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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

Monday, May 25, 2020

My Futile Struggle for Stillness The New York Times ZIPOLITE, Mexico — When in mid-March “Quedate En Casa,” or “stay at home,” became the coronavirus rallying cry for the Spanish-speaking world, ...


My Futile Struggle for Stillness
ZIPOLITE, Mexico — When in mid-March “Quedate En Casa,” or “stay at home,” became the coronavirus rallying cry for the Spanish-speaking world, ...

    My Futile Struggle for Stillness
    I am isolating in a Mexican village, alternating between being impressed by my capacity for serenity and wanting to strangle myself for descending into triteness of Eat, Pray, Love proportions.
    By Belen Fernandez
    Ms. Fernandez is the author of “Exile: Rejecting America and Finding the World.”
    • May 24, 2020
    Credit...Cristóbal Schmal
    ZIPOLITE, Mexico — When in mid-March “Quedate En Casa,” or “stay at home,” became the coronavirus rallying cry for the Spanish-speaking world, I had just arrived from El Salvador to the village of Zipolite on the coast of southeastern Oaxaca State in Mexico.
    My plan was to continue on to Mexico City and then, over the course of the next couple of months, to Turkey, Spain, Greece, Lebanon and Madagascar.
    I left the United States upon graduating college in 2003, after the giddy launch of the war on Iraq had convinced me that America was not any place I needed to be. I began hitchhiking, inaugurating a habit of haphazard and frenetic international movement that would characterize the next 17 years.
    The itinerancy was, it seemed, because of a mix of acute commitment-phobia, an aspiration to omnipresence and a deep envy of people who possess more of a culture than our soul-crushing consumerism and military slaughter-fests.
    For someone with no fixed address, much less country of residence, “staying at home” was a novel and initially terrifying concept. A mandatory curfew was not imposed in Zipolite, but the local assembly voted to erect checkpoints around the village to restrict access and departures. With only a few thousand inhabitants, there were no reported coronavirus cases, but the nearby town of Pochutla was said to have between zero and three, while the number of conspiracy theories was infinite.
    I was issued an identity card permitting me to travel once a week to Pochutla for groceries. The Mexican police and Marines were deployed on the beach and ordered people indoors — a strategy that, mercifully, was never enormously effective.
    • Help us report in critical moments.
    I rented an apartment for an unspecified period and assumed I would careen straightaway into a claustrophobia-induced nervous breakdown. A coronavirus checkpoint materialized in front of my apartment, manned by cops and volunteers who would not let me step out of or, more curiously, into the house without a face mask. A thick rope was stretched across the road.
    Having been in constant motion for so long, being trapped indefinitely was quite the conundrum. I braced myself and lived in fear of whatever my mind was preparing to pull. I ran in circles around a soccer field and plotted what to do in the event of a real lockdown, which involved hiding in the woods by day and sneaking to the sea at night. In a recurring nightmare, I was deported to the United States — where I had vowed to never again set foot, partly in the interest of my own mental health.
    While my travels brought me into regular contact with the fallout of American atrocities from Honduras to Vietnam, a smattering of visits to the homeland confirmed that the United States was a monument to inequality and corporate excess.
    The pandemic has provided the United States another opportunity to shore up elite tyranny, persecute black people, deport migrants, eradicate the notion of health care as a right and carry on with other national pastimes that predated the plague of Donald Trump.
    Suddenly, then, “Quedate En Casa” sounded like a marvelous idea. Here in quarantined Zipolite, requisite human interaction has come in the form of Javier, a diminutive septuagenarian from the central Mexican city of Cuernavaca, who is also stuck in the village. He spends every evening in a plastic chair by the sea, smoking cigarettes, drinking mezcal, writing meticulously in a notebook, and — having recently discovered the internet — listening to Bach on his cellphone.
    On most nights I join him, and he recounts his activities of the day: Watering the plants on a small plot of land he owns and distributing mangoes to whomever he thinks might give him a smile in return. We commit to creating a better world after coronavirus and work diligently toward that goal by, you know, staring at the sea. I alternate between being impressed by my newfound capacity for stillness and simplicity and wanting to strangle myself for descending into triteness of Eat, Pray, Love proportions.
    I purchase two candles for my new home, some cleaning rags and a bucket for washing clothes, and feel like the most domesticated, settled person ever. I set about canceling all of my pending travel tickets. I watch Turkish telenovelas because when else will I have the time? I stumble across a quote from the Chinese philosopher Lao Tzu: “Be still. Stillness reveals the secrets of eternity,” and auto-strangulation appears imminent.
    Previously, I had preferred to view my peripatetic habits with the help of a quote from Bruce Chatwin’s In Patagonia, in which ethnographer Father Martin Gusinde describes the Indigenous Yaghans of Tierra del Fuego: “They resemble fidgety birds of passage, who feel happy and inwardly calm only when they are on the move.” Inner calm was never exactly my forte, but it was certainly a useful excuse for not sitting still and sorting my life out.
    The “birds of passage” approach also produced a scattered sense of self, as I scattered belongings across various geographical locations and endeavored to conduct parallel lives in different landscapes. Ostensibly, then, sweating in place in Zipolite and watching ants crawl across my stomach is the time to focus on being one person for a change.
    But the newness of sedentary existence gradually wears off, and my mind begins to fidget. I start missing countries, cities, and streets like they are people. By the time I complete my 20-minute morning trek down the beach, I’ve already transported myself back to Samarkand, Sarajevo, Tunis. I wonder what kind of person complains about riding out the apocalypse in paradise.
    At home I sob and convulse for no reason, or maybe for the world, or maybe for everything I have spent the past 17 years not dealing with. And while I still want to be simultaneously everywhere else, I also want to be still, in Zipolite, forever.
    I sit by the sea with Javier. He assures me that the world will change for the better after the pandemic, although he hasn’t yet devised a precise solution for climate change, capitalism or the disruptive machinations of my homeland.
    Of course, my current privilege of stillness — just like my privilege of relentless roaming — is thanks to a passport bestowed by the United States. And as the secrets of eternity remain elusive, it seems there are plenty of things to stop and think about.
    Belen Fernandez is the author of “Exile: Rejecting America and Finding the World,” and a contributing editor at Jacobin magazine.
    The Times is committed to publishing a diversity of letters to the editor. We’d like to hear what you think about this or any of our articles. Here are some tips. And here’s our email: letters@nytimes.com.
    Follow The New York Times Opinion section on FacebookTwitter (@NYTopinion) and Instagram.

