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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

Thursday, September 10, 2015

Travelers are choosing airlines over buses Taking a plane is often cheaper than going by bus


Travelers are choosing airlines over buses

Taking a plane is often cheaper than going by bus

Travel by air continues to grow in Mexico at the expense of the bus lines, whose fares in many cases are higher than those of the airlines.
The number of people who have traveled by plane grew 68% in the past 10 years, a period during which bus passenger levels grew just 21%.Twenty years ago, just 0.9% of Mexicans traveled by air, a figure that has risen to 1.8%, according to estimates by the Secretariat of Communications and Transportation.
One reason why travelers are choosing air over ground travel is the fares. Bus tickets increased 21% in price between 2012 and 2015 but airline tickets rose by only 2.6% in the same period.
For example, a VivaAerobus ticket from Monterrey to Guadalajara, departing October 9, will cost 671 pesos (or US $40). Take the bus and the price is 850 pesos. An Interjet ticket for a Mexico City-Cancún flight can be purchased for 1,619 pesos but the trip with ADO will cost 2,160.
Reduced travel time when going by air is also a factor, and analyst Bernardo Vélez of Grupo Bursátil Mexicano, an investment and brokerage firm, sees potential for further growth for the airlines on bus routes that exceed five hours.
More Mexicans are discovering the advantages of air travel, according to the airlines, which estimate that during the past year 27% of their passengers — 877,480 people — were traveling by plane for the first time.
Source: El Financiero (sp)Another factor in the increased popularity of air travel is the growing middle class, says Vélez.
- See more at: http://mexiconewsdaily.com/news/travelers-are-choosing-airlines-over-buses/?utm_source=Mexico+News+Daily&utm_campaign=b848864fbc-September+8&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_f1536a3787-b848864fbc-348153685#sthash.UNsVtQFQ.dpuf



Inicia remozamiento del Zócalo de la Ciudad de Oaxaca Quadratin Oaxaca

Inicia remozamiento del Zócalo de la Ciudad de Oaxaca





wood carving & painting of alebrijes - Oaxaca, Mexico mycompasstv

wood carving & painting of alebrijes - Oaxaca, Mexico





Oaxaca - a video poem by Robert Rahula Robert Rahula

Oaxaca - a video poem by Robert Rahula





Frank n Al - Someday Alan Prudhoe

Frank n Al - Someday





Puerto Angel Rum Wins Two Gold Medals At 2015 International Spirits Review. PR Newswire (press release) Puerto Angel rum is the newest addition to the company's portfolio of ... at the distillery-owned plantation located in Oaxaca Mountains, Mexico. Unique ...

Puerto Angel Rum Wins Two Gold Medals At 2015 International Spirits Review.
Puerto Angel rum is the newest addition to the company's portfolio of ... at the distillery-owned plantation located in Oaxaca Mountains, Mexico. Unique ...

Puerto Angel Rum Wins Two Gold Medals At 2015 International Spirits Review.




ALPHARETTA, Ga.Sept. 9, 2015 /PRNewswire/ -- Double Eagle Imports Ltd is pleased to announce that both age expressions of itsPuerto Angel rum - Puerto Angel Blanco and Puerto Angel Amber - received the prestigious Gold Medals and "Exceptional" ratings at the International Review of Spirits hosted by the Beverage Testing Institute in June of 2015. The event is recognized as one of the most authoritative and influential annual spirits competitions in the United States for the last 20 years.
Puerto Angel rum is the newest addition to the company's portfolio of award-winning craft spirits brands including super premium tequilas Arrogante, Rudo and Tecnico.
"We are very excited that our Puerto Angel rum, which was first introduced to the US consumers only in summer of 2015, has already generated such critical acclaim from the industry experts and spirits competition judges," said Marina Wilson, President and Founder of Double Eagle Imports Ltd. "It is such a great honor to receive Gold Medals and 'Exceptional' ratings for both age expressions from such a respected institution. Considering that rum segment of distilled spirits industry is very competitive, to stand out among the numerous entries is a tribute to the hard work of the distillery's artisans who are committed to quality and craftsmanship."
Puerto Angel rum is handcrafted from the freshly pressed and naturally fermented juice of organic sugar cane that is cultivated at the distillery-owned plantation located in Oaxaca Mountains, Mexico. Unique combination of weather patterns, sun exposure, high altitudes and rich volcanic soils of this rugged, remote area results in the terroir-driven, exotic distillate that takes on a very soul ofOaxaca's untamed and breathtakingly beautiful nature.
The spirit is double distilled in small batches in traditional pot stills to ensure unique and complex flavor profile as well as exceptional smoothness.
Puerto Angel Blanco is aged for 6 months in American oak barrels, while Amber matures in wood for 3 years.  Puerto Angel is one of the very few rum brands that are honored by USDA Organic certification.
About Beverage Testing Institute
Founded in 1981 by a highly skilled group of judges, influencers and educators, the Beverage Testing Institute conducts the most objective, consistent, and widely respected distilled spirits evaluations in the United States. Industry members and millions of consumers use BTI's spirits reviews when making their buying decisions.
Finding the highest quality distilled spirits is the focus of the Beverage Testing Institute's annual International Review of Spirits. Their blind tastings provide an objective, third party affirmation of a spirit's quality and taste and communicates this to consumers and industry members.
About Double Eagle Imports Ltd.
Double Eagle Imports Ltd is a brand developer, importer and marketer of handcrafted alcoholic beverages. Established in 2006, the company is now widely recognized for its proven ability to create, grow and develop the finest, award-winning brands that answer consumer needs for the highest quality, authentic craft spirits produced by the small, independently owned distilleries.
Each of our products features unique production processes, exceptional artisanal quality, innovative packaging and original ingredients as well as a commitment to traditional techniques, environmental sustainability and social responsibility. 
Double Eagle Imports builds its success on the strong, long-term relationships with distributor partners and producers, allowing the company to build spirits brands that enjoy both longevity and strong consumer pull. For more information, please visitwww.deimports.com.
SOURCE Double Eagle Imports Ltd


