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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

Sunday, October 21, 2012

Mexico Radio Stations North America » Mexico






1681 Radio Stations from Mexico

  1. FM 104.1
    Mexico City, Mexico
    Popularity: 23172
    16Kbps
    News Pop Top 40
  2. FM 101.7
    Mexico City, Mexico
    Popularity: 11496
    64Kbps
    Hits Pop
  3. AM 860
    Durango, Mexico
    Popularity: 8824
    24Kbps
    World
  4. FM 97.7
    Mexico City, Mexico
    Popularity: 8132
    32Kbps
    Latin Pop Rock
  5. AM 1190
    Ciudad Hidalgo, MC, Mexico
    Popularity: 7138
    56Kbps
    Mexican Grupera
  6. AM 890
    Zacatecas, Mexico
    Popularity: 5562
    64Kbps
    Pop Talk
  7. FM 91.3
    Mexico City, Mexico
    Popularity: 4858
    64Kbps
    Pop Rock
  8. FM 101.3
    Atlixco, PU, Mexico
    Popularity: 4830
    32Kbps
    Spanish Mexican
  9. FM 94.9
    Puebla, Mexico
    Popularity: 4621
    64Kbps
    70s 80s 90s Pop
  10. FM 106.5
    Mexico City, Mexico
    Popularity: 4370
    64Kbps
    80s 90s Pop
  11. FM 106.7
    Guadalajara, JA, Mexico
    Popularity: 4066
    32Kbps
    Mexican
  12. FM 98.7
    Guadalajara, JA, Mexico
    Popularity: 3836
    32Kbps
    Top 40
  13. Station: EXA FM
    FM 104.9
    Mexico City, Mexico
    Popularity: 3832
    64Kbps
    Pop
  14. AM 690
    Patzcuaro, MC, Mexico
    Popularity: 3428
    56Kbps
    Ranchera
  15. FM 92.7
    La Piedad, MC, Mexico
    Popularity: 2964
    24Kbps
    Mexican
  16. FM 100.9
    Mexico City, Mexico
    Popularity: 2914
    64Kbps
    Dance House Trance
  17. FM 100.3
    Mazatlan, SI, Mexico
    Popularity: 2828
    64Kbps
    World
  18. FM 103.5
    Guadalajara, JA, Mexico
    Popularity: 2766
    64Kbps
    Mexican
  19. FM 93.9
    León, GT, Mexico
    Popularity: 2654
    32Kbps
    Variety
  20. FM 107.3
    Mexico City, DF, Mexico
    Popularity: 1966
    64Kbps
    Adult Contemporary Mexican
  21. FM 92.3
    Guadalajara, JA, Mexico
    Popularity: 1956
    24Kbps
    Folk Mexican
  22. FM 92.1
    Mexico City, Mexico
    Popularity: 1826
    64Kbps
    70s 80s
  23. AM 1340
    Ciudad Serdan, PU, Mexico
    Popularity: 1808
    48Kbps
    Top 40
  24. FM 100.3
    Guadalajara, Mexico
    Popularity: 1696
    56Kbps
    Alternative Latin Rock
  25. AM 1420
    Tehuacán, PU, Mexico
    Popularity: 1656
    40Kbps
    Top 40
  26. FM 97.9
    Guadalajara, JA, Mexico
    Popularity: 1655
    64Kbps
    70s 80s Mexican
  27. AM 730
    Mexico City, Mexico
    Popularity: 1598
    128Kbps
    Sports
  28. FM 94.7
    Queretaro, QT, Mexico
    Popularity: 1550
    64Kbps
    Pop Talk
  29. FM 93.5
    Irapuato, GT, Mexico
    Popularity: 1550
    120Kbps
    Top 40 Mexican
  30. AM 770
    Apatzingan, MC, Mexico
    Popularity: 1509
    24Kbps
    Mexican
Mexico Radio Stations on your iPhone, iPad, iPod Touch, Android, Blackberry, and other app-enabled mobile phones. Get in touch via the Contact Us below if you're interested in these apps. Also, find the top new songs, playlists, and music on our website!
The United Mexican States, commonly known as Mexico, is a federal constitutional republic in North America. Covering almost 2 million square kilometres (over 760,000 sq mi), Mexico is the fifth-largest country in the Americas by total area and the 14th largest independent nation in the world. With an estimated population of 111 million, it is the 11th most populous country and the most populous Hispanophone country on earth. Mexico is a federation comprising thirty-one states and a Federal District, the capital city.
As a regional power, and since 1994 the first Latin American member of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), Mexico is firmly established as an upper middle-income country, and is considered a newly industrialized country and an emerging power. It has the 13th largest nominal GDP and the 11th largest by purchasing power parity. Mexico boasts a long tradition in the arts, renowned cuisine, and culture, as it ranks fifth in the world and first in the Americas with 29 UNESCO World Heritage Sites.

