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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

Monday, December 9, 2013

A Guide to Fruit in Mexico and How to Eat It DEC 9

A Guide to Fruit in Mexico and How to Eat It

Big papayas
Big papayas
High quality fruit piles high in the markets of Mexico. From the exotic pitthaya to the everyday orange, fruit here is fresh and cheap.
If you come from a northern country, like me, just try a banana. Tell me it isn’t the best banana you’ve ever had.
Bananas travel north to the U.S. from Mexico and Central America. They are picked green in order to survive the journey and they ripen on the way. So they aren’t nearly as good as when they are given time to ripen on the tree.
Or take the humble orange. The ones grown in Florida were bred to have that thick white skin. It makes them easier to ship. Sometimes the orange is so dry you almost have to choke it down.
Not here in Mexico. Oranges have thin skin and are juicy as hell. Most of the year I can get two bags of them for just a dollar or two – enough for a huge glass of juice every day for a week. Grapefruit too.
6 kilos of oranges costs about 1.60 USD
6 kilos of oranges costs about 1.60 USD
Don’t buy fruit in a supermarket. Sure, some things like bananas and pineapples will be good. But because most of the fruit on this list is seasonal or regional, for it to make the trip to a big-box supermarket like Wal-Mart, Garis, or Chedraui, it must be picked green as well.
Instead, seek out the mercado municipal (municipal market) anywhere in Mexico. You’ll see different fruit in different states, and each time you’ll see something you’ve never tried or even heard of before. If someone offers you a sample, take it!
Fruit in a Mexico City market
Fruit in a Mexico City market
You can get good fruit on the street too. Fruit trucks sell whatever is in season for great prices. Or sometimes people walk around selling it out of wheelbarrows.
Fruit on the street in Chiapas
Fruit on the street in Chiapas
Here are some of my favorites to get you started. This is not complete list. Every time I travel I find more. Please leave suggestions in the comments.
I refer to each fruit by its most commonly used name in Spanish, followed by the name in English (if I know what it is).

Pitthaya (dragon fruit)

Pitthaya is most commonly found in southern Mexico. In the north you might find it in a supermarket, but as I said, it probably won’t be any good.
A ripe pitthaya has a strong flavor and a texture like a kiwi. In Mexico I’ve always seen ones that were white inside, but in Guatemala they were purple and much better.
pitthaya inside
Pitthaya in Guatemala
They are easy to eat. Just cut it in half and spoon out the fruit.
Pitthaya
Pitthaya in Mexico

Rambutans / lychee / guayas

These three fruits all have a similar texture on the inside, though they look different on the outside. In central Mexico lychees are in season in late summer. In southern Mexico rambutans are especially prevalent in Chiapas, while guayas are all over the street in the Yucatan.
Rambutans are the red ones on the right
Rambutans are the red ones on the right
Lychee
Lychee
Guayas, or mamones in Honduras
Guayas, or mamones in Honduras
For all three, pierce the skin with a thumbnail. The skin is easy to pull back. Pop the whole fruit in your mouth and eat around the seed. Delicious.

Paterna (burburry)

Paterna, known as cushin in Mayan Guatemala and burberry in English, looks like a big pea pod. Inside is a cotton-candy coating on big black inedible seeds. It’s uniquely delicious and fun to eat.
Selling cushin on the street in Guatemala
Selling cushin on the street in Guatemala
It’s easier to find in Guatemala than in Mexico, though I have spotted it in out-of-the way places in Chiapas.