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Wednesday, September 9, 2015

In Mexico, a history of struggle drives a dance of resistance by: DAVID BACON september 8 2015

In Mexico, a history of struggle drives a dance of resistance

dbacon3
The Spaniards conquered the Zapotecs of the central valleys of Oaxaca, Mexico, almost 500 years ago, in an earth-shattering series of events. It changed everything in the lives of the conquered. So many died that many indigenous peoples came close to disappearing; some estimates hold that the indigenous population of the Americas was reduced by 90 percent in the two centuries following the conquest. The population drop was so great that the Spaniards later had to bring slaves to labor in their plantations on the Costa Chica (Oaxaca's Pacific coast).
 
Such change and catastrophe, however, produced one of the world's most beautiful dances: The Dance of the Feather. Today, it is performed in a number of towns in central Oaxaca, among them the weaving village of Teotitlan del Valle. In one of life's ironies, the forced migration of the Zapotecs, driven from their homes by poverty and conquest, helped this commemorative dance survive.
The name of the city, Teotitlán, comes from Nahuatl and means "land of the gods". Its Zapotec name is Xaguixe, which means "at the foot of the mountain". It still retains its Zapotec culture and language. The dance is performed in the town plaza in front of the Preciosa Sangre de Cristo Church, begun in 1581 and completed in 1758. The church sits on the ruins of a Zapotec temple, which the Spanish destroyed.
The dance recalls the basic history of the conquest. At the time of the Spaniards' arrival, indigenous people had been living in Oaxaca's central valleys for 11,000 years. The first site of human habitation is not far from Teotitlan, in the Guilá Naquitz cave near the town of Mitla. The discovery of corncob fragments indicates that the world's first people to cultivate corn lived there.
People speaking Zapotec in Oaxaca's central valleys built towns with palaces, temples, ball courts and markets, coexisting and sometimes fighting with each other until 1457. That year the Aztec tlatoani, or ruler, Moctezuma invaded. First he conquered the towns inhabited by Mixtecs, then those of the Zapotecs. The Aztec invasion halted when Hernando Cortes arrived in the Yucatan, traveling up the coast of Tabasco in 1519. Cortes made alliances with the Aztecs' enemies and marched on Tenochtitlan, their capital, massacring thousands of indigenous people at Cholula on the way.
 
By then, the first Moctezuma was dead. The second Moctezuma let Cortes and his soldiers into the city. Moctezuma was then taken hostage and later murdered. The city's inhabitants rose up, forcing Cortes to flee, but they won only temporary respite. Cortes laid siege to Tenochtitlan and finally destroyed it, burying the huge temple pyramid under what is now Mexico City's main cathedral and central plaza, the Zocalo. Moctezuma's successor, Cuauhtemoc, was eventually captured and, with his death, the Aztec empire crumbled.
To form alliances against the Aztecs, Cortes needed a translator. First he found a priest who could speak Mayan, then a Nahuatl woman from the Gulf Coast who could translate between Mayan and Nahuatl, the language of the Aztecs and surrounding peoples. Malinalli, or Doña Marina, was one of 20 women given to the Spaniards by the residents of Tabasco. She became Cortes' lover and advisor, and bore Cortes' first son, Martin.
Malinalli became known as the Malinche, an object of hatred and veneration ever since. She is blamed for the defeat of the feathered warriors of Tenochtitlan and the end of purely indigenous civilization in Mexico. But she was also the mother of one of the first children borne of this enormous clash. The Oaxacan Jose Vasconcellos, secretary of education in Mexico's first post-Revolutionary government, called the mix a new race: la raza cosmica or "the cosmic race." He and his intellectual companions held that Mexico had people of mixed indigenous, African, and European ancestry, and was therefore moving beyond the boundaries of the old world.
 