    From <https://www.nytimes.com/2020/05/24/opinion/coronavirus-mexico-usa.html>  


Saturday, May 23, 2020

Diving in Huatulco, Hawksbill turtle feeding on the coral reef

Ajijic Reopened To Day 2020

Relax24 just uploaded a video








Led Zeppelin - Stairway to Heaven Live

Led Zeppelin - Stairway To Heaven FIRST TIME HEARING THIS!!🔥

In a scene from Indiana Jones, explorers are trapped by a snake in a cave Tales of an ancient caver: the obviously enraged snake put on a terrifying show By John Pint Published on Friday, May 22, 2020

Mexico Life
Experts suggest the creature may have been a feisty, nontoxic, Mexican bullsnake. Experts suggest the creature may have been a feisty, nontoxic, Mexican bullsnake.

In a scene from Indiana Jones, explorers are trapped by a snake in a cave

Tales of an ancient caver: the obviously enraged snake put on a terrifying show

Ever since I came to Mexico, people have been telling me about caves in their area. Strange as it may seem, the descriptions are always remarkably similar, although the caves, if we find any at all, may be completely unalike.
“This cave starts at a little hole over there by a guamúchil tree and goes straight through the whole mountain … ¡Sí, Señor! It comes right out the other side. But no one has ever gone all the way because as soon as you get 100 meters inside, your light is mysteriously blown out, even if it’s a flashlight! That’s what has stopped us from reaching the treasure … and then there are the snakes … No, you’d better not go into that hole!”
The snakes. Everyone supposes that caves are crawling with them, so I always make it a point to tell people that in 53 years of underground exploring, I’ve seen just about the same number of snakes in caves as treasure chests. But one day something happened that made me change my tune …
Not far from where I live there’s a steep hillside with a big black hole that looks, from a distance, like a railway tunnel. When we walked into that dark opening, we discovered something really curious: on the roof, all along the tunnel’s length, were nicely rounded holes, spaced about 11 meters apart. We found 74 of these “skylights” and were unable to explain their presence until we took two archaeologists inside and discovered our cave was not a cave at all, but a man-made underground aqueduct, commonly known by its Arabic name: qanat.
Some years ago I was visited by two cavers from the U.S.A. After taking Ray and Cindy to Tequila, I thought I would stop on the way back to quickly show my friends our mysterious qanat with its curious string of skylights.