Guayaba (guava)

Maybe it’s because I’m from Michigan, but I never had a guayaba until moving to Mexico. At first glance it doesn’t seem as exotic as paterna or pitthaya.
Here in Mexico they are usually solid inside with an off-white, yellowish flesh. Outside they are yellow-green, sometimes with red spots. They have a light, very subtle, almost pungent flavor.
The consistency is quite soft except for hard, unchewable seeds that you are tempted to spit out, but there are far too many. So you have to gum it. But if you dig the taste then getting over the hard seeds is easy.
Where I live and in most other parts of Mexico they are small, the size of a golf ball.
These guayabas are making me hungry
These guayabas are making me hungry
But sometimes you can find big ones. Recently I also found pink guayabas, which I rarely see. Eating these variations might have made guayabas my favorite fruit in Mexico.
guayabas cut
Two varieties of guayaba

Tuna (prickly pear)

These grow atop the nopal cactus. You can eat the leaves of the cactus too – they must be cooked, either fried or grilled.
Nopal cactus with ripe tunas
Nopal cactus with ripe tunas
The fruit is sweet, but like the guayaba it has hard seeds that can’t be chewed.
tunas
Tunas (tuna the fish is called atun)
Tunas are easy to peel. Just cut into the skin and pull it back. Don’t let the big hard seeds put you off!

Xoconochtle

When you see a name like that, you know the fruit is native Mexican.
xoconochtle
Xoconochtle
Xoconochtle may look like a cross between the tuna and the guayaba, but it has a distinctly powerful, bitter flavor. That’s why it’s usually included in juice mixtures rather than eaten straight.

Capulines (chokecherry)

It looks like a miniature cherry, minus the curvy stem. But it has a flatter flavor, less sweet but not sour.
I’ve been told that capuline trees only grow in a few parts of the state of Mexico. They come into season in late summer and can be bought by Otomi ladies on the streets of Temoaya.
Capulines
Capulines
Eat them like a cherry – don’t bite into the pit.

Granada china (sweet granadilla)

It looks weird and has a mucus-like texture, but granada china is good. Really. I’m not kidding.
Granada china
Granada china
Just crack it open and go at it.
Granada china in a market
Granada china in a market

Granada (pomegranate)

Pomegranates are in season in late summer and early fall in central Mexico. They figure prominently in Chiles en Nogada, a big bell pepper stuffed with meat and fruit and covered in walnut sauce, parsley and pomegranate seeds. It’s easily one of the best meals in Mexico.
The pomegranate is well known, but I include it in this list for two reasons. First of all, it is crazy delicious and much cheaper in Mexico than anywhere else I’ve seen.
granada cut
Granada (pomegranate) – break it, don’t slice into it
Second, I think many people don’t know how to peel it. I didn’t for a long time.
First, cut off the top in a little circle. Then make shallow slices along the ridges of the fruit. The idea is to not cut into the red, fruit-covered seeds.
With the top off and slices along the ridges, you can pull the fruit apart and have some nice chunks to eat from. You can eat the white stuff, so don’t bother picking it off each seed. Just bite right in.

Plums, peaches, apricots, etc.

You can find all of these too, especially in late summer and early fall. Look out for ciruelos, golden plums, my favorite.
golden plums 1
Golden plums

Mango

Everyone knows the mango, but you don’t really know the mango until you have had a soft, juicy ripe one. And make sure you cut it correctly.
mango
How to cut a mango
Have you tried all of these fruits? Have you seen them in other countries? And what have I missed?
If you plan on traveling to Cancun or the Mayan Riviera, please click here. And thanks for reading.

LAS INGLES will play at the open mic this wednesday night at Live Lula Bar come check out our high voltage rock and roll review vol. 1.

LAS INGLES will play at the open mic this wednesday night at 

Live Lula Bar. 

Come check out our high voltage rock and roll review vol. 1.




