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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

Saturday, May 25, 2013

El Sueno De Frida, San Agustinillo, Oaxaca - Local Business ...

El Sueno De Frida, San Agustinillo, Oaxaca - Local Business ...
El Sueno De Frida, San Agustinillo, Oaxaca. 14 likes · 0 talking about this · 3 checkins.
https://www.facebook.com/pages/El.../268858933147944



A Baseball Academy in a Talent-Poor Part of Mexico

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/05/26/sports/baseball/a-baseball-academy-in-a-talent-poor-part-of-mexico.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0


A Baseball Academy in a Talent-Poor Part of Mexico

Jennifer Kho for The New York Times
None of the academy's approximately 45 students come from Oaxaca.
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SAN BARTOLO COYOTEPEC, Mexico — In this tiny town just south of Oaxaca’s state capital, some of Mexico’s most talented young baseball players are taking their first real steps toward the big leagues.
Bats
Keep up with the latest news on The Times's baseball blog.

Major League Baseball

Yankees

Mets

Jennifer Kho for The New York Times
A baseball academy that opened in 2009 has seven fields, a weight room, trainers, dormitories and even custom local art.
Pitchers practice their motions step by step as a coach yells: “Uno! Dos! Tres! Cuatro!” Typical baseball sounds — bats hitting balls, balls hitting leather — compete with the drone of cicadas.
The billionaire Alfredo Harp Helú opened this baseball academy, La Academia de Béisbol Alfredo Harp Helú, in 2009, and the sparkling school has seven baseball fields, a weight room, trainers, dormitories, even custom-made artwork by local potters. Harp’s plan, in part, was to prepare Oaxacan boys for major league careers.
But this school in the heart of Oaxaca, bordered by cornfields and wilderness, is missing one glaring element: Oaxacans. Of the 45 or so students, none are from this mountainous, impoverished state.
Only two Oaxacans, Vinny Castilla and Geronimo Gil, had made it to the big leagues before the academy opened. Most of the teenage boys from this state have failed to meet the academy’s talent requirements.
“Yes, that’s why we put it here,” said Eduardo de la Cerda, the school’s director, while boys sprinted down the right-field line of a field behind him. “But they need to have certain qualities.”
Nearly two-thirds of the school’s athletes are from the northern states of Sinaloa and Sonora, baseball hotbeds that also account for 60 percent of the players in the Mexican League, the country’s primary professional circuit. In contrast, the league has only four Oaxacan players this season, less than 1 percent of the total. Oaxaca’s 3.8 million residents account for about 3 percent of the country’s population.
“Oaxaca never was a place for baseball,” said Castilla, a former third baseman who grew up in Oaxaca, the capital. “The schools never had baseball teams. If you wanted to play baseball, you had to go through a league outside of school.”
Castilla hit 320 home runs during a 15-plus-year career in the majors and works in the Colorado Rockies’ front office. Gil, who spent six years as a major league catcher, plays for Harp’s Mexico City team. Other Oaxacans tended to show little interest in their major league careers when they would return home during the off-season, Gil said.
The atmosphere here is far different from the one most of the academy’s boys grew up in. Ernesto Alonzo Cazarez Arias, for one, endured a 24-hour bus ride to go to the academy.
Cazarez, a 17-year-old left-hander from Sinaloa, hopes to pitch for his favorite team, the Boston Red Sox. He said he would have made sure Oaxacans knew about their state’s major league accomplishments if he had grown up here.
“I think people don’t see the things Vinny Castilla did and aren’t that interested,” said Cazarez, who has a long scar on his throwing elbow, a result of surgery that sidelined him for two years. “If I was from here, I’d see this and tell other people who he is. He did amazing things in the major leagues.”
The sprawling state of Oaxaca is known for its spiced chocolate, spectacular beaches and colorful Day of the Dead celebrations. With one of Mexico’s largest indigenous populations, Oaxaca’s populace is relatively short in stature, which has perhaps contributed to residents’ lack of success in baseball and other sports.
Harp, who made his fortune in 2001 when Citigroup bought his bank, Banamex, has single-handedly shoehorned baseball into the Oaxacan consciousness. He brought Oaxaca a professional team, the Guerreros, in 1996. The team won the Mexican League championship in 1998 and attracts about 12,000 fans a week to its downtown stadium.
He also owns Mexico City’s Diablos Rojos, the country’s most successful baseball team, and part of the San Diego Padres. Harp, whose cousin Carlos Slim Helú holds a minority stake in The New York Times Company, said that he attends about 50 baseball games a year. He said having the academy near his Oaxaca home allowed him to deal with the off-season more easily.
“I like to stay involved in baseball all year,” Harp, 69, said during an interview in the restored 400-year-old convent that houses his foundation’s office in downtown Oaxaca. “Out of season, I go to the academy.”
It may be impossible to overstate Harp’s enthusiasm for baseball. His stamp museum in the city of Oaxaca opened a baseball-related exhibition in May, with stamps borrowed from Peter O’Malley, also a Padres owner and a former Los Angeles Dodgers owner.
Harp’s face lit up as he recalled checking box scores in the newspaper each morning as a child and seeing Mickey Mantle and Sandy Koufax play in a Mexico City exhibition game in the 1960s. He rattled off names of his favorite players: Mantle, Joe Morgan and Josh Gibson, the Negro Leagues slugger who also played in Mexico.
The academy mixes Harp’s love of baseball and his affinity for Oaxaca. Its two-story building is decorated with the black pottery specific to this town. Agaves and cactuses dot the campus, or at least those parts not covered by baseball fields.
The school sends players primarily to Harp’s two Mexican teams and the Mexican League’s academy near Monterrey, but major league teams have taken note. One alumnus, Roberto Osuna, is a pitching prospect in the Toronto Blue Jays’ organization, and several others are training at major league academies in the Dominican Republic.
“I think what he has built there is the No. 1 academy in Latin America,” Omar Minaya, a senior vice president with the Padres, said of Harp. “Traditionally, Oaxaca has not been a hotbed of baseball activity. I think it’s going to improve the level of baseball kids play in Oaxaca.”
So far, however, that improvement has not translated into Oaxacan baseball success. Many blame the sport’s lack of television exposure for its failure to catch on in Mexico’s southern regions and nationally, as soccer has; others say Oaxaca’s youth leagues are not instilling enough of a work ethic in their players.
Oaxacan boys “can do it, but they need discipline,” said Guillermo Spindola, general manager of the Guerreros, whose only local player, Jaime Brena, is sometimes announced as El Oaxaqueño when he comes to bat.
The academy scouts about 2,000 players a year throughout Mexico, Harp said. It is rare for a boy to enroll without being recruited, but a handful of Oaxacans try out every year. None of them have ever gained a coveted spot, said de la Cerda, the academy’s director.
Students, who live in the dormitories and pay nothing, can choose to take high school classes in the afternoons. But most bet it all on baseball, splitting their time among the weight room, the baseball diamonds and the batting cages or bullpens.
The experience has been more fun than expected for José Orlando Garza, a 17-year-old pitcher from Monterrey who was recruited by an academy scout last year.
“Before, I practiced very little,” said Garza, a 6-foot-3 right-hander. “I was more about Facebook and going out with my friends. But now I’m very focused.”
Harp and the academy’s leaders dream of a day when Oaxaca produces talented baseball players, but they appear far from concerned.
“I knew it would be difficult to find players from Oaxaca who meet the requirements,” de la Cerda said. “But if that were the main reason for the academy, we would have put it in Sinaloa or Sonora.”