While the union of Malinalli and Cortes gave birth to the mestizo, this did not free indigenous people, who were forced into conditions close to slavery. When Cortes died, Martin became Marquis of the Valley of Oaxaca. His lands included 23,000 people living in 11,500 square kilometers of territory. The Spaniards set up the encomienda system, huge land grants that included the indigenous population, forced into slavery to "pay" for room, board, and religious instruction.
Martin, so the legend goes, invented a dance to dramatize the conquest of indigenous people by the Spaniards. Jorge Hernandez Diaz, an anthropologist at the Benito Juarez Autonomous University of Oaxaca, writes that there are three theories of the origin of the dance. In one, Martin celebrated the birth of twins by staging a fight between dancers representing the conquering Spaniards (headed by Martin himself in the role of his father) and the defeated native people. The roles of the dancers in the Dance of the Feather today are still the same: Cortes, his captains and soldiers, Moctezuma and his allies. The personality of Malinalli was split into the roles of two people: Doña Marina and the Malinche.
A second version of the dance's history points to the existence of performances carried out before the conquest, which represented battles between different groups of the feathered warriors of the kingdoms of that period. Yet a third version reported by Hernandez "has a more symbolic, ancestral and astronomical role," which is also traced to the pre-conquest epoch. In this, Moctezuma represents the sun, while other dancers perform the role of planets.
 
"Independently of the historical origin of the dance," Hernandez explains, "its essence is renewed, adapted and given new meaning with the symbolism it has for the social group that takes ownership of it throughout its history, giving it new life." The dance is an important part of the celebration of the town's fiesta. "It is a tradition," he continues, "that can't be overlooked, given that it's part of its cultural, ceremonial and spiritual identity." Eighty-six percent of the town's residents aspire to become actors in this dance, he says.
Martin's intention was to use the dance justify his rule and to emphasize to indigenous people the uselessness of resistance. But after over 450 years, the dance no longer means what it once did. If anything, it represents a spirit of resistance to those forces that would deny Zapotecs their language, dance, music, and other cultural traditions. The Dance of the Feather is one element of a broader indigenous culture maintained through hundreds of years of colonization, followed by decades of official national policies denying their culture's autonomy and value.
 
Hernandez says, "The Dance of the Feather keeps its importance in communities that hold to the tradition, like Teotitlan del Valle, because it fulfills the function of reaffirming their cultural identity by recalling a glorious past, that is, of what the community was before the arrival of the Spanish, and what it continues to be in spite of them. The Dance prevents forgetting, because it recalls the struggle that native Zapotecs maintained with the Spanish to defend their territory, and from whom they inherited, according to the perception of the townspeople, only negative things."
In Teotitlan del Valle, the dance also highlights another contradiction. Fifty years ago, the town was very poor and much of the traditional weaving craft that had created part of its historical identity was no longer practiced. That poverty, reinforced by economic reforms and trade agreements that undermined Oaxaca's agricultural economy, forced many of the town's residents to leave. They became migrants, first within Mexico and then across the border into the United States. As remittances began arriving to support the families left behind, expatriates also provided money to buy materials for weaving. With the influx of tourists anxious to buy rugs in traditional Zapotec designs, weaving workshops were reestablished.
 
Migrants saved money to buy the materials for the elaborate clothing and headdresses needed for the Dance of the Feather. Some returned home to fulfill the three-year commitment required of those wanting to perform the dance.
 
Teotitlan has a complicated relationship with migration. The remittances helped to revitalize the town. The workshops now weave not just for tourists, but also for museums in the U.S. But how easy is it to keep a culture in an economy that still depends heavily on the willingness of people to leave home to seek work elsewhere? "This dance is also a strategy for defense against what they felt were negative influences of the modern world, against the consequences of migration, against the loss of moral values and customs," Hernandez emphasizes.
"Why do people make the commitment?" he asks. "These commitments have a religious and spiritual importance. [Benito Mendoza Mendoza, who played Moctezuma in 1977, says:] 'In some cases we do it because the Lord helped us overcome our food situation, when we had no money. Others do it because of their faith. And other people do it because they had a personal problem, or were sick and got better. Therefore, to give thanks to God that they were able to move forward they made the commitment. There are many reasons why people do it.'"
 