Sunday, December 8, 2013

Guest Post from My Spanish Notes: Tortillera NOV 20

Guest Post from My Spanish Notes: Tortillera

This is a guest post from my friend Rodney who writes about learning real Spanish, especially Mexican Spanish. You can find links to his blogs at the bottom of this post.
As a language teacher, in general I think there are two ways to teach a language – the authentic way and any other way (for lack of a better term). The “other” way is used in the books I have to teach English with – lots of photos, sidebars, disorder and nonsense.
Another way was how I learned Spanish in school. We did endless drills of conjugating verbs. Sure, that’s important, but it won’t get you speaking.
On his blogs Rodney teaches it the authentic way. He just gives it to you straight.
I’ve learned a lot from his lessons, and here’s an interesting one he sent me for a guest post.
You never know where your Spanish will take you when you’re shooting the breeze with your compas (buddies), especially if you’re out chupando unas frias (drinking some cold ones).   Like talking about lesbians.
The word for lesbian in Spanish is lesbiana.  Pretty simple and easy to remember right?  But there are quite few words that are much more colorful and fun that you need to know about, so let’s get to it.
The first word we’re going to talk about is tortillera.  A tortillera is actually a woman who makes tortillas, but it’s also a way of referring to a lesbiana.
¿Eres tortillera?
Are you a lesbian?
Desde que soy tortillera veo la vida de otro modo
Since I’m a lesbian I see life another way
Lo sabemos que era tortilla
We knew she was a lesbian
Soy tortillera
I’m a lesbian
The word arepera also means lesbian, and for the record an arepera is woman who makes arepas.  While I’m positive everyone knows what a tortilla is, you may not know what an arepa is.  Click here to see one.  I can tell you from first-hand experience that they’re delicious.  You can equate them to gorditas in Mexico.
You most likely won’t hear the word arepera in Mexico.  You’ll need to keep this one in your back pocket for your Venezuelan and Colombian friends.  Arepa is also a way to refer the female anatomy in Colombia and Venezuela.
Esas viejas son areperas
Those broads are lesbians
Confieso que soy arepera
I confess that I’m a lesbian
Bollera is another term for lesbiana.  You’ll definitely hear it Spain, but I think it’s pretty well known everywhere.  By the way, bolla is a term that refers to the vagina.
¿Soy bollera y qué?
I’m a lesbian and what about it?
Machorra is the word you want when you talk about women who look and act like more like men than women.   We call them studs, dykes or bull dykes.  Think of it as the woman who is clearly the male of the relationship.
There are a couple of more terms that I’ll mention like torta and maricona, but here’s a great link if you want to learn even more words for lesbianas.
¿Como le dicen a las lesbianas en tu pais?  (What do you call lesbians in your country?)
That’s it for today!  Now you have more than enough words to spice up your conversations about lesbians.  And if you’re wondering whether or not these words are offensive.  Well, the answer is yes.  Or at the very least you should assume they are.  You know the drill, some words are not offensive to some and highly offensive to others, so you’ve been warned.  I suggest you talk to your Spanish speaking friends and get their advice.
Be sure to read about my upcoming post on relaciones lésbicas, how to talk about lesbian sex on my blog Swearing in (Mexican) Spanish.
Rodney Prince
rodney.spanish@gmail.com
I’m a Spanish language addict and author of the following blogs:
My Spanish Notes
No book Spanish, Just real Spanish I learn from real conversations
Swearing in (Mexican) Spanish
Explore all of the bad words (Mexican) Spanish has to offer
Helping You Learn Spanish
Making Spanish simple to help you transition from a Spanish student to a Spanish speaker

Photos from Araceli Diaz Gomez's post in Zipolite Back to Album



Photos from Araceli Diaz Gomez's post in Zipolite


Aloha Bar 2nd Aniversario Sabado 14 de Diciembre 2013


Alohaaaaa mi genteee! Are you ready for some party???
HELL YEAAAH!
Segundo Aniversario vamos con todo!
empezamos desde el viernes hasta domingo!! esto es para warriors! Habra muchas sorpresas!
U KNOW HOW WE DO!!
 — 


fiestaa the añooo!,es
the anooo fiestaa! (Translated by Bing)


Alohaaaaa mi genteee! Are you ready for some party??? HELL YEAAAH! Segundo Ani...See More



Tours Zipolite



Santa Fight - Gagstravaganza Day 8




Saturday, December 7, 2013

Chesterfield Time Christmas 1937 with Alice Faye




Guy Lombardo Christmas Tunes 1946





10 Websites Designed to Spare Your Travel Budget by paradise

New post on This Way To Paradise

10 Websites Designed to Spare Your Travel Budget

by paradise

Jetsetter

If you love to travel in the lap of luxury, Jetsetter is the service for you. This division of the fashion company Gilt Group offers limited-time-only deals on some of the world’s most upscale resorts. Sign up for their private sales, or browse the offerings on the website to see a selection of deep hotel discounts.

