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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, September 7, 2013

Entries tagged with "webcam mexico"

Entries tagged with "webcam mexico"
Webcam Akumal - Mexico Live webcamera

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City: Akumal
Country: Mexico
Webcam Cabo San Lucas - Mexico Live webcamera

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City: Cabo San Lucas
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The Unspoiled Beauty of Huatulco Posted: 09/06/2013

Freelance journalist and author


The Unspoiled Beauty of Huatulco

Posted: 09/06/2013 11:54 am

It's hard to pronounce and lacks the cachet of Cabos or Cancun--but you might want to head to Huatulco this winter, a beach getaway with unspoiled beauty
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View of Conjeos Bay from under a Palapa
Huatulco is located on the Pacific coast of southwestern Mexico, about 500 miles from Mexico City in the state of Oaxaca. Although less well known to Americans, it has 9 bays, 36 sandy beaches, 22 miles of coastline and 330 days of sunshine. These make it a near-perfect, all-year destination for those who want to swim, relax and enjoy the outdoors in a relatively unspoiled setting.
The backstory
In the mid 1980s, Fonatur, Mexico's National Trust Fund for Tourism Development (whose other projects include have included more popular resorts like Cancun, Los Cabos and Ixtapa, all developed in the 70s) found this poor and sparsely populated area, relocated its Zapotec inhabitants to nearby Santa Maria Huatulco, and began building the infrastructure to attract foreign tourists and bolster the local economy.
Development proceeded slowly because of a confluence of factors, including the global economic downturn and the area's unique geography; it is nestled between the ocean and the foothills of the Sierra Madre del Sur Mountains. As a result, Huatulco is an oddity in terms of Mexican resort towns.
The town is so new that none of the existing structures (including the parish church) are more than 25 years old. The majority of tourists are from other areas of Mexico.
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The parrish church, Parroquia de Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe
With a population of about 20,000 (too few to be considered a city), it offers an eco-friendly alternative to other Mexican resort areas that critics characterize as overdeveloped.
Abundance of beaches and bays
With sparkling turquoise waters, the bays and beaches of Huatulco (also called Bahias de Huatulco) are the major lure. Nine scenic bays offer opportunities for swimming, boating, scuba diving, snorkeling, surfing, sailing and other water sports in protected areas off the Pacific Ocean. One of the local beaches, Playa Cacaluta, is especially well known because it served as the setting for the movie, Y Tu Mama Tambien.
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One of the bays surrounded by lush foliage
Eco-friendly emphasis
The water treatment plant in Huatulco was one of the first in Mexico to recycle sewage water, a prescient effort undertaken decades ago to preserve the purity of nearby waters. Well-paved roads afford easy access to the nearby international airport and large areas of Huatulco (estimated at 70 percent) have been set aside for preservation as "green zones."
Huatulco is the only resort area in Mexico with international Green Globe certification for sustainable tourism. There are no factories or industry and the mountains and lush jungle are filled with orchids. The area offers opportunities for hiking, horseback riding, riding four-wheel motorized ATVs, bird watching, photography, and river rafting.
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Plenty of places for hiking and exploring the outdoors
Archeological discoveries
The ruins at the 200-acre Copalita Eco-Archeological Park were unearthed in 1994 and opened to the public in 2010. The site once housed the city of Copalitlan more than 2,000 years ago. For about $9 per person, guests can take a guided visit through the park beside the mouth of the Copalita River.
Along the earthen walking paths carved out of the lush terrain are remains of an ancient temple, ball court, and civic plaza, predating the ruins of Chichen Itza. The protected area is filled with birds and wildlife, like iguanas and armadillos. It is better to visit during the dry season from November to May when it's less likely to be muddy.
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Copalita Eco-Archeological Park
Microclimates
The state of Oaxaca, about the size of Indiana, is considered number one in Mexico in terms of biodiversity. It is the only place where one can travel about 75 minutes from coral reef to cloud forest, says Alberto Espana Chavez, a tour guide with Amstar Tours Huatulco.
