Turtle egg trade is alive and well in Juchitán, OaxacaDespite a federal ban on their hunting, sale and consumption, the longstanding practice is still tolerated in the Isthmus city. Turtle eggs are bought and sold openly and without threat of prosecution. FULL STORY |
Budget, Backpackers, Surfers, Beach Lovers, Naturalist, Hippie, Sun and Sand worshipers, Off the Beaten Path Paradise! Everyone is welcome at Zipolite!
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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
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Wednesday, August 14, 2019
Turtle egg trade is alive and well in Juchitán, Oaxaca Despite a federal ban on their hunting, sale and consumption, the longstanding practice is still tolerated in the Isthmus city. Turtle eggs are bought and sold openly and without threat of prosecution. FULL STORY
Hiking the Huge Mountains of Mexico City: Izta-Popo National Park AUG 13 Posted by Ted Campbell
Hiking the Huge Mountains of Mexico City: Izta-Popo National Park
Posted by Ted Campbell
Unless you’re looking out of an airplane window, you might not even notice that Mexico City is surrounded by mountains, including the second and third highest in the entire country. You can see the green slopes and sometimes snow-capped peaks off in the distance when you finally escape the dense neighborhoods of the mega-metropolis.
At least ten national parks are within driving distance of the the city, meaning hiking trails, ziplines, ATM rentals, old ruined convents, waterfalls, caves, and expanses of pine forest. You might even get lucky and see animals like weasels, the tiny teporingo rabbit, white-tailed deer, long-tailed wood partridges, horned lizards, tarantulas, and rattlesnakes. Don’t be afraid of these last two–they’ll leave you alone if you leave them alone.
What you should make you cautious, however, are badly-marked trails and some safety issues, especially robberies. So if you want to go hiking near Mexico City, go in a group, stay on the most obvious trails, and come prepared with rain gear, layers of warm clothing, food, and lots of water. Also, choose a national park where you must pay an entrance fee and can park in an official parking lot, which will greatly reduce (if not eliminate) the possibility of criminals on the trail.
If the trail takes you high into the mountains, even better. For all these reasons, Itza-Popo National Park is probably the best for a day of hiking near Mexico City. I’ll write about other places in later posts, like the Cubres de Ajusco and Nevado de Toluca national parks.
You’ll need a car to get to there, or else pay for a long taxi or uber ride. Driving there is straightforward–just follow directions on Waze or Google Maps to the Paso de Cortés (Cortés’s Pass), where the park entrance is located. Get up early; the best light for photographs is in the morning, and rain is most likely in the afternoon, especially in summer.
Izta-Popo National Park
The two tallest mountains next to Mexico City, which are also the second and third highest in the country, are actually volcanos, one active and one long extinct. Active Popocatépetl has that classic cone with a wisp of smoke coming from the crater, while Iztaccíhuatl has a rocky, broken peak that gives few obvious clues to its volcanic origins.
Both of these pre-Hispanic names are quite a mouthful, so they’re usually abbreviated as Popo and Izta (pronounces EES-ta). They were revered as gods by the native Mexica, along with neighboring peak Tlaloc, named after the rain god.
In the Nahuatl language, Popocatépetl means “mountain that steams,” as it’s been active since ancient times. Iztaccíhuatl means “white woman”–like many mountains in the world, people have identified the features of a reclining body in its crags and cliffs.
Popo is off-limits to hiking because of regular activity; big eruptions happened most recently in 2000 and 2005, and it ejects long columns of smoke nearly every day. So the spot for hiking is on Izta, a long, arduous and high-altitude hike that’s only for the experienced and in good shape.
A less difficult hike is the Alpino trail, which follows the saddle between the two mountains. It begins at the parking lot at the entrance to the park and ends at La Joya, the name for the area that has the parking lot for the trail up Izta. Cars can take a winding dirt road to La Joya; the Alpino trail is roughly parallel to it but follows a higher ridge, with the road mostly out of sight.