tour en ventanilla!!!

New Lasers 1st Show, tonight at 10pm, Grand Coulee Dam. It is a good Memorial Day at the the Dam tonight! :) ivan

Friday, May 24, 2013

Richy Pérez GómezZipolite Quien no conoce esta parte de Zipolite, realmente no conoce toda la playa...?




Quien no conoce esta parte de Zipolite, realmente no conoce toda la playa...?



https://fbcdn-sphotos-d-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-frc3/294976_570372536336224_462358560_n.jpg

Surfing for beginners in puerto escondido surfing Mexico surf ... Surfing for beginners in puerto escondido surfing Mexico surf holiday Mexico. www.globalsurfers.com/read_thread.cfm?ForumID...

Surfing for beginners in puerto escondido surfing Mexico surf ...
Surfing for beginners in puerto escondido surfing Mexico surf holiday Mexico.
www.globalsurfers.com/read_thread.cfm?ForumID...

Tropic Huatulco | Facebook Tropic Huatulco is from Santa Cruz Huatulco, Oaxaca, Mexico. Join Facebook to connect with Tropic Huatulco and others you may know. https://www.facebook.com/tropic.discothequehuatulco

Tropic Huatulco | Facebook
Tropic Huatulco is from Santa Cruz Huatulco, Oaxaca, Mexico. Join Facebook to connect with Tropic Huatulco and others you may know.
https://www.facebook.com/tropic.discothequehuatulco