In addition to its striking waterfalls, the tiny town of Pluma Hidalgo, some 4,400 feet above sea level and only an hour away (16 miles away as the grow flies) is a center for the production of high-quality organic coffee. High in the cloud forest, its conditions are perfect for coffee cultivation and production: The tasty and aromatic beans are "blessed" by high altitude, proximity to moist ocean breezes, shade from tall trees, acid soil, pure water, bright sun, and an artisan tradition that has been preserved for hundreds of years.
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A coffee grower in Pluma Hidalgo
Fit for foodies
Located in the state of Oaxaca, famed for its nine moles (sauces), there are other specialties worth trying in Huatulco: quesillo (a soft farm cheese), tamales wrapped in banana leaves, tasajo (dried beef), tlayudas (pizza-like baked flatbreads topped with black bean puree), chorizo (sausage), and chapulines (fried grasshoppers topped with salt and lemon).
In this town with four traffic lights (and no Burger King) restaurant options are limited, however, because many of the hotels and resorts are all-inclusives. On the positive side, these dining venues showcase regional cuisine in addition to international menus. One excellent option for savoring the authentic tastes of Oaxacan cooking is El Sabor de Oaxacain the downtown La Crucecita area.
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An Oaxcan sampler at El Sabor de Oaxaca
Folk art traditions
With 16 different ethnic groups in Oaxaca, Huatulco has a rich heritage in terms of food, art, and culture. "We are colorful by genetics," says Chavez, the Amstar tour guide. Many of the downtown shops sell handmade alebrijes, brightly painted pieces of folk art. First made in Oaxaca, they are now collected and sold across the world. The whimsical animal figures are supposed to bring good luck.
Cotton is native to the area so colorful cotton goods, such as bedspreads, blouses, sundresses, scarves and popular men's shirts called guayaberas, are woven and stitched by hand. Operators at the textile shop, called Telares Oaxaquenos (in La Cruecita) still use large looms with foot pedals.
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Loom used to make cotton textiles
Choice of hotels and resorts
Huatulco has two beachfront hotel zones, Tangalunga and Conejos, with a variety of accommodations. Properties (43 are listed on Trip Advisor) range from budget to upscale. Huatulco also has an 18-hole golf course and two marinas for fishing and boating.
Sheraton built the first hotel in Huatulco in 1988; that property has been transformed into the luxury Barcelo Huatulco Beach. Only two years old, Secrets Huatulco Resort & Spa, an all-inclusive, all-adults property offers stunning waterfront views from every room and suite, and a choice of five restaurants. The resort received an AAA Four Diamond Award in 2013. Dreams Huatulco Resort & Spa is a family-friendly alternative with an Explorer's Club for kids.
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One of the three infinity pools at Secrets Huatulco
Spa-worthy spots
The spa at Secrets, a freestanding contemporary structure with incredible views overlooking the ocean, is among the most beautiful in Mexico. In addition to yoga classes, guests can use the sauna, steam, a traditional cave-like sweat house (called a temazcal), and ten treatment rooms. The hydrotherapy circuit overlooks the sandy shores of Conjeos Bay. Guests who aren't staying at the property can purchase a day pass for $65 to use the spa facilities.
For a more authentic and less expensive spa experience, the Zapotec Mud Baths are a cooperative where the local women at La Bocana bathe visitors in "lodo," a sand native to the area, which is said not only to leave your skin silky but also to have healing properties.
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Zapotec Mud Baths at La Bocana
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A vacationer at the Mud Baths (Photo: Susan Campbell)
Sense of safety
With concerns about terrorism and organized crime, travelers always worry about safety. The latest State Department travel warnings for Mexico excludes the entire state of Oaxaca, including Huatulco, from any of its advisories.
The Bottom Line on WA-TOOL-CO
Although Huatulco is delightful for much of the year, at certain times, it can be very hot or very muddy. Like much of Mexico, it's located in a seismically active area, so small to moderate earthquakes occur from time to time.
But if you are looking for a winter getaway with natural beauty, Huatulco, Mexico is almost perfect, especially in November when prices are lower, mosquitoes are dormant, hotel occupancy is sparse, and the vegetation is very green.
All Other Photo Credits: Jerome Levine
IF YOU GO
Getting to Huatulco usually requires a change of planes in Houston or Mexico City (about a 50-minute flight away). Apple Vacations is starting non-stop charters from Chicago in November 2013, Minneapolis in December 2013, and St. Louis in January 2014.
Irene S. Levine, PhD is an award-winning travel writer and member of the Society of American Travel Writers (SATW). You can follow her blog for travelers over 50 at More Time To Travel or on Twitter.

