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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

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

pina palmera


Piña Palmera’s Mission:

Our mission is to contribute to the improvement of the quality of life for people with disabilities and their families in the southern coast of Oaxaca.
Piña Palmera’s Objectives:
  • to help people with disabilities to accept themselves and to integrate themselves into their families, communities and daily lives
  • to assist disabled people to be as independent as possible
  • to promote the development of the abilities of people with disabilities to the fullest
  • to generate social acceptance in the region towards people with disabilities

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    New document:
    Being a volunteer in Piña Palmera

    We are dreaming of a society, where EVERYBODY recognizes and respects differences !

    Piña Palmera Centro de Atención Infantil, A.C. is a non-governmental organization (NGO), legally constituted without any political or religious interest, which has tackled since more than 20 years the issue disability of persons of any age from rural communities, its majority are indigenous people. We are working in the southern coast of Oaxaca on rehabilitation, social integration, information and prevention of any kind of disability (physical, intellectual or conductive), without bearing in mind the grade of disability, ability to pay and/or ethnicity.
    We consider that the work with disabled persons is not a matter of kindness, but of bringing their human rights to bear. The extreme poverty or various social problems complement the challenge of Piña. The central axis of our work is respect towards differences and the formation of an integrative society. The center’s efforts focus on changing the way local people regard people with disabilities, by promoting awareness and rehabilitation programs for families, schools and local communities.
    These programs teach people to use adaptive equipment and therapeutic techniques as well as to take care of people with disabilities. Thus children and adults with disabilities become more integrated into everyday life.
    We are a Civil Association, legally constituted, with the right to receive deductible donations. Since our foundation, more than 5000 children and adults with different disabilities have participated in our programs. Today participate 350 persons in our programs (20% children, 35% youths, 10% elderly people…).
    We are dreaming of a society, where EVERYBODY recognizes and respects differences.
    We want to create a world where it is less difficult to love
    (Paulo Freire, brasilian pedagogue)
    If you want to know more, write to:
    Flavia Anau
    C.A.I. Piña Palmera A.C. Apartado Postal 109,
    C.P. 70900, Pochutla- Oaxaca,
    México
    E-Mail: caippac@yahoo.com.mx
    Telephone: (01) 958- 58 43147 and Fax: (01) 958 - 58 431 45

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Look At Miss Ohio By Sarah Darling




Uploaded by on Jan 11, 2012
This song gets stuck in my head!! Thought id play it for you!!! I love Miranda's version of this too:)

Zipolite Oaxaca


 Zipolite Oaxaca

Nudist beach located in the state of Oaxaca, about 2 km. de longitud y 40 m In length and 40 m wide on average. The sand is golden medium grain and slope moderate. The water is crystal clear with green and blue hues, regularly temperate ; dominated by strong waves.
Zipolite became famous in the 70’s when entire colonies of hippies came to enjoy this beach that was the only nude beach in Mexico. Today still hear from some speakers of the restaurants sounds of The Doors, Bob Marley, Santana, Led Zeppelin and others. Already past midnight pulled the two clubs and Zipolipas The Making music with varied.
Zipolite, which means Zapotec Beach shore of the Dead is a very strong waves and dangerous currents submarine. Any native can tell stories of drowned in those waters. It is best to swim where lifeguards are volunteers watch as a precautionary measure and have placed colored pennants. Green means you can swim with no problem. Yellow means caution and is nothing more for good swimmers. The red is forbidden to swim.
Very near the beaches in Zipolite are Mazunte (some of which is the Centro Mexicano de la Tortuga, where he exhibited all sea turtle species that inhabit the coasts of Mexico, also are represented six species of freshwater turtles and two terrestrial species that inhabit the Mexican territory) and San Agustinillo (beach divided into three sections, one of which is protected by rocks and you can swim with ease by the softness of the waves, while the strong wave occur in the area of open sea, which is located in the eastern part of the beach).
Symbols:  Yes it has  NO it has
Prices on the beach
low  high
Location
Zipolite is located 5 miles west of Puerto Angel paved road, south of Oaxaca City, 256 km along the Federal 175 for San Pedro Pochutla.
It has lodging type: help
Camping
Cabin or Bungalows
Hotel Green
Hotel 1 to 5
stars
It has food type: help
Restaurant Bar
Restaurant typical
Franchises
International cuisine
It has tourist attractions such as: help
Virgin Beaches
Beaches all services
Parks and nature reserves
Archeological areas
Actividades principales
Diving
Surfing
Fishing and boat ride
Museum of the turtle
 

Día 2 en Zipolite




Uploaded by on Jan 5, 2012
Este día olvide la camara en el cuarto, pero aprovecho para mostrarles que bonita vista tenía desde el hotel

