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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, December 21, 2013

Winter Solstice 2013: December 21 is the shortest day Last Updated: Saturday, December 21, 2013, 09:55

Last Updated: Saturday, December 21, 2013, 09:5


Zee Media Bureau 
http://zeenews.india.com/news/space/winter-solstice-2013-december-21-is-the-shortest-day_898333.html
New Delhi: The official onset of winter has begun as the winter solstice this year falls on December 21 thereby making it the shortest day and the longest night of the year in the northern hemisphere. 

On a solstice the sun is at its greatest distance from the celestial equator. The solstice happens when the sun reaches a point where it will appear to shine farthest to the south of the equator, over the Tropic of Capricorn. 

The reason behind the occurrence of winter solstice is that the Earth does not spin upright, but on an axis 23.5 degrees from the vertical. 

In the southern hemisphere, the winter solstice occurs on June 21 or 22 when the sun is placed in the farthest north. 

In the northern hemisphere, the winter solstice marks the shortest day and the longest night, but the sun continues to rise later for some days afterwards. 


First Published: Saturday, December 21, 2013, 09:55

Winter Solstice 2013 Natal Chart Dec 21, 2013, Sat 12:11pm


Winter solstice 2013: Were you really waiting until now for winter? Winter solstice 2013: The sun is lowest, the night is longest, the (Northern Hemisphere) winter solstice is here, and so is winter. Unless, of course, you take your cues from the weather, and you're three weeks in already. By Mark Guarino, Staff writer DECEMBER 21, 2013

Winter solstice 2013: Were you really waiting until now for winter?

Winter solstice 2013: The sun is lowest, the night is longest, the (Northern Hemisphere) winter solstice is here, and so is winter. Unless, of course, you take your cues from the weather, and you're three weeks in already.

By , Staff writer  

  • Ognen Teofilovski/Reuters
    View Caption
Winter begins Saturday with the winter solstice. Or does it?
It depends on whom you ask.
Meteorological and astronomical winter seasons run along different time schedules. The former pegs winter as having been already under way; it started Dec. 1 and will run through Feb. 28. The latter defines winter as starting with the winter solstice, Saturday, Dec. 21 this year, and continuing through the vernal equinox on March 20.
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The difference is temperature: Meteorological winter is defined as the three coldest months of the year, December through February, during which theNational Weather Service does its official winter record-keeping. However, astronomical winter is more generally accepted by the public and is based on the position of the Earth in its orbit around the sun.
Astronomical winter watchers will note that the US will receive just 9 hours, 32 minutes of daylight Saturday, which occurs at 12:11 p.m. EST. The solstice, which this year occurs at 12:11 p.m. EST on Dec. 21, is not a fixed date; in 2015, it will take place Dec. 22.
Those in the north made weary by a succession of cold, dark days have reason for hope: The days will appear longer each day through June 20, the summer solstice, as the midday sun creeps higher above the horizon each day.
The solstice is derived from the Latin words “sol” (sun) and “sisto” (stop). With the approach of the winter solstice, the sun’s highest point in the sky every day sinks lower and lower toward the southern horizon. On Saturday the sun’s retreat halts, after which it will appear to start moving northward. The reverse will take place on June 21, when the day will be longest.
Another difference between both categories for winter is that the winter solstice is not necessarily the coldest day of the year, nor does it even fall in the coldest month of the season. According to the National Weather Service, there is a delay between the shortest day and the coldest average temperatures, especially for most of the mid- and high-latitude locations.
While most winter watchers may cheer for the longer days, no place will celebrate more than Stonehenge in England, which hosts an annual celebration of the date. Many believe the Neolithic monuments were built as an astronomical observatory used to track the sun’s movement.
This week, a $44 million visitor center opened its doors to provide visitors a virtual “Stonehenge experience” before entering the monument area, a UNESCO World Heritage site, by foot or via shuttle.
Of course, it’s notable that not every part of the globe will experience a shortened day Saturday. While the Northern Hemisphere will see the sun rise and fall in about 9 hours, the South Pole will receive more sunlight than any other location on Earth. There, temperatures are frigid, however: about -10 degrees Fahrenheit, according to the National Weather Service.

Friday, December 20, 2013

Lonely Christmas







All I want for Christmas is ...

Francesco Abundis AMIGOS VAMONOS EN SEMANA SANTA A ZIPOLITE, MANZUTE Y PUERTO ESCONDIDO, DEL 17 AL DOMINGO 20 DE ABRIL. APARTA TU LUGAR CON 300 PESOS. 3314579003 36414259 franciscoabundism@gmail.com https://www.facebook.com/events/652145638139537/?fref=ts FRIENDS LETS GO IN WEEK SANTA TO ZIPOLITE, MANZUTE AND PUERTO ESCONDIDO, FROM THE 17TH TO SUNDAY, APRIL 20. IT SEPARATES YOUR PLACE WITH 300 PESOS. :D 3314579003 36414259 franciscoabundism@gmail.com https://www.facebook.com/events/652145638139537/?fref=ts (Translated by Bing)

AMIGOS VAMONOS EN SEMANA SANTA A ZIPOLITE, MANZUTE Y PUERTO ESCONDIDO, DEL 17 AL DOMINGO 20 DE ABRIL. 