The Dance of the Feather in Teotitlan has had its ups and downs, according to Hernandez. "There have been long periods in which it wasn't performed, until someone takes the initiative to revive it. In different historical periods various situations have caused a break in the tradition. Modern social forces have played a paradoxical role, sometimes leading to changes in the dance. But at the same time, they've allowed it to survive, to be reproduced and to continue to exist." 
This article originally appeared in Contexts, a publication of the American Sociological Association.
Photo: Dancers perform the "Danza de la Pluma" or Dance of the Feather.  |  David Bacon

3 HOURS Study Music Alpha Waves: Relaxing Studying Music, Brain Power, Focus Concentration Music Spiritual Moment Spiritual Moment

3 HOURS Study Music Alpha Waves: Relaxing Studying Music, Brain Power, Focus Concentration Music




Mistake - Serial Joe (Official Music Video) UnidiscMusic UnidiscMusic

Mistake - Serial Joe (Official Music Video)




W!CKA *MASHUPS/BOOTLEGS AND MORE*

*MASHUPS/BOOTLEGS AND MORE*


Shawn Mendes - Stitches (Tyler & Ryan Cover) DirtyTAR

Shawn Mendes - Stitches (Tyler & Ryan Cover)





Tuesday, September 8, 2015

Zipolite Picture Of Posada Mexico Zipolite, Zipolite

http://rialnodesigns.com/tag/zipolite--picture-of-posada-mexico-zipolite,-zipolite


Zipolite Picture Of Posada Mexico Zipolite, Zipolite


Oaxaca Mio - La Guia perfecta para conocer Oaxaca
Zipolite Picture Of Posada Mexico Zipolite, Zipolite

RialnoDesigns, Zipolite Picture Of Posada Mexico Zipolite, Zipolite - Puerto angel, oaxaca - pacific coast mexico, Additional accommodations are available in zipolite to the west and pochutla to the north. rates are higher around christmas, easter, and in july and august.. Posada real puerto escondido - mexico vacation resorts, Posada real puerto escondido resort hotel is located on the beach in puerto escondido, mexico near zicatela beach and chacahua lagoon and manialtepec lagoon.. Hoteles de mazunte, zipolite, san agustinillo, puerto, Hoteles de puerto angel,san agustinillo, zipolite, mazunte y zonas cercanas..

Zipolite- Picture of Posada Mexico Zipolite, Zipolite
Zipolite- Picture of Posada Mexico Zipolite, Zipolite

Playa zipolite - wikipedia, free encyclopedia, Playa zipolite is a beach community located in san pedro pochutla municipality on the southern coast of oaxaca state in mexico between huatulco and puerto escondido..Playa zipolite - pacific coast mexico, The origin of the name zipolite, which is sometimes spelled sipolite or cipolite, is uncertain but may have come from the nahuatl word sipolitlan or zipotli, which.Zipolite travel guide - wikitravel, "zipolite" is growing backpacker beach destination along the south-western pacific coast of oaxaca, mexico. it is between the cities of puerto escondido to the north.Hotel posada buena vida zipolite en zipolite, reserva de, Hotel posada buena vida zipolite se localiza a la orilla del mar, ofrece prácticos servicios a 71 km de puerto escondido. sólo en bestday.com.mx el hotel posada.

Traveltalkonline.com Forums
Traveltalkonline.com Forums

Oaxaca, mexico hotel - posada real puerto escondido, On the serene shores of puerto escondido, a peaceful retreat awaits. posada real puerto escondido resort hotel is a sanctuary of tropical tranquility where guests.Puerto angel, oaxaca - pacific coast mexico, Additional accommodations are available in zipolite to the west and pochutla to the north. rates are higher around christmas, easter, and in july and august..

Playa Zipolite Exchange or Buy Excellent home safe and quiet. Plot 5 min. from the beach Classified ads For Sale in Zipolite Beach. I offer a low price: - Total land 450 m2 - 12x12 m2 Building - Material - crockery - wall ...

Playa Zipolite Exchange or Buy Excellent home safe and quiet. Plot 5 min. from the beach
For Sale in Zipolite Beach. I offer a low price: - Total land 450 m2 - 12x12 m2 Building - Material - crockery - wall ...

:) oaxaca Ryan Heenan

:) oaxaca





Demo reel Oaxaca - José Velasco José Velasco

Demo reel Oaxaca - José Velasco