Hiking Alpino takes about two hours each way, there and back, and has great views of both mountains. If you have enough time, you can continue up the trail to Itza for an hour or two for more great views and a taste of big-mountain experience.
When you arrive, first visit the park office to register and pay the 57-peso per-person fee. Then you can decide whether to start on the Alpino trail right there or continue driving to La Joya, where the hike up Itza begins.
The park office is located at the Paso de Cortés (Cortés’s Pass), named after the Spanish conquistador Hernán Cortés, who crossed it in 1519 after leaving Cholula, the nearby pre-Hispanic capital where he and his men had slaughtered between 5,000 and 6,000 people. Legend has it that, on the way, some of his men climbed Popo to collect sulfur for gunpowder for their canons and rifles. Then they descended into the Valley of Mexico to eventually conquer Tenochitlan, the island city that’s now the central part of Mexico City.
Yes, it’s a long story, and a fascinating one.
Today, a bumpy dirt road leads down the mountain slopes from the Paso de Cortes to Cholula, one of the most attractive towns in the area, with its yellow church built atop a massive, mostly unexcavated pyramid that resembles a hill. So, a nice two-day trip is an early morning hike in the national park, a twisty downhill drive to Cholula, and an evening and next morning exploring the town. You could also visit the city of Puebla right next to Cholula, making for a weekend of dramatic nature, pleasant towns, great food, and astounding history.
Mexican Women Use Sunlight Instead of Firewood or Gas to Cook Meals Inter Press Service Oaxaca is also one of the three Mexican states with the highest levels of energy poverty, which means households that spend more than 10 percent of ...
Mexican Women Use Sunlight Instead of Firewood or Gas to Cook Meals
Oaxaca is also one of the three Mexican states with the highest levels of energy poverty, which means households that spend more than 10 percent of ...
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Tuesday, August 13, 2019
Adriana Lopez Franco shared a post. House for rent in Zipolite, please share if you can 🙏🌺💗
Adriana Lopez Franco shared a post.
House for rent in Zipolite, please share if you can 🙏🌺💗
Hello friends, once again I am subrenting my cozy, quiet one bedroom house. It is available from September 1st to November 31st, for a minimum two month stay. This house has a great location, a few hundred meters from the beach and restaurants. It is also situated a hindred meters from public transportation to other beaches like Mazunte and Puerto angel, yet it is hidden behind nature in a quiet neighborhood. It is available for a minimum 2 month stay. The ideal tenant to this wonderful house enjoys quiet and nature. I will be happy to answer your questios through inbox. Pleasr share 🌺
Hola amigos! Una vez más subrento mi casita durante los meses de Septiembre, Octubre y Noviembre por un mínimo de dos meses. Maravillosa ubicación cerca de restaurantes, la playa y transporte público a las playas de los alrededores. Con gusto respondo a sus preguntas por mensaje privado.
Gracias por compartír! 🌺
Gracias por compartír! 🌺
Monday, August 12, 2019
2.º Encuentro De Pole Dance & Fitness Zipolite Oaxaca Facebook Fitness event in San Pedro Pochutla, Mexico by Encuentro Pole & Fitness on Friday, August 30 20195 posts in the discussion.
https://www.facebook.com/Encuentro-Pole-Fitness-321707472077679/?eid=ARDRzhVGjmc0HwHLGr2bvCnvk_l6ktO74drz6BBAV-XrJ3wdMppF3VONWRiCG2RBkAZWXNZ9BKs_dhtt
2.º Encuentro De Pole Dance & Fitness Zipolite Oaxaca
Fitness event in San Pedro Pochutla, Mexico by Encuentro Pole & Fitness on Friday, August 30 20195 posts in the discussion.