Travelzoo

Sick of spending hours searching for the hottest deals? Let Travelzoo take care of the dirty work. This online service collects the top 20 travel offers from across the web and sends them to your inbox every week. You can even sign up for a VIP list that gives you access to flight, hotel and package sales days before everyone else.

Trip Advisor

Though Trip Advisor offers plenty in the way of coupons and discounts, its real benefit goes beyond the actual money you’ll save on your American Express card. Thanks to its collection of reviews, you can uncover a property’s benefits and drawbacks before you put down a deposit. It’s a great way to avoid unpleasant surprises and ensure that you spend your cash on the right hotel.

Trip Alertz

Like Jetsetter, Trip Alertz is a flash-sale site with an eye for the deepest discounts. Not only will you find hard-to-believe flight and hotel deals on a regular basis, but you can also take part in weekly giveaways that might just land you a completely free vacation.

Airfare Watchdog

Frequent fliers, meet your new best friend. This popular online service tracks down hidden fares and limited-time discounts in nearly every global destination, so you can fly cheaply without having to do all the behind-the-scenes legwork. Plus, you can sign up for email alerts that let you know when your favorite routes are on sale.

Kayak

Kayak may seem like a run-of-the-mill fare aggregator, but its Kayak Explore section is a serious boon for travelers. Choose your departure city, departure month and estimated budget, and this map will show you where you can fly for how much. It’s ideal for travelers who have a set budget but are open to trip ideas.

Tablet

Interested in finding design-centric hotels for a fraction of the usual rates? Tablet Hotels has exactly what you need. This website concentrates on interesting, trendy and so-cool properties so that you can track down the hottest little spots from Denver to Dubai at the most amazing prices.

Hipmunk

Hipmunk takes flight searching to an entirely new level. Rather than simply spit out a selection of fares based on schedule and price, this service sorts your results according to the amount of agony you’re likely to endure. This organizational scheme takes several elements into consideration — for instance, flight duration, number of stops, length of layovers and price — and gives you the results that are ideal for both your budget and your general happiness.

paradise | December 6, 2013 at 8:50 am | URL: http://wp.me/p359Wl-Up

M O H, Mercado Organico de Huatulco


Zipolite Beach Billies Sabado 7 de Diciembre 10:30, Babel Cafe, Entrada Roca Blanca Zipolite


LIVELULA GOES ITALIAN!!!!!!!!!!!

LIVELULA GOES ITALIAN!!!!!!!!!!!

Wednesday 7-8 pm just before open mic special menu:
  • -Arancini
  • -Gnocchi
  • -Dessert
Fish or meat menu's available.
180 pesos. 
Pre-bookings available until Monday! 30 pesos booking fee included in the dinner price.

For bookings/reservations ...  go to Livelula, or ask Elisa in
Colibri 
 
SEE YOU THERE!!!!!!

NBA GLOBAL GAMES MÉXICO 2013 SPURS VS TRIQUIS

Barefoot Triqui Indian boys' team 

vs. San Antonio Spurs

Published on Friday, 6 December 2013 16:09 - Written by
A youth team of Triqui Indians from Oaxaca’s Academy of Indigenous Basketball won a tournament in Mexico earlier this year even though most of them elected not to wear shoes.
Later, they played a different team, the San Antonio Spurs, who also elected to go barefoot.
The lack of shoes may have thrown off the Spurs, since the Triqui boys defeated them 10-4.

Friday, December 6, 2013

Queen - Invincible Hope / The Call - feat Brian May / The Show Must Go On



Mazunte Oaxaca Adrian Shared con delfines 2013

Mazunte Oaxaca tortugas golfinas apareandose verano 2013

Adrian Shared en Hostal Doña Porfiria playa Mazunte Oaxaca 2013

playa mazunte

FATHER KNOWS BEST -- CHRISTMAS PROGRAM (12-24-53)








THE SAINT -- "CHRISTMAS EVE PROBLEMS" (12-24-50)









Unplugged Mateo Steady Mad, Babel Cafe, Viernes 6 de Diciembre 9:00pm, Bar Restaurante Pizzeria - - - Zipolite


Waves from Zipolite Oaxaca Mexico

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

Wanderlust | The Crowds Swell on Mexico's Pacific Coast New York Times (blog) Mexico's Puerto Escondido used to be a quiet fishing village known only to surfers for its legendary waves, but now a more cosmopolitan crowd is beginning to ...