Babel cafe, Zipolite Beach Billies


Adventurez in Mexico - A Short Film- 2008-9

Friday, September 6, 2013

One Direction All Performance 2010 X Factor

Scuba Diving Huatulco

Tropical costeño pochutla - Aquel inmenso amor

Tropical costeño pochutla - Quiero ser

IVANs Zipolite Playlist

Firehouse - Good Acoustic [Full Album], La Real 958 - Lineas de fuego, Tony Bennett, Tony Bennett, Tony Bennett & Lady Gaga - The Lady Is a Tramp, Discretamente RAÚL ORNELAS, MOLINA ANICETO 27 GOLDEN HITS FOR DANCING encourage savanna tiger















https://www.facebook.com/radioo.pochutla/music

Mezcal Resto-Bar Playa Zipolite Beers Shots Food Music Lounge Pool Sport Bar Zipolite Oaxaca


Mexicans Partys 6 de septiembre, you can do to promote peace mudial? Go home and love your family. Pochutla


-Mile-







you can do to promote peace mudial?
Go home and love your family








Aritz Mexico Huatulco by Ed Temperley on Thursday 5th September, 2013



Aritz Aranburu’s first trip to Mexico this year proved something of a Huatulco hackfest, which means “the place where wood is adored” in the Mixteca language.
Sitting at number 20 in the world ranking it’s becoming increasing likely we’ll see this fireball on the Tour again next year.

Thursday, September 5, 2013

Mexico's city of dogs by Michelle Garcia @pistoleraprod September 4, 2013

Mexico's city of dogs

A portrait of ambitions and failures in Ciudad Juarez
Topics:
 
International
 
Mexico
 
Drugs
BY MICHELLE GARCIA AND IGNACIO ALVARADO ALVAREZ

PHOTOS: THE DOGS OF JUAREZ

In better times — and there were better times in Ciudad Juárez — even the mangiest street dog could count on kindness for its survival. Unwashed and unkempt, the streets were his home, the neighborhood his master. Scraps, the stray bone, a bowl of water — he got by.
Imagine, then, the upheaval that upended this imperfect but functioning system when a manageable 20,000 street dogs morphed into a teeming population of 200,000 mutts, German Shepherds, Labs, and the favored dog of city dwellers for years — the Poodle.
The bond between man and his best friend was corrupted. One man nailed a dog to his fence. A gang of 10 children lassoed a cat, hurling it up onto the street cables high above, leaving it to dangle there.
On the surface, this breakdown in the relationship between man and beast could be attributed to the brutal violence that tore at the social fabric in Ciudad Juárez between 2008 and 2011.
Often described in overly simplistic terms as a "drug war" among "drug cartels," the disaster that erupted in this city resulted in the deaths of an estimated 10,000 people, 100,000 abandoned houses and 2,000 businesses shuttered or destroyed in fires—within four years. But no single occurrence in this border city across from El Paso explains the roughly 700 dogs found dead on city streets every month, victims of hunger, car tires or execution. 
When the number of homicides dropped significantly — from an estimated 2,086 in 2011 to 751 in 2012 — many declared an end to Juárez's designation as the "murder capital of the world" and spoke of a city on the mend.
But to this day, the dogs still roam the streets. Their miserable bodies betray the lasting legacy of violence, their wretched lives warning that the human conditions — which ushered in the crisis and determined their sad fate — persist.

Dogs were often the first to arrive at the crime scene — slinking through the blood, slipping behind police tape. 