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Spiritual Healing - Relaxing Waterfalls
Spiritual Healing - Relaxing Waterfalls
Aborted landings up 84% due to heavy traffic at Mexico City airport Such incidents are still rare but the increase over last year seen as cause for concern Published on Monday, August 12, 2019
Aborted landings up 84% due to heavy traffic at Mexico City airport
Such incidents are still rare but the increase over last year seen as cause for concern
Published on Monday, August 12, 2019
Data obtained by the news agency Bloomberg through a freedom of information request shows that pilots of 541 planes were forced to perform go-arounds – as aborted landings are called – before they could touch down at the Benito Juárez International Airport between January and May.
Of that number, 83 were caused by the presence of aircraft that had not yet cleared the runways.
In the first five months of 2018, there were 357 go-arounds of which 45 were due to clogged runways.
Bloomberg reported that aborted landings are still rare in Mexico City but the increase to six out of every 1,000 landings between January and May compared to four in the same period last year is nevertheless cause for concern.
Go-arounds cost airlines both time and money because they force planes to use more fuel.
Richard Bloom, an aviation security professor at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, said that for every 1,000 landing attempts at a global level, between one and three will result in a go-around.
The increase in aborted landings in Mexico City should at the very least “lead to a review of the typical factors involved in go-arounds,” he said.
Gabriel Yee, flight operations manager for Aeroméxico, said that sudden changes in weather conditions have caused aborted landings in Mexico City in recent months.
However, he told Bloomberg that Mexico City airport doesn’t have a policy known as “minimum runway use” to get planes off the runway quickly, adding that “there’s no denying the airport has more operations than before.”
Passenger traffic grew 6.6% last year to 47.7 million people. The airport has two runways but they can’t be used simultaneously because they are too close together.
Yee pointed out that there is no short-term solution other than finding ways to make the airport “work more efficiently.”
To ease congestion at Mexico City airport, Latin America’s busiest airport, the federal government is pursuing a three-pronged plan – but relief is still some way off.
The Defense Secretariat has been given the responsibility of building a new airport at the Santa Lucía air force base in México state and the existing airports in Mexico City and Toluca will be upgraded. A third terminal will be built at the existing facility in the capital.
The Santa Lucía project, however, is currently mired due to legal opposition and even if it materializes, aviation experts doubt that it will be able to meet the growing demand for runway space caused by the rise of budget domestic airlines.
In that context, President López Obrador’s decision to cancel the previous government’s Texcoco airport project – after a legally questionable public consultation – becomes an even greater target for criticism.
Aviation experts at Mitre Corp.’s Center for Advanced Aviation System Development have questioned the viability of the Mexico City and Santa Lucía airports to operate simultaneously due to their proximity to each other.
Aeroméxico CEO Andres Conesa said that he had similar concerns.
“We haven’t seen the analysis,” he said. “We’d like to see the ability to increase operations in this dual system. We prefer to have one airport because we’re under a hub-and-spoke model.”
As for Toluca, the chances of success of the plan to increase traffic at that airport is dependent on cost, the CEO of budget airline Volaris told Bloomberg.
“We stopped operating out of Toluca because of what it cost us,” Enrique Beltranena said. “We need more clarity” about how much it would cost to return.
Source: Bloomberg (sp)
Zipolite MEX COLOR Zipolite, Oaxaca, Mexico Photo Gallery
The Authentic Market Experience - Pochutla by Huatulco Experience
The Authentic Market Experience - Pochutla
by Huatulco ExperiencePochutla is an important coastal town that is strategically located directly between Huatulco and Puerto Escondido approximately a 45 min drive from your hotel, and just outside the coastal town of Puerto Ángel, the main road to Puerto Escondio. Pochutla town therefore acts as an important town in terms of transport and commerce. Every Monday the local merchants and crafts people from all over the area set up shop on the streets selling everything from homemade handicrafts, to local foods, cheeses, corn products and everything else you can imagine. Join us on this adventurous day out where you will have a chance to try local delicacies and get to know the area as it was hundreds of years ago.
https://www.expedia-aarp.com/things-to-do/the-authentic-market-experience-pochutla.a794582.activity-details
Sunday, August 11, 2019
Saturday, August 10, 2019
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