APARTA TU LUGAR CON 300 PESOS. 
3314579003 36414259 franciscoabundism@gmail.com

https://www.facebook.com/events/652145638139537/?fref=ts
FRIENDS LETS GO IN WEEK SANTA TO ZIPOLITE, MANZUTE AND PUERTO ESCONDIDO, FROM THE 17TH TO SUNDAY, APRIL 20.

IT SEPARATES YOUR PLACE WITH 300 PESOS. :D
3314579003 36414259 franciscoabundism@gmail.comhttps://www.facebook.com/events/652145638139537/?fref=ts(Translated by Bing)


Solstice Party, Sabado, 21-12-2013


All You Need Is Love ...


Psydeco Zipolite Entrada Libre


Gold - Shaymus Tribute

Puro Espiritu, 26 Diciembre 2013, Psychedelic Trance, DJ Nat.X Ginzu Yopra Nemesis!


Psydeco Zipolite Entrada Libre Sab 21 Diciembre 2013


Triqui, shoeless Mexican team, plays basketball exhibitions in LA

Triqui, shoeless Mexican team, plays basketball exhibitions in LA

Triqui kids basketball team, from the mountainous region of Oaxaca, Mexico, who have been called the "Barefoot Champions of the Mountain," are known throughout their native Mexico for playing basketball without shoes took on the local Top Flight boys team at the Pacific Boys Lodge in Woodland Hills, CA Wednesday, December 18, 2013. Before the game teams pose together for photos. (Photo by David Crane/Los Angeles Daily News) 
Triqui kids basketball team, from the mountainous region of Oaxaca, Mexico, who have been called the "Barefoot Champions of the Mountain," are known throughout their native Mexico for playing basketball without shoes took on the local Top Flight boys team at the Pacific Boys Lodge in Woodland Hills, CA Wednesday, December 18, 2013. The Triqui team defeated Top Flight 31-29. (Photo by David Crane/Los Angeles Daily News) 
WOODLAND HILLS >> The boys had arrived from their remote Mexican pueblos the day before and had gotten about four hours of sleep but the “barefoot champions of the mountains” had come to do what they love the most: play basketball.
And they didn’t disappoint. In their first visit to Los Angeles, the children from the indigenous Triqui region of Oaxaca played two thrilling exhibition games Wednesday against their U.S. counterparts in the Woodland Hills-based Top Flight community basketball club.
Although many members of the Triqui kids basketball team, which is famous in Mexico and other Latin countries, have received donated athletic shoes to participate in tournaments, they prefer to practice and often play barefoot to avoid ruining their shoes and because they have grown accustomed to training without them.
With several players shoeless and the electrified crowd chanting “Triqui, Triqui” and “Si, se puede!” a team of the Oaxacan boys ages 10 and 11 defeated a Top Flight team by a score of 31-29 in their first scrimmage at the Pacific Lodge Boys Home gymnasium.
“They come out here with no shoes and play their hearts out,” Top Flight player Derek Morhar of Calabasas said shortly after the game. “They’re really good.”
Morhar, a sixth-grader at Alice C. Stelle Middle School, said he learned from his Mexican counterparts, most of whom were significantly shorter than their opponents, how “to play with heart” since they fought again and again for control of the ball.
“If we got the rebound,” he said, “they would slap it out of our hands.”
But Morhar, who aspires to play college and pro basketball, said he also enjoyed hearing about life in their Mexican villages, how they are so poor they often eat just one meal a day and play basketball barefoot, which he found “really inspiring.”
Speaking his indigenous language, Triqui player Melquiades Ramirez de Jesus, 10, said through an interpreter before the game that they appreciated everyone coming out to see them play.
“For them, this is a way to get out (of the country) and they’re amazed by all the things that they have here because in their town, they don’t have them,” said Triqui coach Guillermo Merino Ramirez in Spanish. “For them, it’s a big deal to be here and a dream come true.”
The Triquis, who are on tour in the U.S. through Dec. 29, are one of many indigenous groups that inhabit the mountainous region of Oaxaca, where so many young men and adults have crossed the U.S. border to work that many of its communities are left mainly with children and seniors.
The Triqui kids basketball team is famous in Mexico for discipline and for fighting for what they want, said Gerardo Vasquez, president of the Federation of Oaxacan Communities and Indigenous Organizations in California, which sponsored the Mexican children’s trip to Los Angeles.
“Poverty doesn’t stop them,” he said in Spanish. “With or without shoes, they are always fighting to move forward. This is what inspires us.”
The kids, who won an international basketball championship in Argentina in October, will be playing additional exhibition games and attending a Lakers game during their visit. There will also be a large Christmas party in their honor at the federation’s headquarters downtown.
Top Flight player Mason Oppenheim, 12, who played the first game said it was “really tough” to play the boys from Mexico since they played very aggressively.
But “it felt really good to give them gifts,” he said, “because I know I’m really lucky to have all the things I have.”
The next match by the Triqui team is Friday 10 a.m. at Toberman Park, 1725 Toberman St., in the Pico-Union district, where they will play one match against adult members of the media and another against a team of young local immigrants.
On Saturday, they will play against teams affiliated with the Federation of Oaxacan Communities and Indigenous Organizations in California at 10 a.m. in Toberman Park. The second part of that tournament will take place at 10 a.m. on Dec. 28.