Parienko Storms To First World Cup Win In Huatulco Race News Monday, 20 May 2013

Parienko Storms To First World Cup Win In Huatulco

Monday, 20 May 2013
Artem Parienko wins at HuatulcoArtem Parienko wins at Huatulco
(Photo: Larry Rosa / triathlon.org; click to enlarge)
Artem Parienko (RUS) threw down a monster run on Sunday in Huatulco to take a late lead in the run and win his first ITU World Cup.
"It's my first World Cup win, and it's a new experience for me. I'm very excited and happy," Parienko said. "The first two laps after the bike were not easy because of the size of the group. On the run I just gave everything I had and I won."
In a late surge, Parienko gunned for the leaders who were more than a minute ahead on the start of the run. But by the second run lap, the Russian had pulled even with Luciano Taccone (ARG), who had broken away on the bike behind France's Aurelien Raphael. Parienko smoked the final two laps for the win, followed closely by Taccone. While Raphael faded under the hot conditions, Mexico's own Irving Perez stormed ahead for bronze.
Raphael was at the helm from the start, driving the lead pack, who all entered T1 within 35 seconds of each other. The leaders then worked to build a distance over the chasers, which included some lone riders and small packs riding more than a minute back.
At the end of lap four, Raphael had broken away from the pack, tackling the scorching hills on his own and putting a distance of 30 seconds between himself and the competition. The pack fractured in lap 5, with Taccone and Italy's Luca Facchinetti staging their own breakaway from the main pack of 14 who had fallen to almost a minute back from Raphael.
As he continued to push the pace on the bike, Raphael's quick transition to the run gave him an edge of nearly a minute over Taccone in the final leg of the race. The main pack was close to two minutes back, having fallen off the pace with the full run still looming ahead.
"I tried to make a difference on the bike," Taccone said. "I know perhaps going with Raphael wasn't a good idea but I tried it for myself. I knew the others could come to me and I could run with them. I was confident of my running."
However, despite a strong lead, chasers Taccone and Parienko reeled in Raphael, cutting his advantage to just 14 seconds after two laps. In the third lap, Parienko surged ahead to take the lead, with Taccone keeping distance behind him. While the men have each finished 33rd in Huatulco in previous years and lined up in nearly identical positions on the start list on Sunday, it was Parienko who won out on Sunday.
The Russian took the top podium spot in two hours, 3 minutes, and 12 seconds. Taccone posted his highest ever ITU World Cup finish with silver 12 seconds later. Meanwhile, Perez held off a pair of Brazilians to take bronze in 2:03:44.

Results: ITU Triathlon World Cup: Huatulco, Mexico

Elite Men

1. Artem Parienko (RUS) 2:03:12
2. Luciano Taccone (ARG) 2:03:24
3. Irving Perez (MEX) 2:03:44
4. Bruno Matheus (BRA) 2:03:58
5. Danilo Pimentel (BRA) 2:04:18
6. Anton Ruanova (ESP) 2:04:21
7. Fabio Carvalho (BRA) 2:04:45
8. Gonzalo Raul Tellechea (ARG) 2:05:02
9. Sergio Sarmiento (MEX) 2:05:16
10. Ivan Rana (ESP) 2:05:34

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

2013 Huatulco World Cup - Elite Men's Highlights

2013 Huatulco World Cup - Elite Women's Highlights

Huatulco Mexico 2013 Vaca from brian hunt

Huatulco Mexico 2013 Vaca from brian hunt on Vimeo.

Parienko storms to first World Cup win in Huatulco By Erin Greene on 19/05/13 at 5:48 pm


Parienko storms to first World Cup win in Huatulco

By Erin Greene on 19/05/13 at 5:48 pm
Parienko storms to first World Cup win in Huatulco
Artem Parienko (RUS) threw down a monster run on Sunday in Huatulco to take a late lead in the run and win his first ITU World Cup.
“It’s my first World Cup win, and it’s a new experience for me. I’m very excited and happy,” Parienko said. “The first two laps after the bike were not easy because of the size of the group. On the run I just gave everything I had and I won.”
In a late surge, Parienko gunned for the leaders who were more than a minute ahead on the start of the run. But by the second run lap, the Russian had pulled even with Luciano Taccone (ARG), who had broken away on the bike behind France’s Aurelien Raphael. Parienko smoked the final two laps for the win, followed closely by Taccone. While Raphael faded under the hot conditions, Mexico’s own Irving Perez stormed ahead for bronze.
Raphael was at the helm from the start, driving the lead pack, who all entered T1 within 35 seconds of each other. The leaders then worked to build a distance over the chasers, which included some lone riders and small packs riding more than a minute back.
At the end of lap four, Raphael had broken away from the pack, tackling the scorching hills on his own and putting a distance of 30 seconds between himself and the competition. The pack fractured in lap 5, with Taccone and Italy’s Luca Facchinetti staging their own breakaway from the main pack of 14 who had fallen to almost a minute back from Raphael.
As he continued to push the pace on the bike, Raphael’s quick transition to the run gave him an edge of nearly a minute over Taccone in the final leg of the race. The main pack was close to two minutes back, having fallen off the pace with the full run still looming ahead.
“I tried to make a difference on the bike,” Taccone said. “I know perhaps going with Raphael wasn’t a good idea but I tried it for myself. I knew the others could come to me and I could run with them. I was confident of my running.”
However, despite a strong lead, chasers Taccone and Parienko reeled in Raphael, cutting his advantage to just 14 seconds after two laps. In the third lap, Parienko surged ahead to take the lead, with Taccone keeping distance behind him. While the men have each finished 33rd in Huatulco in previous years and lined up in nearly identical positions on the start list on Sunday, it was Parienko who won out on Sunday.
The Russian took the top podium spot in two hours, 3 minutes, and 12 seconds. Taccone posted his highest ever ITU World Cup finish with silver 12 seconds later. Meanwhile, Perez held off a pair of Brazilians to take bronze in 2:03:44.