Wanderlust | The Crowds Swell on Mexico's Pacific CoastNew York Times (blog)
Mexico's Puerto Escondido used to be a quiet fishing village known only to surfers for its legendary waves, but now a more cosmopolitan crowd is beginning to ...


Wanderlust | The Crowds Swell on Mexico’s Pacific Coast



  • On the Pacific Coast of Mexico, surfers ride the break at La Punta, a popular spot on the southernmost end of Puerto Escondido’s Playa Zicatela, which features some of the biggest waves in the world. Christopher Sturman
  • An open-air room at the new Hotel Escondido. Christopher Sturman
  • A lifeguard tower at La Punta. Christopher Sturman
  • One of Puerto Escondido’s many surfers, who come from all over the world. Christopher Sturman
  • Oysters on the beach at Playa Carrizalillo. Christopher Sturman
  • The cafe at Frutas y Verduras, a popular hostel near Playa Zicatela. Christopher Sturman
  • A pier overlooking Manialtepec Lagoon just outside of town. Christopher Sturman
  • Lihi Peretz, the French-born owner of Black Velvet Fish Taco & Beer. Christopher Sturman
Full Screen
Mexico’s Puerto Escondido used to be a quiet fishing village known only to surfers for its legendary waves, but now a more cosmopolitan crowd is beginning to discover this unspoiled stretch of perfectly pristine beach.
In Puerto Escondido, on Mexico’s Pacific Coast, the biggest waves fall on the shores of Playa Zicatela, a wide beach bordered by cliffs blanketed in emerald jungle. The summer storms build huge swells here, enticing surfers from all over the world to wake up at dawn to stake their claim in the ocean. During the peak surfing season in August, legends like Laird Hamilton and trust-fund kids from Australia and New Zealand hire Jet Skis to save them the trouble of paddling out to waves against the heavy current. Back on shore, a motley crew of girlfriends, hangers-on and amateur surf photographers, leaning on their tripods, drink beer and wait for the perfect shot. But this is about as much commotion as this sleepy Oaxacan fishing village gets.
Even though its name translates as “hidden port,” it would be wrong to refer to Puerto Escondido as a true “secret.” For the last five decades, surfers who call this area the “Mexican Pipeline” have been migrating here from Sydney, Maui and Santa Cruz, all places known for their champion-making waves. While just a few hundred miles up the Pacific Coast, resort-filled Acapulco draws cruise ships and package tours, Puerto Escondido has remained the hideaway for this low-key bohemian crowd — a mix of surfers, expats and locals, who eke out livings selling fish tacos or fresh juices on the beach, any excuse to never leave this stretch of coast that doesn’t look that much different than it did a half century ago.
Up until a few years ago, it wasn’t so easy to get here. Navigating the road, with its washed-out sections and hairpin turns around the Sierra Madre del Sur mountain range, not to mention the occasional road bandits waiting in the fringes to rob unassuming tourists, was quite arduous. There were also the battering hurricane seasons (hence the spectacular swells) and inadequate infrastructure (Oaxaca is the second-poorest state in Mexico), which didn’t make the area appealing to tourists even if they could get here.
An open-air room at the new Hotel Escondido.Christopher SturmanAn open-air room at the new Hotel Escondido.
Now, with daily flights from Mexico City, Puerto Escondido is drawing a wealthier crowd, including foreigners looking for an easier life as well as the country’s newly minted millionaires who have colonized the beach’s cliffs with their hulking vacation retreats. The Hotel Escondido, courtesy of Mexico City’s design-conscious Grupo Habita, just opened its doors. The cluster of smart-looking oceanfront palapas, complete with Daliesque cactus gardens, private saltwater plunge pools and iPod docks are a far cry from the area’s typical ramshackle guest cottages. But the hotel’s setting — tucked behind papaya groves with horses and oxen grazing nearby — gives it a rustic feeling.
