Budget, Backpackers, Surfers, Beach Lovers, Naturalist, Hippie, Sun and Sand worshipers, Off the Beaten Path Paradise! Everyone is welcome at Zipolite!
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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
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Wednesday, April 11, 2012
Life on Death Beach Clip
Life on Death Beach Clip - IMDb 2 min In this scene, Mauro, a Zipolite resident visits the grave of his son, Jaime. Jaime was a lifeguard ... imdb.com |
http://www.imdb.com/rg/VIDEO_PLAY/LINK//video/wab/vi2889589529/
Mexican consulate to help repatriate crash victims Updated 05:37 p.m., Wednesday, April 11, 2012
EL PASO, Texas (AP) — The Mexican embassy in Washington says its consulate in McAllen will help repatriate the bodies of nine suspected illegal immigrants killed when the van in which they were packed rolled over in South Texas.
Embassy spokesman Ricardo Alday said Wednesday the consulate was contacting the victims' relatives. He tells The Associated Press most of the dead were from the southern state of Oaxaca (wah-HAH'-kah).
Alday also said consulate officials had contacted crash survivors. The embassy wouldn't release their identities because of privacy issues.
Authorities say the eight-passenger van had at least 19 occupants when it crashed Tuesday night after the driver sped away from a Border Patrol traffic stop about 10 miles from McAllen.
Eight remain in custody pending investigation of the accident and immigration statuses of the eight.
Puerto Escondido (Teaser)
Puerto Escondido (Teaser) - YouTube Mexican Pipeline in Puerto Escondidoby sastheatre454917 views · GAME ...The Zicatela ... www.youtube.com/watch?v=1AV- |
Tuesday, April 10, 2012
Downtown
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Return to Topics Oral Exercises #1 Oral Exercises #2 Oral Exercises #3 Oral Exercises #4 Flashcards Matching WordSearch Concentration Practice Exercises Test |
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Meeting People
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Return to Topics Oral Exercises #1 Oral Exercises #2 Oral Exercises #3 Oral Exercises #4 Flashcards Matching WordSearch Concentration Practice Exercises Test |
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At the Restaurant
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Return to Topics Oral Exercises #1 Oral Exercises #2 Oral Exercises #3 Oral Exercises #4 Flashcards Matching WordSearch Concentration Practice Exercises Test |
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Puerto Escondido: Sah-Hey y Yo Sah-Hey y Yo. Sah-hey (as Sage's name is pronounced in Spanish) is leaving today. We had a great few days together, filled with yoga, beaches, walks, sunsets ... onemexicanminute.blogspot.com/2012/04/sah-hey-y-yo.html
Wednesday, April 4, 2012
Sah-Hey y Yo
Sah-hey (as Sage's name is pronounced in Spanish) is leaving today. We had a great few days together, filled with yoga, beaches, walks, sunsets, and a hilarious Zumba-type work-out class (the students were the two of us, and a gray-haired bigggg dude with no rhythm). Our friend Maria invited us to her house on Sunday, a little oasis in the middle of nowhere on a secluded beach. We spent the day and evening lounging, talking, eating, napping, and releasing baby turtles into the ocean.
This week is Semana Santa, and the town is filled to over-flowing with families on spring break. This is Sage waiting in a huge @ss line at the Super Che (or as Sage calls it, Mexican Costco).
I got home from Spanish class on Monday and found a dude up in the top of one of the palm trees in our yard. He had shimmied to the top with just a rope to cut down the coconuts so they wouldn't fall on our head (problems in paradise). Look close and you can see him in the tree.
It was so good to have Sage here - so needed. Now I'm perfectly positioned to enjoy my next few days off doing yoga, surfing, walking, journaling, reading, and resting in the spirit of solitude.
This week is Semana Santa, and the town is filled to over-flowing with families on spring break. This is Sage waiting in a huge @ss line at the Super Che (or as Sage calls it, Mexican Costco).
I got home from Spanish class on Monday and found a dude up in the top of one of the palm trees in our yard. He had shimmied to the top with just a rope to cut down the coconuts so they wouldn't fall on our head (problems in paradise). Look close and you can see him in the tree.
It was so good to have Sage here - so needed. Now I'm perfectly positioned to enjoy my next few days off doing yoga, surfing, walking, journaling, reading, and resting in the spirit of solitude.
Mexico Vignettes - Puerto Escondido by Steve Henderson
Mexico Vignettes - Puerto Escondido on Vimeo I went to Mexico for just under a month. I documented my trip and made short vignettes. Puerto ... vimeo.com/40058040 |
I went to Mexico for just under a month. I documented my trip and made short vignettes.
