the southern pacific coast of Oaxaca in a little village called playa Zipolite. Zipolite has almost 2 km of beachside and a neighbouring beach beach called playa del amor. The Hotel is located 80 meters from the Zipolite beach and 200 meters from the little playa del amor.You will find it at calle del amor 97 at the entrance Playa del amor.
Like the name lets you know, you find the Castillo Oasis in the middle of a tropical Palm- and Plantoasis with the benefit of having shade all year long with our" natural" airconditioning system (the oasis).
All rooms have fans, mosquitonets and safe- boxes. There are beautiful quarz- stones in the walls. It makes for a good atmosphere and magical energy.
There are little stores and public transportation nearby.
Last but not least, we hope you will enjoy your stay!
Please note:
Cancellation policy: 72 hours
Minimum Stay: 2 nights
Check in: 14:00
Check out: 12:00.
Breakfast not included.
Credit cards payment accepted upon arrival.
Taxes included.
Located Near
The Castillo Oasis is located on the southern pacific coast of Oaxaca in a little village called playa Zipolite. Zipolite has almost 2 km of beachside and a neighbouring beach beach called playa del amor. The Hotel is located 80 meters from the Zipolite beach and 200 meters from the little playa del amor.You will find it at calle del amor 97 at the entrance Playa del amor.
Facilities
Internet: | Breakfast: |
- Outdoor Terraced Area | - 24 Hour Security |
- Airport Transfers | Parking: |
- Café | - Air Conditioning |
- Safe Deposit Box | - Tea/Coffee Facilities |
- 24 Hour Reception |
The ocean set June 16, 2012
The ocean set
June 16, 2012
Village vibe... schoolchildren rehearse for a festival in Mazunte, Mexico. Photo: New York Times
Damien Cave discovers thundering surf, turtle conservation and eco-minded villages on the Pacific's Costa Chica.
Eager young men waving us towards empty parking spaces by an eco-tourism kiosk, two excited toddlers in the back seat and no way to turn back: tourism hell seems upon us. After a long sigh, and a glance at the pristine Pacific in front of us, we give in.
And then the Costa Chica, as this region of Oaxaca is known, surprises us. "It's 400 pesos [$29] for a private boat tour with a guide," one of the young men says. "But if no one else shows up, you can just pay the group price."
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My wife and I look around; we're alone. So we end up with a chartered boat for the price of a crowded one, paying the equivalent of about $10 for a 90-minute trip through mangroves teeming with mating birds, lazy crocodiles and neon-green iguanas. Our guide paddles while identifying the animals. Our children squawk with delight and as we re-emerge to stunning views, my wife and I stare in awe.
This stretch of surf is one of those rare places - hard to find in Mexico and the Caribbean - with natural beauty and tourists, but not a squeeze-the-tourist attitude. There's no charge for waterfront beach chairs; no waitresses waving plastic menus to coax us inside. Then toys, a cat or a playmate (same age as our children, occasionally nude) would often magically appear as we were seated.
The friendliness seems unforced and it's a counterpoint to the monstrous waves and dangerous undertows that have helped keep the area from being overrun. Indeed, the Costa Chica was once hardly fit for tourists.
For decades, the four small neighbouring towns here - Zipolite, San Agustinillo, Mazunte and Ventanilla - were nearly empty except for fishermen hunting sea turtles or harvesting their eggs.
That began to change in the 1980s, as the turtle population dwindled and mass tourism arrived. When the Mexican government banned turtle hunting in 1990, the coast became a test case for how to shift from an industry that created environmental degradation to others that are eco-friendly. With investment from government, non-profit groups and green-minded businesses (such as The Body Shop founder who helped establish a cosmetics co-op run by local women) the shift is nearly complete.
San Agustinillo has more charm than the other three towns, with its smaller beach, preference for cafes and handful of newer, upscale hotels such as Punta Placer (Pleasure Point) and El Sueno (The Dream). Mazunte, a 10-minute walk away, is busier. Live music blares until a loosely enforced closing time - some say midnight, others guess 2am.