One of 74 ceiling holes noted by surveyors of the qanat.
One of 74 ceiling holes noted by surveyors of the qanat.

After exploring the lower section of the qanat where, long ago, people used to come to collect water, we climbed up a steep hill of debris and down the other side.  The long dirt slope brought us into the main part of the system, a narrow passage about 10 meters high. As we had not planned to do any caving that day, we had only one proper flashlight among us, plus Ray’s feeble throwaway, which was emitting a hazy brown glow.
“No problem,” I exclaimed confidently as we made our way down the dusty dirt pile, “there’s plenty of light in this section from all those holes in the ceiling.”
The four-meter-wide fissure we were in quickly narrowed to a maximum of 1.5 meters at shoulder level and a mere 30 cm on the floor. Right at a spot halfway between the shafts of light, a spot “as black as a cow’s inside” (as Mark Twain might have put it), my friend Ray, who was bringing up the rear, suddenly let out a nerve-wracking scream and began yelling bloody murder at the top of his voice.
HOLY ☼#Δ■₰!!!!” was shouted with such force and genuine panic that Cindy and I literally leaped into the air and jumped forward while Ray jumped back.
Up until this moment, we had assumed there were only three of us in that cave but, from a point halfway between us, we could hear inhuman noises that made our hair stand on end.
“John, shine the flashlight over there, down on the ground!” And we had our first look at the creature with which Ray had been doing a tango in the dark.

The ancient spelunker, author John Pint.
The ancient spelunker, author John Pint.

There in that narrow slot, the bright beam of my light revealed the coils of a nearly two-meter-long snake, type unknown. It was obviously enraged, crazily striking left and right and putting on a terrifying show. As Ray so colorfully expressed it, “That sucker was hissin’ an’ spittin’ an’ jumpin’ all at the same time.” And with good reason. Apparently I had woken it up, Cindy had stepped right on it and unlucky Ray was left to make the apologies.
How do you get past an incensed serpent in a narrow crack? Even when we moved farther away, we could see it lunging at every shadow. It had a good 75 cm reach and there was no way we were going to slip by it in that narrow fissure. The possibilities of “chimneying” up and over it (a technique for climbing cracks) were not too bright, and a little experimenting showed us that one of the side walls was extremely slippery.
Cindy and I pondered our situation while stretched across the crack at a spot farther away and too high for the snake to reach. Meanwhile, Ray left the cave to hunt up a long stick. One thought kept coming back into our conversation: what if all three of us had got trapped on the wrong side of that furious ophidian?
Ray returned with a long pole and we discussed escape plans. Should he prod and push the critter further into the cave, beyond the high spot where Cindy and I were now perched? Or should he try to hold its head down while we made a flying leap over it? Both solutions might have resulted in the snake taking off after Ray. Unfortunately, we didn’t have a copy of the Guinness Book of Records to find out what this reptile’s top speed was, so we decided on option two, which might result in demobilizing the beast for a few moments.
Cautiously Roy reached out with the pole. “Keep the light on it, John! Keep the light on it! Ah! Got him!” There was a wild thrashing of rippling coils. Hoping Ray had the right end pinned down, Cindy scrambled over, feet on one wall, hands on the other. “EEEEK! I’m slipping!”
Ah, what a scene for an Indiana Jones movie! But she didn’t slip, and now it was my turn. I opted for a flying leap, which resulted in my going right over Ray’s head. Of course, as I flew over him, there was no more light on the snake. “Run for it, Ray!” I shouted and believe me we didn’t tiptoe out. Never have I seen anyone get up the steep dirt-hill entrance faster than the three of us.
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    The imposing entrance to Qanat La Venta, easily seen from afar.
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  • 8——GR-Wet
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On our way home we acknowledged that our little problem might not have developed had we not broken one of the cardinal rules of caving: don’t go into a cave unless every member of the group has three sources of light.
One person trying to light the way for three reduced our chances of spotting danger to almost zero. In addition, we might have realized that a cave with 74 holes in the ceiling is 74 times more likely to contain extraneous objects than a normal cave. Breathing frequent sighs of relief, we celebrated our “self rescue” with frosty bottles of Negra Modelo. After all, having found that elusive snake-in-a-cave was a sure indication that on our next trip we were bound to run into a treasure chest.
The writer has lived near Guadalajara, Jalisco, for more than 30 years and is the author of A Guide to West Mexico’s Guachimontones and Surrounding Area and co-author of Outdoors in Western Mexico. More of his writing can be found on his website.