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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, December 2, 2018

zipolite Vimeo zipolite #hotelnoga.


zipolite


zipolite 

#hotelnoga.


ZIPOLITE from Fero on Vimeo.

1 December 2018 - 05:06 AM Analysis Mexico: AMLO's Swearing-In Ceremony and His Leftist Guest List

1 December 2018 - 05:06 AM
Mexico: AMLO's Swearing-In Ceremony and His Leftist Guest List
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Mexico’s President-Elect Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador will take over the government on Saturday, welcoming a diverse group of Latin American and world leaders for his inauguration ceremony while others remain at the G-20 Summit in Argentina.
Mexico
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Since the landslide victory of Lopez Obrador and the National Renewal Movement (Morena) in the July 1 elections, Latin America has been attentive to the future president’s steps in a moment of history in which right-wing governments are taking over progressive regions. His victory represented hope for many in and out of the country, but Lopez Obrador has also suffered criticism from across the political spectrum.
His guest list also sparked controversy, as Lopez Obrador decided to distance himself from previous interventionist foreign policies and invited both left- and right-wing leaders from Latin America, including Venezuelan and Nicaraguan presidents Nicolas Maduro and Daniel Ortega, besides the regular variety of kings, presidents and ministers.
Maduro is already on Mexican territory, despite resistance from conservative sectors of society and the previous mainstream parties, including Mexico’s former foreign minister, Jorge Castañeda. One group even collected signatures to prevent his visit and sent it to the Venezuelan government. Others called for a protest, but without much response.
Sources from Morena have declared that Maduro is looking to organize a meeting with supporters in Mexico City after the ceremony, but no official declaration has yet been made.
When Lopez Obrador was declared victorious in the July 1 elections, Maduro greeted the future president and sent a message hoping for better relations between both Latin American countries.
“Let the broad avenues of sovereignty and friendship between our peoples be opened,” tweeted Maduro. “With him truth triumphs over lie and the hope for the Great Homeland is renewed.”
Conservative representatives protest Lopez Obrador's invitation to Nicolas Maduro: "Maduro, you're not welcome." The same group has also called the future president a dictator and compared him to Hugo Chavez. Mexico City. November 7, 2018. Photo | Reuters
The Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega, against whom groups also organized protests, canceled his visit to Mexico at the last moment.
Another controversial guest is Colombia's former FARC commander Rodrigo Londoño, better known as ‘Timochenko,’ now the political leader of the Common Alternative Revolutionary Force. Colombia’s peace tribunal recently authorized his exit from the country, as his mobility is formally restricted, and the news was received negatively from the same groups that rejected Maduro’s visit.
But just hours before his planned flight, Londoño announced he wouldn’t attend Lopez Obrador’s ceremony because his doctor advised him against it. “I have to take care of myself and I don’t have the money to bring a doctor with me,” he said.
Rodrigo Granda, also known as Ricardo Tellez and FARC’s de facto chancellor, will attend instead and remain in the country for meetings with members of the Workers’ Party (PT) of Mexico, which invited both former insurgents and forms part of Lopez Obrador’s coalition and other world representatives.
Detractors also stood against Timochenko’s visit, calling him a ‘terrorist’ despite the world-recognized peace efforts between the FARC and the Colombian government. Colombian President Ivan Duque is also expected to attend the ceremony.
Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel, Bolivia’s Evo Morales and North Korea’s President of the Presidium of the Supreme People’s Assembly Kim Yong-nam are also attending the ceremony, as well as renowned Cuban singer Silvio Rodriguez.
The right in Mexico argues that by inviting Ortega, Diaz-Canel, and Maduro, the government is legitimizing what they call “dictatorships” in Latin America.
Answering the criticism, Lopez Obrador declared that his ceremony would be open to all heads of state, regardless of their ideology, returning to Mexico’s traditional non-intervention policy.
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Meanwhile, U.S. President Donald Trump seems to be busy in Argentina, but his Vice-President Mike Pence, his senior adviser and daughter Ivanka Trump and the Secretary of Homeland Security Kirstjen Nielsen, who implemented the policy of separating migrant families, are already in Mexico.
Despite divergent perspectives on migration policies, Trump and Lopez Obrador have shown relatively friendly relations so far and have declared their willingness to cooperate.
Lopez Obrador's foreign policy might be a return to Mexico’s tradition, but he has also declared his focus will be the interior at the same time he promises a new integration approach with Latin America, based on the region’s shared culture and history.
“Mexico won’t be a lamp on the streets and obscurity at home,” said Lopez Obrador. “We will first take care of our house and then earn prestige abroad.”
His non-interventionist approach might also represent bad news for the Lima Group, formed by right-wing governments with the sole purpose of pressuring Venezuela, and Chilean President Sebastian Piñera has already expressed his concerns.
Earlier in November, Piñera said Lopez Obrador would distance from the Lima Group “because he will focus his human rights’ concerns on the human rights of Mexicans.”
Lopez Obrador will be sworn in at 11 a.m. local time, ending a political history dominated by the two right-wing mainstream parties.

