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Budget, Backpackers, Surfers, Beach Lovers, Naturalist, Hippie, Sun and Sand worshipers, Off the Beaten Path Paradise! Everyone is welcome at Zipolite!
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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Help Gaby keep Firefly Cinema operating!
Show your support by going to this linkExigen mejorar servicio de telefonía e internet en la costa oaxaqueña Restauranteros, hoteleros y prestadores de servicios de Zipolite, gestionan en coordinación con la autoridad local, la intermediación del gobierno ... |
Ante las persistentes fallas de telefonía celular e internet que afectan a usuarios, piden ... Cabe referir que Zipolite no es el único lugar con fallas en la telefonía celular e internet, pues toda la Costa y en particular Pochutla, Tonameca y ... |
SAN PEDRO POCHUTLA, Oaxaca.- Faced with the persistent cell phone and internet failures that affect users and service providers, and given the growing tourist projection of Zipolite at the national and international level, local authorities manage with the intermediation of the state government, the immediate attention to the problem and improvement of the telephone network infrastructure before the Telmex company.
In the framework of the first Ordinary Session of the Tourism Advisory Council convened by the Secretariat of Tourism of the State of Oaxaca, and before representatives of the telephone company in Oaxaca, the Tourism Commissioner of San Pedro Pochutla, Luis Felipe García Arvea and president Zipolite's committee of service providers, Jair Flores, urged that the problem of solitary confinement and persistent deficiencies in internet and telephone service be resolved as soon as possible, and requested the installation of a fiber optic network in the area.
Destination with tourist projection, but without internet
Taking as a background various requests to Telmex from the Zipolite agent, Antonio García, which have not received a favorable response, and with a census of almost a hundred establishments affected by telephone and internet failures, the Secretary of Tourism, Juan Carlos Rivera Castellanos, pledged to help directly so that the requests are favorably addressed.
"Despite the projection of the destination at an international level and being in the intermediate connection between Mazunte and Huatulco, we do not have adequate infrastructure for a good service, or fiber optics, before which the secretary (Juan Carlos Rivera) He promised to intervene and follow up on the issue ”, explained the Tourism Commissioner.
It should be noted that Zipolite is not the only place with cell phone and internet failures, since the entire Coast and in particular Pochutla, Tonameca and Huatulco frequently suffer from the total absence of the signal for several hours, which affects thousands of users and businesses.
Equipment improvements and refolder
Luis Felipe García explained that before the request for the provision of equipment for lifeguards, the state official promised to manage an ATV and aquamoto to streamline the work of rescuers.
Likewise, authorities asked that Caminos y Aeropistas de Oaxaca (CAO) resume as soon as possible the work of re-folding the local Puerto Ángel-Zipolite-San Antonio highway, as it is a road that connects the main tourist destinations of the coastal strip that correspond to the municipalities of Pochutla and Tonameca.
Given the positioning of Zipolite as the most important nudist beach in Mexico, which is reflected in an accelerated media projection and in the visit of characters such as the undersecretary of health Hugo López Gatell, which has recently led to an intense exposure of this destination On the beach, the entity's Secretary of Tourism urged representatives of the local government to intensify prevention measures to avoid further infections of COVID-19.
Covid-19: From a beach in Mexico, nomadic dreams of return An actual lockdown was never implemented in Zipolite, but checkpoints were installed on either side of the village, and I was issued an ID that allowed ... |
Covid-19: From a beach in Mexico, nomadic dreams of return
Belen Fernandez
25 February 2021 13:29 UTC | Last update: 3 hours 28 mins ago
It's uncharming to whine about being trapped on a stretch of pristine Pacific coast while the rest of humanity dealt with the apocalypse
Many years ago at a Chinese restaurant in some city or another, I acquired a fortune cookie containing a fortune inscribed with the verb "to return". At the time, I was in the midst of a 17-year bout of mad itinerancy that had commenced in 2003, when I had abandoned the United States in favour of darting between countries and fleeing like the plague the notion that I might ever subscribe to a sedentary existence.
The fortune would eventually end up among the heap of belongings I deposited at a friend’s house in the southwestern Turkish city of Fethiye, which, appropriately, would become one of my regular stops as I transited the globe. Sorting through my possessions on each return trip, I’d come across the slip of paper, which provided the requisite amount of consistency to offset my continuous motion.
In 2020, the coronavirus plague put a stop to my returns - and to movement in general. I had travelled in March to the coastal village of Zipolite in the Mexican state of Oaxaca, where I was meant to spend 12 days before dashing off again. Nearly a year later, I’m still here.
An actual lockdown was never implemented in Zipolite, but checkpoints were installed on either side of the village, and I was issued an ID that allowed me to visit the nearby town of Pochutla once a week for groceries and banking.