Ultimo atardecer del 2011 en zipolite

Latin America moves ahead Mexico can’t see the wood for the trees An indigenous community in Mexico wants to drop protected conservation status for its area because it feels it has lost real control of its land and way of life. Concern about carbon emissions is blinding policy makers to the failures of some of their conservation policies by Anne Vigna


Latin America moves ahead

Mexico can’t see the wood for the trees

An indigenous community in Mexico wants to drop protected conservation status for its area because it feels it has lost real control of its land and way of life. Concern about carbon emissions is blinding policy makers to the failures of some of their conservation policies
by Anne Vigna
“That’s the one,” said Arcenio Osorio, pointing at the huge mountain that towers over the village of Santiago Lachiguiri, in Oaxaca state, part of southwestern Mexico’s Isthmus of Tehuantepec. “It provides water to all the towns in the area, and to us, the Zapotec people, it’s sacred. That’s the mountain we wanted official protection for.” Osorio is secretary of the community assembly, a traditional elected body that represents the people of the village. The 8,000 inhabitants of the county have always been involved in the conservation of their mountain, the Cerro de las Flores (“Mountain of the Flowers”). An official from the National Commission for Protected Natural Areas (Conanp) told me it is classed as an area of “exceptionally high biodiversity” due to the “excellent state of preservation of its ecosystem”.
In the valleys at the foot of the mountain, they grow organic coffee. The slopes are covered with little woods and patches of maize, but after several hours of walking and clambering you come to forests of pine trees, under which grow hundreds of species of wild flowers. Because of its altitude (2,200 metres) and the rock it is made of, the mountain acts as a kind of sponge, which stores the greater part of the area’s water supply.
Cerro de las Flores is a textbook case of conservation policy. In August 2003 it became Mexico’s first “voluntary community preserved area”. My source said Conanp defines this as an area protected by a “conservation mechanism put in place at the request of the local community, that protects the area’s natural riches and offers sustainable economic alternatives to its inhabitants”. According to Conanp, 207,887 hectares of land are managed in this way in Mexico. But at the meeting of the community assembly in January 2011, the people of Santiago Lachiguiri voted to drop the area’s “preserved area” status. “The government deceived us,” explained Osorio. “We are still the legitimate owners of the land, but we have lost control of it.”
Osorio was clearly irritated, and with some justification. The village’s land commissioner, Enan Eduardo, explained his choice of words: “We discovered that the certification of the 1,400 hectares of Cerro de las Flores entailed a conservation period of 30 years, rather than the five years we had agreed on when we voted.” Did that imply deception, and loss of control? “The conservation policy means we also have to change our production methods, even if it makes no sense in ecological terms.”
Certifying land involves the establishment of a development plan, preceded by a diagnostic survey; non-governmental organisations (NGOs) and government institutions (Mexico’s ecology ministry and Conanp) handle both tasks. The process is supposed to begin with “participatory workshops”, to inform the local inhabitants and allow them to make their opinions heard and take part in decision-making. But in Santiago Lachiguiri this procedure, seen as essential for the success of any conservation initiative, wasn’t followed correctly. Conanp insists the local inhabitants participated and were properly informed. Osorio said: “We went everywhere with them, and answered all their questions. But we had no idea what they were planning.”