Wednesday, December 18, 2013

Festival de Circo en Mazunte del 22 de febrero al 2 de marzo del 2014




The Pacific Coast of Oaxaca


Mapa Posada del Arquitecto Ubicacion | Hoteles de Mazunte Oaxaca ... www.hotelesdemazunte.com



Mapa Posada del Arquitecto Ubicacion | Hoteles de Mazunte Oaxaca ...

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Mapa Posada del Arquitecto Ubicacion | Hoteles de Mazunte Oaxaca Mexico

Christmas Traditions in Mexico - Posadas and Nativity Scene Las Posadas and Nativity Scene - Mexican Christmas Traditions

Sunday, 15 December 2013  

http://tenekmaple.blogspot.com/2009/12/las-posadas-and-nativity-scene.html


Christmas Traditions in Mexico - Posadas and Nativity Scene

Las Posadas and Nativity Scene - Mexican Christmas Traditions

Mexican Nativity Scene - Nativity Scene Exhibition - Virreinato Museum in San Luis Potosi - Photo: Casa Las Margaritas
"Posadas", Nativity Scene and "Acostada del Niño Dios" are three of the Mexican Christmas traditions. There are also "Pastorelas", "Levantada del Niño Dios", "Día de Reyes" (Wise Men celebration) and "Día de La Candelaria" (Candle Mass Day).

Nativity Scene Exhibition Virreinato Museum in San Luis Potosi - Courtesy Casa Las Margaritas
Nativity Scene: Belén also called Nacimiento is set up usually on Dec 16th. It has representations of traditional Mexican scenes combined with scenes of how the artisans imagine was Bethlehem in the time when Jesus was born. The center of the Nacimiento are the figures of Joseph and Mary with Baby Jesus. Important part of a Nativity Scene are the Bethlehem Star, the 3 wise men (Los 3 Reyes Magos), the angel, a cow, a ox, shephers and the devil (diablo).

Posadas : is a 9 days celebration (Novenario de Las Posadas) that symbolizes the journey of Joseph and Mary to Belen and the problems they had to endure to find a place to stay (posada).

Mexican Nativity Scene - Nativity Scene Exhibition Virreinato Museum in San Luis Potosi - Photo:  Casa Las Margaritas 
 Posadas traditionally begin on Dec 16th when the Nativity Scene is set up in most of the houses in Mexico, and the last posada is on Dec. 24th. In a traditional Posada the Rosary is prayed and images of Joseph and Mary are taken on a pilgrimage by the "peregrinos" (pilgrims) carrying candles and "bengala" lights and singing the traditional songs looking for a place to stay where Jesus will be born.During the pilgrimage Joseph and Mary are rejected until they are finally allowed in a place where Jesus will be born. Traditional songs are song by the participants, a piñata with seven cones (that represent the seven capital sins) full of candies, oranges, mandarins and sugar cane pieces  is broken and bags with colaciones (special type of candy for posadas), cookies, oranges, mandarins, sugar cane pieces and peanuts (bolos) are given to all the attendants.
Posadas can be organized by families, friends, neighbors, churches, companies, etc. The following is the program of the Posadas organized by the Church in Barra de Navidad where everybody is welcome to participate.



Traditional Mexican Posadas in Barra de Navidad barrio "San Felipe de Jesus", Jalisco, Mexico

Poinsettia, Christmas flower, Cuitlaxochitl or Nochebuena is a  flower or Mexican Central American origin

Devil figure in Nativity Scene - Nativity Scene Exhibition Virreinato Museum in San Luis Potosi - Photo: Casa Las Margaritas 
Acostada del Niño Dios - On Dec. 24th it is also very common the celebration of "Acostada del NiñoDios" (bedding of Baby Jesus) where the image of Baby Jesus is put in the Nativity Scene on a special ceremony with prays and songs. The image of Baby Jesus is cleaned with perfume by the "godparents" (usually children are invited as Baby Jesus godparents), and putting to "sleep" with prays and songs.  The image of Baby Jesus is putting on a tray with candies and chocolates, the tray is passed to everyone to kiss Baby Jesus and take a candy from the tray. Then Baby Jesus is  put on the Nativity Scene usually until Candlemas day on February 2nd. when the "Levantada del Niño Dios" is celebrated.

Visiting Barra de Navidad? Stay at Casa Las Margaritas

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