As luck would have it, one of the checkpoints was placed directly in front of the apartment I had rented and was overseen by a rotating agglomeration of civilian volunteers, police and marines - whose predilection for stationing themselves and their armaments next to my front door resulted in a near-heart attack every time I opened it.
A smattering of incidents aside - such as when I was not permitted to enter my house without a face mask, impassioned appeals to logic notwithstanding - the checkpoint was, relatively speaking, hardly oppressive. I also had an ever-present crowd of people on hand to assist in the performance of domestic tasks, such as hot sauce jar-opening and wasp-slaying.
I could no longer run away from whatever it was I had spent the past two decades running away from - the idea of mortality itself, perhaps
And yet, claustrophobia quickly set in, the thick rope stretched across the road offering a constant reminder that I was more or less stuck. I could no longer run away from whatever it was I had spent the past two decades running away from - the idea of mortality itself, perhaps. Instead, I was suddenly confined to a place whose very name, Zipolite, is rumoured to mean playa de la muerte, or “beach of death”.
In an effort to create an illusion of movement - and to expel the djinn that had apparently taken up residence in my idle self - I ran in frantic circles around the football field, and paced up and down the beach. Attempts to focus on the physical beauty of my surroundings were futile, and my mind manically ricocheted between Beirut, Sarajevo, Addis Ababa, Dushanbe and all of my other destinations once upon a time.
I would wake up sobbing in the middle of the night about the most bizarrely trivial of memories: a staircase in Turkey, a room key in Isfahan, the highway sign for the Lebanese town of Barja that someone had amended to Barjalona.
Of course, it was decidedly uncharming to whine about being trapped on a stretch of pristine Pacific coast while the rest of humanity dealt with the apocalypse. Crying over Lebanese road signs became an even more questionable pastime on 4 August, when the Beirut port explosion devastated Lebanon’s capital city - as though the pandemic and economic self-combustion hadn’t already been devastating enough.
Lebanon, incidentally, also has a history of checkpoints, albeit of a far less benign nature than the one erected in front of my house in Zipolite. A defining feature of the national landscape, checkpoints notoriously played host to ID card-based sectarian killings during the civil war, which lasted from 1975 until 1990.
Nowadays, they function more as a veneer of security, competence and control on the part of the state, which continues to be dominated by parasitic sectarian civil warlords concerned only with the perpetuation of their stranglehold on power - and not, say, with preventing massive port explosions or allowing the Lebanese masses a chance to emerge from the socioeconomic misery in which they are trapped.
Indeed, a brutal boundary - a metaphorical checkpoint, if you will - separates the haves from the have-nots, as it does throughout the rest of this capitalism-ravaged planet. The pandemic has simply confirmed the sickness of the whole arrangement.
Just across Lebanon’s southern border, meanwhile, ubiquitous Israeli military checkpoints have long made life hell for Palestinians, whose rights and dignity they violate in every possible way, sometimes lethally - and all with the blessing of Israel’s partner in crime, the United States of America.
As I note in my forthcoming book Checkpoint Zipolite: Quarantine in a Small Place, Israel has “strived to perfect its repressive technologies and conquer global security industry and surveillance markets accordingly, and checkpoints have proven handy testing grounds (as has Gaza, where the ability to periodically slaughter thousands of Palestinians while suffering negligible casualties in return surely speaks to the efficacy of one’s armaments)”.
To be sure, if anyone knows about being trapped, it’s the residents of the Gaza Strip, otherwise known as the world’s “largest open-air prison”. And Covid-19 has only made things more asphyxiating for Palestinians in Gaza, whom Israel forcibly confines to overcrowded, unsanitary conditions while also denying them necessary medical supplies.
Palestinian refugees abroad, too, are well acquainted with the feeling of being stuck, many of them in squalid camps. Denied the right of return and condemned to seemingly perpetual limbo, they can only mentally inhabit villages and homes obliterated or stolen decades ago - passing along detailed memories of olive and citrus trees to ensuing generations, and, oftentimes, even their former housekeys.
From my obscenely privileged position of semi-limbo in Zipolite, I myself continue to conduct schizophrenic trips down my own memory lane, and to wonder if and when I’ll be returning anywhere. But as the coronavirus pandemic relentlessly exposes the ills of a global system predicated on inequality, war and ecological destruction, one thing is clear: a post-pandemic return to business as usual should be avoided like the plague.
The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Middle East Eye.
Marea Viva (Homestay), Zipolite (Mexico) Deals White Rock Zipolite is 1,200 feet from the family stay, while Camarones Beach is a 10-minute walk away. The nearest airport is Huatulco International ... |