On the south side of Juárez, where cotton fields once bloomed, New Juárez, or Nuevo Juárez, as it is locally known, began to take root in the late 1990s. A vast development of cookie-cutter homes, it was lauded by government officials as a home-ownership project that factory workers could afford.
By 2002, construction was nearly complete on the subdivisions of Riberas del Bravo, further north, abutting the Rio Grande. The development became home to migrants from southern Mexico — "the disposable ones," as human-rights activist Gustavo de la Rosa calls them, "the ones whose deaths don't matter." The area is so poor, one sanitary official says, it hardly sends any garbage to the city landfill because anything of value is extracted and little is wasted.
During the worst moments of the violence, when the desert was littered with dead and mutilated human bodies, parts of New Juárez and Riberas del Bravo were all but lost to the dogs.
One summer day in 2010, five squads of anti-rabies canine units arrived. The men pulled out their dog-catching cables and, like the cowboys working on nearby ranches, lassoed the dogs. In one day, says Dr. Juan Jose Martínez, director of Centro Antirábico, or dog rescue, these urban cowboys captured 130 dogs from the streets of Riberas de Bravo.
Those very same dogs once symbolized home and humanity for the families of New Juárez and Riberas del Bravo, like the local children's paintings of faraway islands and flowers on the walls of the now gutted houses. Such small touches brought life to dreary conditions – 14,000 identical houses planted in neat rows across the desert, houses so small they could not accommodate a sofa in the living room, where nothing more than a double bed fit in the bedroom. These houses were suitable for individual workers, but were occupied by entire families.
More than just beloved pets, dogs served as protectors in Riberas de Bravo and New Juárez, where a two-income family typically lived on roughly ten dollars a day earned at factories in the city, and where violence raged on their doorstep.
Constructed under intense protest, Riberas del Bravo suffered from a lack of required government approval. Schools and services never caught up. It is an area born of a disregard for law.
"These type of things only produce disorder," the newly elected mayor, Jesús Alfredo Delgado, said at the time of the subdivision's inception. The waiting list for one school had nearly 1,000 names on it, according to news reports. Mothers protested. Kids stayed home. When the city became known for its astonishing death rate a decade later, roughly half the killings of people under 30 occurred in New Juárez.
Only the mutts knew for sure what happened. They were often the first to arrive at the crime scene — slinking around the blood, slipping behind police tape. They watched from sidewalks as the caravans carrying armed men rumbled past. Rottweilers and poodles alike were found standing guard outside the carcasses of torched homes, defending the remains.
Before long, nearly a quarter of the population — some 250,000 people — had fled. Houses emptied out seemingly overnight; entire blocks lay quiet. Meanwhile, every six months, the dogs produced a new brood, a new gang, and the dog population reached crisis levels. 

In a city where few human cases were even investigated and less than five percent of killings resulted in a conviction, animals weren’t considered a priority. 

But it wasn't just the killings that led to this exodus. The Great Recession in the U.S and competition from China dried up the demand for many goods, and with it went the factory jobs that had lured families north from Veracruz. With no work and no prospects, houses financed by the state would soon be lost. And with a situation so severe and ripe for political points, the governor of Veracruz launched a program to rescue families from the collapsing border city. And so it was that New Juárez was left to the dogs.
"People opted to abandon them, either inside the houses or opening the doors and set them loose," says Carolina Montelongo Ponce, director of the veterinarian hospital at a local university.
For months, rescuers arrived in Riberas and other neighborhoods to find dogs locked inside homes, behind fences, left to defend meager property. "They would leave someone in charge of going and giving the dog water and food," says Martínez. Eventually, the caregivers up and left. "We had many cases of dogs found inside houses, dead or really skinny, or one dog would die and the others would eat him. It was horrible."
The entire world of dog maintenance began to collapse, pulled down by the destruction of the people in Ciudad Juárez. Pet adoptions dropped to zero. Sterilization campaigns ended after mobile clinics came under attack. Dr. Martínez remembers the time a group of men arrived at a mobile clinic, and shot their victim in front of other people and pets.
Veterinarians across the city became targets of kidnappings and extortions. After one clinic refused to hand over a payment to a criminal group, says Montelongo Ponce, armed men began firing and drenched the building — still filled with people and animals — with gasoline. Fortunately, for some inexplicable reason, the building did not ignite.
Volunteers and government workers persisted in their efforts to rein in the dogs. In a city where everyone was suspect, dog catchers arrived in neighborhoods where shootouts occurred, where tanks rolled through and whatever authority existed was viewed suspiciously. Martínez says every member of his team has encountered a pistol or knife while in pursuit of homeless animals.
It was in these years of upheaval, animal advocates say, that cases of abuse and mutilation began to appear. Mutts with legs severed clean suggested the work of criminal groups practicing human dismemberment. There was no way to know for sure. In this city with a conviction rate of less than five percent, few investigations in human cases produced results, much less with animals.