Puerto Escondido, Oaxaca, Mexico.
MUSIC: "BORN TO DIE" by DEAD HORSE BEATS
deadhorsebeats.bandcamp.com
Spring kicks off with surf from every which way, from Puerto Escondido to Ghost Tree and beyond
Spring kicks off with surf from every which way, from Puerto ...
Meanwhile, a few thousand miles south, Puerto Escondido was also seeing too much of a good thing -- closing out, washing through and sectioning off with all ...
www.surfline.com/.../spring- kicks-off-with-surf-from- every-w...
Springtime in California is many things to many people. Mark Renneker, Mav's paddle purist, once was quoted as saying, "I hate poppies," and he's not alone. Non-surfers gaze upon beautiful hillsides speckled with California's state flower and see signs of hope and renewal. But NorCal waveriders see the onset of howling NW winds, mottled green, freezing cold water and weeks on end of marginal swells.
This spring started off a bit different. The biggest NW swell of the year decided to hit on April Fool's Day, for starters. (No foolin'.) And not to be outdone, the Southern Hemisphere kicked out a very large SW swell at the same time.
Now here's the thing: we've been doing swell stories for years over here at Surfline. But we've never done one which includes both maxing Ghost Tree and maxing Puerto from the same weekend. (Neither were epic, to be fair, but both were very solid with few takers.)
Surfline's Hellman of the Swell Award goes to Monterey lifeguard Paul Wetterau, who solo-missioned blustery 40-foot (50-foot?) Ghost Tree during the peak of the NW swell on Sunday morning.
"The night before, I saw that buoy 59 was 32 feet at 17 seconds, so I knew it was going to be big," Wetterau explained. "I paddled out around 8:30 on my 10'6" and played cat and mouse for a while, mainly spectating. I was sitting a bit wider than normal. I had called all my friends, but no one was game."
Wetterau has surfed out here a dozen times over the past few years, but Sunday was the biggest -- and windiest -- he'd seen since December 2007. "Sunday was a memorable day," he continued. "I caught like six waves or so; really only two that were legit. There was one that stood out and it was huge -- and even then, I wasn't where I wanted to be. It's hard to get into the bowl at that size, with that amount of wind, you're kinda on the corner."
Meanwhile, a few thousand miles south, Puerto Escondido was also seeing too much of a good thing -- closing out, washing through and sectioning off with all that long-period SW energy. "It came on pretty strong," explained local Coco Nogales, who was the only one to catch anything at the peak of the swell. "The waves were solid but with a lot of current -- not very clean, and lots of closeouts, so I decided to grab the rope and whip in."
Those are the extremes. Smack in the middle -- as in straight out front of the Surfline offices and the rest of Orange County -- the two swells combined to create a few days of a-frame city.
"It's been like Groundhog Day," local pro Teddy Navarro frothed when we called him Wednesday afternoon. "I keep trying to stop, but I wake up and the waves are good again! Gotta take advantage of the swell while it's here; everything's falling apart other than surfing, but I'm gonna keep going till this thing shuts down."
Surfline forecaster Jon Warren explains the science behind the swell: "The first significant development was a strong early season storm that slowly tracked across the central South Pacific over March 22nd-26th, which had a fetch aimed well at California and Mexico (ie. a more south to north aimed fetch, rather than west to east). So, just as this good pulse of SSW swell started to build into CA on Friday the 30th (already lighting up Mexico with solid surf), the North Pacific didn't want to retire just yet for the season and decided to quickly whip up an intense late season storm within close proximity to the California coast on Friday the 30th.
"As a result, a newly developed and large/consistent westerly swell slammed the Golden State on the weekend of the 31st-1st, just as the SSW swell moved in. This North Hemi pulse (with a WNW-NW angle) swept down the coast of Baja shortly after, and even down to the exposures along the north-central coast of Mainland Mexico (peaking for MM today, Wednesday the 4th)."
It wasn't an all-state shackfest, however. "Conditions for California over the weekend were variable, as the storm system that pushed out the west swell moved into the coast with clocking winds and rain," continued Warren. "However, if you knew where to look, there were some locations that offered good conditions. Then everywhere cleaned up on Monday and into Tuesday as high pressure resided over the region and light winds prevailed."
Meanwhile, a few thousand miles south, Puerto Escondido was also seeing too much of a good thing -- closing out, washing through and sectioning off with all ...
www.surfline.com/.../spring-
April 4, 2012
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Spring kicks off with surf from every which way, from Puerto Escondido to Ghost Tree and beyond
This spring started off a bit different. The biggest NW swell of the year decided to hit on April Fool's Day, for starters. (No foolin'.) And not to be outdone, the Southern Hemisphere kicked out a very large SW swell at the same time.