Elite Men

1.Artem ParienkoRUSRU02:03:12
2.Luciano TacconeARGAR02:03:24
3.Irving PerezMEXMX02:03:44
4.Bruno MatheusBRABR02:03:58
5.Danilo PimentelBRABR02:04:18
6.Anton RuanovaESPES02:04:21
7.Fabio CarvalhoBRABR02:04:45
8.Gonzalo Raul TellecheaARGAR02:05:02
9.Sergio SarmientoMEXMX02:05:16
10.Ivan RanaESPES02:05:34
Find more details about this event - 2013 Huatulco ITU Triathlon World Cu

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Pool Party!!!! MEZCAL HOUSE. Zipolite, Oaxaca.

chava colombiana bailando en Zipolite Oaxaca

Ambient, Trance, Meditation Music & Gymnopodies (Piano, Panflute, Bain-Su

Temperature rising as 2013 ITU Triathlon World Cup heats up in Huatulco, Mexico Posted by By Gary Roethenbaugh at 17 May, at 13 : 20 PMPrint


Temperature rising as 2013 ITU Triathlon World Cup heats up in Huatulco, Mexico

Posted by By  at 17 May, at 13 : 20 PMPrint
Temperature rising as 2013 ITU Triathlon World Cup heats up in Huatulco, Mexico
ITU Triathlon World Cup action heats up with the third race of the international tri circuit landing in Huatulco, Mexico, this coming Sunday 19 May. This is the sixth year the tourist destination has been part of the World Cup calendar, and the scorching heat is part of the unique challenge facing athletes.
An ocean swim and a tough hill in the middle of the bike course and at the start of the run loop will test the field, which includes nine London Olympians.
With a total prize fund available this weekend of US$68,400 (equal for men & women), Hatulco is celebrating its sixth straight year on the World Cup calendar and is quickly becoming an athlete favourite thanks to its scenic but tough course.
Live text coverage from Huatulco will be available on race day at triathlon.org/live or via @triathlonlive on Twitter.
Course:
  • Swim – Two-lap, 1.5K swim in Santa Cruz bay, with a standing sprint beach start
  • Bike – Eight-lap, 40K bike leg through the centre of town, which is climbing most of the way including a major hill, and some technical turns
  • Run – Four-lap, 10K run with two hills in each lap
Schedule:
  • Elite Women – Sunday 19 May – 08:00 (UTC/GMT -5)
  • Elite Men – Sunday 19 May – 10:45 (UTC/GMT -5)

Joanna Brown fights to finish fifth at the Huatulco World Cup May 19, 2013 By Triathlon Canada


Joanna Brown fights to finish fifth at the Huatulco World Cup

Artem Parienko (RUS), Luciano Taccone (ARG) and Irving Perez (Mex), pose for photograph post race at the 2013 Huatulco ITU Triathlon World Cup in Huatulco, Mexico on May 19th 2013 Photo by Larry Rosa/ITU/Triathlon.org2013 Huatulco ITU Triathlon World Cup - women on the bike - Canada's Joanna Brown (rear right) Photo by Larry Rosa/ITU/Triathlon.org2013 Huatulco ITU Triathlon World Cup - Women's Podium Photo by Larry Rosa/ITU/Triathlon.org
Photo by Larry Rosa/ITU/Triathlon.org