Bus from Puerto Escondido airport to Pochulta/Mazunte? TripAdvisor We are coming from Mexico City to Mazunte but flights to Huatulco are twice the price, so thinking that flying into PE is a better option and only a little ...

Bus from Puerto Escondido airport to Pochulta/Mazunte?
We are coming from Mexico City to Mazunte but flights to Huatulco are twice the price, so thinking that flying into PE is a better option and only a little ...

Vancouver BC
What's this?
Destination Expert
for Vancouver
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1. Re: Bus from Puerto Escondido airport to Pochulta/Mazunte?
Tony, a taxi from outside of the airport will be more or less 500 Pesos. If you bus, you'll pay 150 Pesos from highway 200 to Mazunte. Take a taxi all the way.
Vancouver
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2. Re: Bus from Puerto Escondido airport to Pochulta/Mazunte?
Thanks. To clarify, you say a taxi all the way from PE Airport (picked up on the highway 200) to Mazunte will only be 150 pesos? That seems ridiculously cheap for an hour-long trip. Bus tickets on ADO are 70-110 Pesos a person . . . ..
Tonya
Vancouver BC
What's this?
Destination Expert
for Vancouver
Level  Contributor
 11,042 posts
 216 reviews
3. Re: Bus from Puerto Escondido airport to Pochulta/Mazunte?
Nope from PE airport will be approx 500 Pesos (understand that taxis inside the airport will be double of those outside the airport) The 150 Pesos is from the highway junction of main highway 200 and secondary highway 175 about 20 minutes from Mazunte. (or from Pochutla which is farther east than the junction) Might be worth looking at Google maps.
Toronto, Canada
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4. Re: Bus from Puerto Escondido airport to Pochulta/Mazunte?
Have you checked VivaAerobus for flights from MEX to Huatulco?
Vancouver
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5. Re: Bus from Puerto Escondido airport to Pochulta/Mazunte?
I did ... but my husband is a nervous flyer and friends who do that route fairly regularly suggested choosing a different airline.
Toronto, Canada
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6. Re: Bus from Puerto Escondido airport to Pochulta/Mazunte?
Well, I'm not sure what you are referring to, but they are a legitimate airline flying modern aircraft. You can get some amazingly low fares if you carefully navigate their website. I have flown several times with them so I can't imagine what your friends are talking about that they would make you nervous to fly with them.
Texas Gulf Coast...
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7. Re: Bus from Puerto Escondido airport to Pochulta/Mazunte?
I am here in Puerto Escondido now. It is probably a couple hundred yards from the small airport terminal building, down to the airport entrance on the highway where the (non-airport) taxis are lined up. There is a nice wide sidewalk, but certainly no shade.
I am planning on taking the ADO bus on Monday to Pochutla for the market as I would prefer a comfortable bus ride vs. a 4 door subcompact car (even for just an hour). Also I think you are going to find that the taxi rates have changed. I will try to ask a driver or 2 tomorrow.and post back.
¡Diviértanse!
Vancouver
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8. Re: Bus from Puerto Escondido airport to Pochulta/Mazunte?
That would be amazing, thank you! Obviously taxi is more convenient but we are not in a rush and the trip isn’t far.

Vancouver
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9. Re: Bus from Puerto Escondido airport to Pochulta/Mazunte?
Thanks @46jimbo. I am sure they are a legitimate airline; not a safety concern but more around service. No matter as we have already booked flights to PE.
Edited: 12:45 am, yesterday




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