Now here's the thing: we've been doing swell stories for years over here at Surfline. But we've never done one which includes both maxing Ghost Tree and maxing Puerto from the same weekend. (Neither were epic, to be fair, but both were very solid with few takers.)
Surfline's Hellman of the Swell Award goes to Monterey lifeguard Paul Wetterau, who solo-missioned blustery 40-foot (50-foot?) Ghost Tree during the peak of the NW swell on Sunday morning.
"The night before, I saw that buoy 59 was 32 feet at 17 seconds, so I knew it was going to be big," Wetterau explained. "I paddled out around 8:30 on my 10'6" and played cat and mouse for a while, mainly spectating. I was sitting a bit wider than normal. I had called all my friends, but no one was game."
Wetterau has surfed out here a dozen times over the past few years, but Sunday was the biggest -- and windiest -- he'd seen since December 2007. "Sunday was a memorable day," he continued. "I caught like six waves or so; really only two that were legit. There was one that stood out and it was huge -- and even then, I wasn't where I wanted to be. It's hard to get into the bowl at that size, with that amount of wind, you're kinda on the corner."
Meanwhile, a few thousand miles south, Puerto Escondido was also seeing too much of a good thing -- closing out, washing through and sectioning off with all that long-period SW energy. "It came on pretty strong," explained local Coco Nogales, who was the only one to catch anything at the peak of the swell. "The waves were solid but with a lot of current -- not very clean, and lots of closeouts, so I decided to grab the rope and whip in."
Those are the extremes. Smack in the middle -- as in straight out front of the Surfline offices and the rest of Orange County -- the two swells combined to create a few days of a-frame city.
"It's been like Groundhog Day," local pro Teddy Navarro frothed when we called him Wednesday afternoon. "I keep trying to stop, but I wake up and the waves are good again! Gotta take advantage of the swell while it's here; everything's falling apart other than surfing, but I'm gonna keep going till this thing shuts down."
Surfline forecaster Jon Warren explains the science behind the swell: "The first significant development was a strong early season storm that slowly tracked across the central South Pacific over March 22nd-26th, which had a fetch aimed well at California and Mexico (ie. a more south to north aimed fetch, rather than west to east). So, just as this good pulse of SSW swell started to build into CA on Friday the 30th (already lighting up Mexico with solid surf), the North Pacific didn't want to retire just yet for the season and decided to quickly whip up an intense late season storm within close proximity to the California coast on Friday the 30th.
"As a result, a newly developed and large/consistent westerly swell slammed the Golden State on the weekend of the 31st-1st, just as the SSW swell moved in. This North Hemi pulse (with a WNW-NW angle) swept down the coast of Baja shortly after, and even down to the exposures along the north-central coast of Mainland Mexico (peaking for MM today, Wednesday the 4th)."
It wasn't an all-state shackfest, however. "Conditions for California over the weekend were variable, as the storm system that pushed out the west swell moved into the coast with clocking winds and rain," continued Warren. "However, if you knew where to look, there were some locations that offered good conditions. Then everywhere cleaned up on Monday and into Tuesday as high pressure resided over the region and light winds prevailed."
Tag Archives: Huatulco
Tag Archives: Huatulco
Highway 200 – Reducing Travel Time & Increasing Tourism
Work continues on Highway 200 from Huatulco to Puerto Escondido and includes straightening and twinning the highway, as well as building 30 connecting roads, several bypasses, 78 bridges, 42 underpasses and three tunnels. Work is being completed at an aggressive pace, East from Puerto Escondido, West from Huatulco and South from Oaxaca City. We [...]
Easter in Mexico – Celebrating along the Oaxaca Coast
All along the Oaxaca coast, from Puerto Escondido to Puerto Angel, many families take time off to enjoy the beautiful beaches and celebrate the Holy Week of Easter. Families travel far distances to visit Puerto Angel to Puerto Escondido, spending time with family, attending church and enjoying the beautiful beaches and attractions. Holy Week or “Semana [...]
My Mexico Adventure
After 10 days of driving from Calgary to the State of Oaxaca we reached our destination to our home in Puerto Angel, a small fishing village only 40 minutes from Huatulco airport. After over 4 months of living here there are 3 things I know for sure: 1. Even though we don’t speak the same [...]
Air Mexicana To Fly Again
Mexicana airline, once Mexico’s leading carrier, said on February 24, 2012 that it expects to fly again in April after being grounded in bankruptcy for the past 18 months. A bankruptcy judge gave the green light for Med Atlantica, a private company, to invest $300 million in the airline and it’s operations. They plan on starting [...]
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