One month removed from posting a career-best 18th on the World Triathlon Series, the 20-year-old rising star in the Canadian triathlon circles was at it again on Sunday, chalking up her best World Cup finish with a time of two hours, 18 minutes, 13 seconds (2:18:13).
“I didn’t feel great, or even good, at any point today and I had to constantly push through my discomfort and do my best,” said Brown, who has been sick for most of the week, but started feeling better on the weekend. “I may have needed a few more days to recover, but I tried to push it (feeling sick) to the back of my mind. I did well tactically and was proud to get a lead on the pack going into transition two.”
Brown, of Carp, Ont., battled through extreme heat after a solid 1.5-kilometre swim to bridge the gap on the lead pack after two of eight laps on the 40-kilometre bike course which featured a major climb. Hard work on the bike combined with staying mentally tough during the 10-kilometre run, were key factors to the young Canuck’s fifth-place result.
“I can’t say that I was really happy with my race. There are always going to be frustrating races, and things that I cannot control, but I think that is part of growing as an athlete - accepting that you are not going to feel your best going into every race,” said Brown. “I am so proud of my Canadian teammates for pushing through the conditions today, and Coach Craig Taylor deserves a big thank you for delivering me to the start line calm and prepared.”
Brazil’s Pamela Oliveira took the race into her own hands once the gun sounded for the ocean water beach start. Oliveira led out of the water and battled to pull away from the pack all day to clock a winning time of 2:16:10. Austria’s Lisa Perterer was the next best woman in second spot at 2:16:48, while Yuliya Yelistratova, of the Ukraine, hung on for the bronze medal with a time of 2:16:57.
Dominika Jamnicky, of Port Hope, Ont., was the only other Canadian woman on the start line, and finished 13th at 2:28:50.
Competing in just her third World Cup race, and second year as a senior athlete, the determined Brown has enjoyed a steady climb towards racing as an elite. After winning the bronze medal at the Junior World Championships, Brown also celebrated a bronze medal at the Under-23 World Championships one year ago. The rising star in the sport ran to the international podium four times, including her first victory, during her rookie season as an elite athlete last year while competing in development level Pan American Cup races.
“I am slowly working my way up there, but I know it will be a constant climb that requires me to be patient, and learn from my mistakes and successes while trying to keep the whole picture in mind,” added Brown.  “I learn more about elite racing with every competition, and I’m not as intimidated. I belong on the start line with these women.”
Meanwhile, some of the top male triathletes cranked up the Mexican heat for an Olympic distance race of their own. Ranked number one heading into the event, Andrew Yorke, of Caledon, Ont., was the top Canadian male on the day in 12th spot after stopping the clock at 2:06:21. Alexander Hinton, of Kingston, Ont., placed 16th at 2:08:19.
Russia’s Artem Parienko put down a monster run to win his first World Cup race with a time of 2:03:12. Argentina’s Luciano Taccone clocked-in at 2:03:24 for the silver medal, while Mexico’s Irving Perez won the race for the bronze medal with a time of 2:03:44.
Three other Canadians also suited up. Taylor Reid, of Hamilton, Ont., finished 20th (2:10:10), while Calgary’s John Rasmussen finished 24th (2:13:43). Tyler Bredschneider did not finish.
Triathlon Canada is the governing body for triathlon in the country. Recognized as an Olympic medal sport since 2000 and has been added to the 2016 Paralympic program, Triathlon Canada’s mandate is to promote, foster, organize and develop the sport of triathlon, and its related disciplines, in Canada. For more information on Triathlon Canada, please visit us at www.triathloncanada.com.
Complete Results (1.5-kilometre swim, 40 kilometre bike, 10 kilometre run):www.triathlon.org
Top-Five Women’s Results:
1.  Pamela Oliveira, BRA, 2:16.10; 2. Lisa Perterer, AUT, 2:16:48; 3.  Yuliya Yelistratova, UKR, 2:16:57; 4. Claudia Rivas, MEX, 2:17:35; 5.  Joanna Brown, Carp, Ont., CAN, 2:18:13
Other Canadian Results:
13.  Dominika Jamnicky, Port Hope, Ont., 2:28:50.
Top-Five Men’s Results:
1.  Artem Parienko, RUS, 2:03:12; 2. Luciano Taccone, ARG, 2:03:24; 3.  Irving Perez, MEX, 2:03:44; 4. Bruno Mattheus, BRA, 2:03:58; 5. Danilo Primentel, BRA, 2:04:18
Canadian Results:
12.  Andrew Yorke, Caledon, Ont., 2:06:21; 16. Alexander Hinton, Kingston, Ont., 2:08:19; 20 Taylor Reid, Hamilton, Ont., 2:10:10; 24. John Rasmussen, Calgary, 2:13:43; DNF. Tyler Bredschneider