Nearby, Bosco Sodi, a Mexican-born painter who is now based in Brooklyn, has built a modernist destination. With the Japanese architect Tadao Ando, he’s created Casa Wabi, a concrete and wood compound that serves as his local home and studio as well as an artist residency with an exhibition area and meditation spaces. (Not too far away in Playa Roca Blanca, another Mexican artist, Gabriel Orozco, has built his own dramatic retreat based on an observatory in Delhi.) The idea was to collaborate with Grupo Habita to develop the hotel next door and create a getaway with cultural importance, “like a Mexican Marfa,” says Sodi, 43, who had been coming to Puerto Escondido on camping trips with his family since he was a teenager. “I fell in love with the wild nature of this place. It’s changing, but not too fast, and at least this part of Mexico retains the old magic and energy it always had.”
Robin Cleaver, who was living in Palo Alto, Calif., was also lured by the rugged beauty of the area. In 1975, during a visit to his parents, who had retired to Guadalajara, he stumbled upon the region. “The coastal highway was just being built back then, and before that there were just the dirt roads used by local fishermen and coffee growers that lived around the fertile coastal plains.” After having spent several holidays in Puerto Escondido, Cleaver and his family decided to put down roots. Mexico was hovering on the brink of economic collapse, but Cleaver decided to buy property and build a hotel. His Hotel Santa Fe is a sprawling Spanish colonial estate surrounded by tropical gardens, overlooking the ocean. “There was nothing but thorn bushes on the beach when I got here, not even a road to Zicatela Beach. I built the damn road,” says Cleaver, who also owns a farm a few hours away, which supplies the hotel’s restaurant.
A pier overlooking Manialtepec Lagoon just outside of town.Christopher SturmanA pier overlooking Manialtepec Lagoon just outside of town.
This kind of do-it-yourself spirit among the expats, who wanted to find a way to stay permanently, has created a micro-tourist industry. “If it wasn’t for the driftwood we found washed up the beach by Hurricane Carlotta, you literally wouldn’t be sitting here,” says Vicky Cano, who runs Lychee, certainly the only Thai restaurant in the area. She moved here about five years ago from Argentina with her husband, Luciano Venini, a trained chef, with whom she is expecting her second child. One suspects that if they hadn’t cobbled together their restaurant from the storm’s flotsam, the couple would have figured out another business venture. And the French-born Lihi Peretz didn’t set out to open Black Velvet Fish Taco & Beer, Puerto Escondido’s most popular restaurant. She came here to surf the Mexican Pipeline, and then married a professional surfer named Celestino Diaz. After Diaz died unexpectedly a few years ago, she opened a restaurant. The place, decorated with kitschy seashell-studded lamps and mobiles, and a flat-screen TV that plays an endless loop of surf films, is filled with tourists and locals alike. Next year, Peretz plans to expand with branches in Oaxaca City and Mexico City.
“When I first came here, I thought my mother was completely out of her mind,” says Brett Radmin, who now runs a vacation rental agency with his mother, Nancye. She came here in 2009 from New York City to switch gears after running the Forgotten Woman, a national plus-size clothing chain. “But after 24 hours I caught the bug and decided to stay. There is something about this place, something that is hard to put into words.”
For José Galán, a fisherman who owns the local seafood shack Restaurant Y Mariscos in Playa Roca Blanca, the area’s appeal is quite simple. Galán, who has been living shirtless under the sun for so long that his skin looks like it’s been stained a deep mahogany, can chat about anything: fishing trivia, surfing wisdom, regional politics. “I’ve been out here for 17 years, fishing and running this restaurant, and the government never did anything to help us when times were bad,” Galán says. “But Puerto Escondido always provides, and even when the season is low and the customers aren’t here, you can get by on waking up to this every morning.”