Radio Station from Huatulco ... La VOZ del Pacífico Sur




Relax on the beach, check out the shops at the Aldoquin, enjoy a spa day or participate in a yoga class at one of the 2 local studios. Zipolite provides something for everyone and is as relaxing as it gets along the Oaxacan coastline.


Puerto Angel, a Naked Beauty


Puerto Angel, a Naked Beauty

Reconciliation with the Sea Turtle


Reconciliation with the Sea Turtle

Saturday, October 20, 2012

Creed -Faceless Man - HD




Día de Muertos (Day Of The Dead): how to celebrate the dead in Mexico


Día de Muertos (Day Of The Dead): how to celebrate the dead in Mexico
LocationOaxaca, Mexico
Dates: 1–2 November
Level of participation: 3 – everyone’s invited to the party, even the dead
Mexico’s Carnivalesque remembrance of departed souls is one of the world’s most universally familiar festivals. Its papier-mâché skeletons and candy skulls are as recognisable as the jack-o’-lanterns at Halloween. Westerners find the Latino rave from beyond the grave, with its upbeat treatment of immortality, both fascinating and confronting.
In anticipation of the gloriously grisly event, stores and markets fill with miniature coffins, skulls and skeletons made of chocolate, marzipan, paper, cardboard or clay. Many of them are engaged in highly un-skeletonlike activities such as riding bicycles, playing music or getting married.
In a belief system inherited from the Aztecs, Mexicans believe their dead are lurking in Mictlan, a kind of spiritual waiting room, and they can return to their homes at this time of year. Families thus begin preparations to help the spirits find their way home and to make them welcome, starting with an arch made of bright-yellow marigolds – a symbolic doorway from the underworld. An altar is erected and piled high with offerings to the invisible visitors: flowers, ribbons, coloured candles, tamales (steam-cooked cornmeal dough), fruit and corn. Two important additions are a container of water, because the spirits arrive thirsty after their journey, and pan de muertos (bread of the dead). The loaf is made with egg yolks, fruits and tequila or mezcal, and is adorned with, or shaped as, a symbol of death.
The first day, Día de Angelitos (Day of the Little Angels), is dedicated to dead children, and the toys they once loved are placed on the altar.
The rituals are particularly important if the household has suffered a bereavement in the previous year. Women will spend all day cooking the favourite food of the dead relative for the customary feast, in which friends and family gather to toast the ghostly visitors.
The event climaxes with a visit to the cemetery. There might be a funfair en route, with neon-lit rides and stands selling crucifix waffles and cooked cactus snacks. Families will devote a day to cleaning the graves, decorating them with candles and flores del muerto (flowers of the dead), having picnics and dancing to mariachi bands. By now, the streets are full of papier-mâché skeletons, which are life-size but could never pass for the real thing in their dresses, jewellery, flowery boas and hats. A cigarette dangles jauntily from a white hand, a hoop earring hangs against a bare jawbone.
Again, such apparitions can be traced back to Aztec lore. The death god, Mictlantecutli, is often depicted with a skull-like face in pre-Hispanic artefacts. The skeletal street urchins became a major fixture in the late 19th century, when the great engraver José Guadalupe Posada used the occasion to satirise society and explore the theme of death as the ultimate leveller.
In his famous calaveras, skeletal figures cheerfully engage in everyday life, working, dancing, courting, drinking and riding horses into battle. One of his most enduring characters is La Calavera Catrina, a female skeleton in an elaborate low-cut dress and flamboyant flower-covered hat, suggestively revealing a bony leg and an ample bust that is all ribs and no cleavage.
The event is, like many aspects of post-colonial Mexico, a melange of influences. Its origins stretch back to the Aztec month of Miccailhuitontli, which was dedicated to deathly Mictlantecutli’s equally scary wife, Mictecacihuat. It originally fell around August, but the Christian conquistadors, hoping to assimilate the heathen holiday through their favoured tactic of culturalmestizaje (mixing), moved it to the day after All Saints’ Day.
Celebrations take place all over the country, but their heartland is southern Mexico, where indigenous culture is strongest. Mixquic, southeast of Mexico City, is known as ‘City of the Dead’ for its procession that calls at shrines to the deceased. A popular location is Oaxaca, where there are graveyard tours and a ‘best altar’ competition.
If you do find yourself in the north, head to Guanajuato, where salesmen dole out mummy candies outside the gruesome Museo de las Momias (Museum of Mummies). On Janitzio Island, Lake Pátzcuaro, the arrival of flower-covered, candlelit canoes begins a night-long vigil-come-party.
Although you have to work hard to reach small villages and organise accommodation there, it’s worth getting out of the main towns and cities to catch more traditional festivities.
Local attractions: Situated in rugged countryside, Oaxaca is a Spanish-built city of narrow streets.
More infowww.visitmexico.com
See a list of other festivals in November here.


Read more: http://www.lonelyplanet.com/mexico/oaxaca-state/oaxaca/travel-tips-and-articles/77490#ixzz29uPgHJWv