Slash and burn

As a result, the conservation area ended up including the flanks of the mountain, where 140 smallholders had been growing maize. A further 517 hectares were included in the “payment for environmental services” programme, under which agricultural activities are forbidden, but the community receives an annual payment of 400 pesos (US$30) per hectare, that is $15,510 a year. It’s not much — and less than they were making from farming the land. The conservation plan also described a range of activities that would supposedly enhance the area’s resources without damaging the environment. The two flagship projects were an ecotourism initiative and a water-bottling plant. Both were abandoned after four years. Two cabins intended to accommodate tourists were never used — this remote area attracts few visitors — and the cost of transporting the bottled water proved prohibitive.
But it was farming that stirred up the most trouble. The local community practised slash-and-burn cultivation (land is cleared, burned and then planted every seven years). The ash serves as a natural fertiliser and the wood is used as cooking fuel. Typical crops are maize, beans, tomatoes and peppers.
Anthropologist Eckart Boege says that, when properly managed, according to strict rules, itinerant cultivation is the best way of farming without destroying the environment; the Mayas were masters of this technique, in both production and reforestation. But Mexican and international institutions have identified this farming method as the latest big threat and they all want a ban on burning, since carbon capture has become the central element of conservation policies. Slash-and-burn has in fact caused environmental damage in Mexico, leading to deforestation, soil impoverishment, water shortages and reduced biodiversity.
But this is not the case with land occupied by indigenous peoples such as the inhabitants of Santiago Lachiguiri, who have established strict community rules (1). “If it’s properly used, the technique can actually increase the biological diversity and mass of the forest. We release CO2 by burning, but we capture more during the regeneration phase,” explained Alvaro Salgado, agronomist and author of a study on slash-and-burn. These facts have been recognised in scientific publications but are denied by Conanp, which is busy imposing another project on the village — agro-forestry, a system that integrates trees into a system of permanent cultivation, in this case apricot trees and maize. The results have failed to convince the locals. In three years, the soil has become impoverished and the trees are scrawny. “Since the maize yields were poor, Conanp advised us very early on to use chemicals to enrich the soil,” said Eduardo. Another result was that most of the 140 smallholders who had lost their land left the village. Some emigrated to the US, some moved to the city, some went to work on a motorway construction site, and the youngest joined the army after a recruitment campaign.
The villagers demanded the removal of the mountain’s protected area status and an end to the payments for environmental services. They also sent two representatives to the Alternative Global Forum that was held at Cancún in December 2010 in parallel with the 16th Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (COP 16). Their aim was to denounce the conservation policies that were being imposed. Their testimony was of the highest importance: it was COP 16 that approved the agreement on forest conservation proposed at COP 13, in Bali in 2007 — the REDD (Reducing Emissions From Deforestation and Degradation) programme.
Unable to agree on reductions in greenhouse gas emissions, the signatories hoped that REDD would kill two birds with one stone, cutting emissions by 15% while preventing deforestation. Diego Rodriguez from the World Bank had no doubts REDD would enable the world to prepare for climate change.

’We want to be able to say no’

Yet REDD shows little concern for the 300 million people across the world who depend on forests for their living. The programme is based on “compensation”: any business enterprise or country that pollutes can compensate for its greenhouse gas emissions (quantified in terms of tons of carbon) by “protecting” a forest. Advocates of REDD claim this approach is scientific but it does not appear to have convinced everyone. Research by Stanford University in California shows that the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change overestimated the amount of carbon stocked in a forest in Peru by one-third (2).
Anne Petermann of the NGO Global Justice Ecology Project says the idea that carbon can be stocked implies a ban on the felling of trees. Indigenous groups are opposed to REDD, she says, because they believe it will inevitably displace communities or have a serious impact on their way of life, without doing anything to reduce pollution or climate change. Representatives of indigenous peoples, who came to Cancún in large numbers, hoped to impose a requirement that free, prior and informed consent be obtained before the implementation of any REDD project. “We want to be able to say no if a company wants to use our territory to compensate for carbon emissions,” said Onel Masardule, representative of the Kuna people of Panama.
But REDD’s final text merely refers to “social and environmental safeguards”, which have yet to be defined. It mentions the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (which says that “indigenous peoples have the right to determine and develop priorities and strategies for the development or use of their lands or territories and other resources”), but the declaration isn’t binding. Two recent reports (3) on respect for indigenous peoples in REDD programmes indicate that the land rights of local inhabitants and principles of consultation and information have been systematically flouted.
Over the past six years, a range of projects have been financed by enterprises (Shell and Gazprom in Indonesia, BP in Bolivia, and Rio Tinto in Australia), by countries (Norway in Brazil and Indonesia, France in Mexico) and special funds belonging to international institutions such as the World Bank and UN agencies. The Cancún Agreements did not decide how the REDD programme was to be financed but the idea, still championed by the World Bank, of offering REDD carbon credits on the global emissions market already seems less viable.
It is now accepted that the markets have done nothing to help reduce carbon emissions or to promote the financing of a less polluting economy. Kate Dooley, an expert on forests at the NGO Fern, says carbon trading does not encourage people to use less carbon but gives the illusion that it’s possible to compensate for pollution. She fears that if REDD were to become part of the carbon trading market, there could be a wave of land speculation based on assigning a “carbon value” to forests. But the so-called developed nations, which are historically responsible for climate change, have refused to finance REDD alone. A decision on the issue has therefore been put off until COP 17, to be held in Durban, South Africa, 28 November—9 December 2011.
All the World Bank reports stress that public money will not be enough to finance the establishment of REDD; private funding is also needed — estimates range from $15bn to $50bn per year, but the funds currently available amount to only $2bn. And a question remains: what is to be done about the smallholders who want to continue growing maize while conserving some of their land? At COP 16, Mexico’s president Felipe Calderón declared: “We will pay the smallholders to plant trees instead of maize on the mountain, and live on payments they will receive for environmental services.”