We speak for those who suffer in silence.

Outrage over both the abuse and the impunity exploited by the criminal and police class alike eventually coalesced around a scrappy dog named Canela (Cinnamon). Like most pets in Juárez, Canela was not confined to a yard. She was prancing around the sidewalk outside her home on a summer day in 2011 when a group of policemen walked by. She began to bark insistently. In front of everyone, an officer drew his .45 handgun and fired it straight into the dog's back.
Canela dragged herself under a pickup truck, without even a whimper, leaving a trail of blood. Local reporters called animal rescue but Canela had suffered significant internal damage; she died within hours.
In a city where public officials routinely characterized victims as criminals, the dog, for sure, was innocent. People protested, holding signs that read: "We speak for those who suffer in silence." An investigation was launched and the policeman who fired the shot was temporarily suspended.
It was as though Juárez had acknowledged that abuse of the weak had to end and that there was no better place to start with the weakest among them.
Around this time, Barbara Quintana, a college student, began rescuing dogs in her neighborhood. She says she shooed off some youths who had stuffed a puppy in a sack and used him like a ball. The big Labrador mix she found, apparently mutilated in a clandestine dogfight, was nursed back to health and named Rocky.
With a declining death toll that began last year, officials now deliver speeches about Juárez’s recovery. Businesspeople see a bright future for Mexico now that the cost of labor there is less than in China, according to a report by Bank of America Merrill Lynch released in April.
Still, the dogs wander the streets, vulnerable to man and city. In August, city workers reportedly collected 372 dead dogs from parks and streets across Juárez, victims of the road and the heat. Animal rescue began limiting dog catches to those reported by people. On Aug. 31, a shooter killed a man and his dog when he arrived at the veterinarian clinic. And general impunity continues unabated. According to an analysis of government statistics by Animal Politico, a Mexico City based investigative reporting news service, 98 percent of homicides committed in 2012 remain unsolved.
Dr. Martinez says the profile of the abandoned dog has changed too. Desperate owners now leave their pets at rescue centers. "A lot of people lost jobs, or their salaries are very low and they can't maintain their dogs," he says. "That is now the number one cause of abandonment."
Nevertheless, Juárez is looking to the future. The city now boasts yet another innovative fixture — an organic-waste system created to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. The municipal landfill was reorganized and outfitted with tubes and engines for extracting methane gas from organic waste.
Every day, a bulldozer opens a special pit next to the garbage heap before two pickup trucks equipped with metal cages arrive carrying dogs, mostly from Nuevo Juárez — roughly 80 each day.
On one morning, workers unloaded the carcasses of a puppy, a small white furry lapdog wearing a collar, a huge Saint Bernard, a Rottweiler and tossed them all into the hole. The methane from their decomposing bodies is siphoned through a network of pipes along with the other organic waste and cycled through an intricate network of motors and coolants and transformed into energy. The dead become energy to power the city’s street lamps.
But neighbors in Riberas del Bravo say that the street lamps rarely work, providing perfect cover for criminals. By day, lookouts record the license plate numbers of outsiders and circle the streets on patrol. Among the gutted houses, there’s no one left to report the little dog, its ribs laid bare, tossed on a mound at the end of a street named "Century 21."