The fishermen here still occasionally pull in sharks despite pressure from the government and locals to end the practice. But, mostly, the area has found its sustainable groove. Much of the new construction is built to blend in with the surroundings, walkers outnumber drivers and several business owners have plans for solar-powered streetlights. Residents who have been here longer are equally proud, showing off their cooking ingredients, or the parrots that seem to be the favoured mascot.
But the main attractions are the beach and the area's totem of green conversion, the Mexican Turtle Centre. This aquarium and research centre shows off five of the seven turtle species found on the Mexican coast. Giant sea turtles, known as golfinas in Spanish and olive ridleys in English, race around an above-ground pool just metres from crashing waves. The lodging options also make us long for a second trip. Pan de Miel, sitting on the cliffs between San Agustinillo and Mazunte (see casapandemiel.com/english) has rooms for about 1500 pesos a night that allow travellers to take in amazing views without interruption from children (they aren't allowed). Rooms costing far less are at least as common at other hotels, many within earshot of the waves.
And the waves are important - loud and large, they define this place. The tubes of green surf rolling along the empty beach at Ventanilla and the fierce undertow at San Agustinillo are a perfect match for the cactus plants and palm trees, and even the fishermen hunting sharks. They all reflect a Mexico in (less sanitised) form, rough and raw, still dominated by nature and the struggle for identity.
This is not the Mexico of Cancun, or even fashion-friendly, high-end Tulum on the calm Caribbean. We swim mostly at low tide. We meet people we see again and again.
In a country filled with resorts emphasising tourist convenience and the hunt for tourist dollars (I'm looking at you Ixtapa, Huatulco, Puerto Vallarta), the Costa Chica is a mix of risk and reward well worth making.
From Mexico City, fly to Puerto Escondido or Huatulco, then hire a car to drive to the Costa Chica region.
Read more: http://www.theage.com.au/travel/the-ocean-set-20120614-20cej.html#ixzz1xubgDvsz
[HuatulcoParadise.net] Tropical Storm Carlotta
[HuatulcoP aradise.ne t] Tropical Storm Carlotta
Inbox
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Inbox
5:26 PM (4 minutes ago)
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We are having quite a bit of rain, but the wind isn't that bad. Around 17:00 hrs I reckon we had the worst of it (the wind), with pretty strong gusts. Nothing extreme however.
Electricity, internet, satelite-tv, it's all working up to now....
By the looks of it the center just past Puerto Angel portside and it's following the coast line.
Roberto
--- In huatulco@yahoogroups.com, "hurricanedivers" wrote:
>
> We have a tropical storm in the Gulf of Tehuantepec, heading in our general direction.
>
> This is from the National Hurricane Center:
>
> MAXIMUM SUSTAINED WINDS HAVE INCREASED TO NEAR 45 MPH...70 KM/H...
> WITH HIGHER GUSTS. ADDITIONAL STRENGTHENING IS FORECAST DURING THE
> NEXT 48 HOURS...AND CARLOTTA IS EXPECTED TO BECOME A HURRICANE BY
> THE TIME THE CENTER NEARS THE PACIFIC COAST OF MEXICO ON FRIDAY.
>
> It's predicted to make landfall close to Puerto Angel on Friday.
>
> Right now it's overcast and it looks like it's going to rain. No wind to speak of. I suspect we won't be able to go out the next few days....
>
> Roberto
>
Electricity, internet, satelite-tv, it's all working up to now....
By the looks of it the center just past Puerto Angel portside and it's following the coast line.
Roberto
--- In huatulco@yahoogroups.com, "hurricanedivers"
>
> We have a tropical storm in the Gulf of Tehuantepec, heading in our general direction.
>
> This is from the National Hurricane Center:
>
> MAXIMUM SUSTAINED WINDS HAVE INCREASED TO NEAR 45 MPH...70 KM/H...
> WITH HIGHER GUSTS. ADDITIONAL STRENGTHENING IS FORECAST DURING THE
> NEXT 48 HOURS...AND CARLOTTA IS EXPECTED TO BECOME A HURRICANE BY
> THE TIME THE CENTER NEARS THE PACIFIC COAST OF MEXICO ON FRIDAY.
>
> It's predicted to make landfall close to Puerto Angel on Friday.
>
> Right now it's overcast and it looks like it's going to rain. No wind to speak of. I suspect we won't be able to go out the next few days....
>
> Roberto
>
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