Deceptive Tribute - Mad Raf & Tom Zenith (Giuseppe Visciano Remix)

Hula Hoop en Zipolite

Playa Zipolite From Shambala

Zipolite, Oaxaca

Amanecer Zipolite

Delfines en Mazunte

Trip Report: Oaxaca & Puerto Escondido, Mexico – Christmas 2011 Posted on January 10, 2012


Trip Report: Oaxaca & Puerto Escondido, Mexico – Christmas 2011

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Puerto Escondido SunsetBy Roxanna McDade/Shelley Claude
My good friend Shelley Claude took a trip to Mexico this past December to celebrate the Christmas holidays with her family and friend. She had a wonderful trip and has been talking non-stop about going back – sometime very soon. I thought this would be a good opportunity to ask her about safety, family and fun in Mexico. Below is my interview with Shelley.
1. What were the dates of your travel?
December 21-31, 2011
2.  How did you travel? 
We flew by plane to Mexico City. We then took a Oaxaca city and then another bus to Puerto Escondido
3.    Who went on this trip with you?Surfing in Puerto Escondido Mexico
My two daughters, my husband and one friend
4.    What activities did you participate in?
Sightseeing, a museum in Mexico City and a cooking class in Oaxaca city, which is famous for it’s mole. I also took surfing lessons on the coast in Puerto Escondido.
5. What was your favorite destination during the trip and why?
It’s hard to say. I really loved Oaxaca city for its culture, but loved Puerto Escondido for its beach.
6. Did you feel safe during your travels? Was there any time you did not feel safe & if so, why? Or, why did you feel safe?
I felt safe the entire time.
7. Was it crowded? Did you wish it were less crowded? 
We went at high season and it did not feel very crowded to me.
8. Did you meet other American travelers? 
No other Americans but lots of other International travelers
9. What was your least favorite part about the trip? 
The duration of the bus rides
10. Would you recommend the same trip: Christmas, cities, Mexico, travel method to other families traveling to Mexico? 
Yes, but I would take a flight right to Oaxaca city.
11. Will you go again? 
I can’t wait to go back
12. Was there something you did or saw that you feel other visitors should not miss?Mexico City Historic DistrictYes, cooking classes and Mexico City’s historic district.
13. Any final comments? 
Now is a great time to visit Mexico, since crowds are reduced due to the inaccurate depiction given by the media for all of Mexico.
Thank you Shelley…and next time I’m coming with!
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Puerto Music Festival January 5 - March 4, 2012

Puerto Music Festival
January 5 - March 4, 2012





Blues Festival News By Warren Sharpe
Pause and Play Controls are at bottom of page.


Mayonnaise is the secret behind the rich chicken chipotle BY ELIZABETH KARMEL January 10, 2012 12:26PM


Mayonnaise is the secret behind the rich chicken chipotle

Story Image
Mayonnaise, believe it or not, will help you capture the essence of Oaxaca, Mexico, with this Chipotle Chicken and Cool Orange, Jicama and Mango Slaw. | Matthew Mead~AP
Updated: January 10, 2012 3:22PM
 

And the secret ingredient is: mayonnaise!
The first time anyone told me that, I thought I was going to faint or laugh out loud. It sounded preposterous. But then I tasted the food and suddenly it made sense. Mayonnaise is an emulsified mixture of oil and seasonings. I always coat my food with a little olive oil, or add oil to a marinade. So mayonnaise actually makes a lot of sense!
Fast forward to a trip I took to Oaxaca, Mexico, during the February “vela” or festival season. At each neighborhood vela, the women brought out numerous platters and bowls of homemade food. My favorite was a pit-fired chicken dish that had been marinated in a thick chipotle mixture.
The minute I tasted the rich meat with a tangy, slightly smoky crust squirted with a burst of fresh lime juice, I knew that this was one souvenir I had to bring home.
I asked our guide, Mexican food expert Susana Trilling, if she could find someone who would let me come to their home and show me how to make this dish. The next day we went to the home of the village’s best cook. She had everything set out on the counter for the dish — chipotles in adobo, onions, limes, chicken thighs — and mayonnaise!
As we made the marinade, I realized how smart the mayo was. You can add a lot of flavor to mayonnaise and it stays suspended. Traditional marinades tend to separate. Because the flavors are spread evenly through the marinade, the food you are flavoring gets a more intense and consistent flavor. The mayonnaise also tempers any harshness.
The chicken not only was delicious and memorable, but taught me a great cooking lesson. Today, I frequently use mayonnaise as my “secret” way to impart flavor. A classic Nantucket swordfish steak is made better slathered with mayo. And pork chops are kept flavorful and moist with a pesto mayonnaise.
But my favorite way to use it is this chipotle chicken adapted from a tiny village cook in Mexico.
AP