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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, July 4, 2013

Indigenous gays celebrate traditions in Mexico

Indigenous gays celebrate traditions in Mexico

  • Eduardo Verdugo - AP Photo
    In this June 29, 2013 photo, a person known as a muxe, center, poses for a photo at a party in Mexico City. Zapotec indigenous homosexual men known as muxes gathered last weekend for a "vela," as community parties are called in the Zapotec city of Juchitan in the southern state of Oaxaca, to share their traditions with people in the Mexican capital. According to anthropological studies, some women in Juchitan encourage sons' muxe leanings because they tend to stay home and care for their parents rather than getting married.
MEXICO CITY Wearing a long skirt, headdress and loose blouse embroidered with bright flowers, Mariana de la Noche road on a float in Mexico City's recent gay pride parade. The float was for "muxes," Zapotec indigenous men who dress and behave in ways associated with women.
The 33-year-old restaurant cook was picked as queen of the "muxes" (pronounced MOO-shays) living in Mexico City, where for the first time Saturday they celebrated a "vela," as community parties are known in their hometown of Juchitan, a city of Zapotecs in the southern state of Oaxaca.
Gay men, transvestites and transgender people are generally accepted in Juchitan and often work as home helpers, embroiderers, decorators, cooks and entertainers.
Like Mariana, most of the muxes at her crowning wore Tehuana dresses from the Juchitan area, popularized around the world by Mexican artist Friday Kahlo, along with the region's traditional large gold earrings and necklaces and "resplandor," headdresses made from a starched veil worn around the face like a halo.
It was a party to have fun but also an opportunity to reaffirm the muxes' presence in the capital and celebrate their traditions from back home, said David Kelvin, who organized the event.
"We want to bring the party here, but through the party we want to have a (message) about exercising our rights, of respect, of dignity, of culture," Kelvin said.
The contact between muxes and the gay men from Mexico City has led to the fusion of urban and indigenous cultures, said Kelvin. The gathering was important "to rescue our culture, to rescue who we are and show the rest of the people in this city how we live our sexuality, how we exercise our rights," he said.
According to anthropological studies, some women in Juchitan encourage sons' muxe leanings because they tend to stay home and care for their parents rather than get married.
"Muxes are a blessing from God because they look after you when you are sick more than a woman would," said Vicenta Toledo, who attended the party with her gay son. "They are a very important part of life."

Read more here: http://www.charlotteobserver.com/2013/07/03/4146586/indigenous-gays-celebrate-traditions.html#storylink=cpy

CORRIDO EL COMBATE DE SAN PEDRO POCHUTLA.

Brian Legg ZBB Live! @ Babel Cafe July 11 at 6:00pm Playa Zipolite, OXACA, MX




ZBB Live! @ Babel Cafe
July 11 at 6:00pm
Playa Zipolite, OXACA, MX

Zipolite Painting 2000-2001

Jimi Hendrix - Jimi Hendrix - Foxey Lady - Denver Pop 1969

Wednesday, July 3, 2013

Making Orange Juice In Zipolite

Le Castelet

Ruby The Hammock Vendor- Zipolite

3 Hermanos Abarrotes

Noormaa Ordazz hermoso!!


hermoso!!



Beyond the glow of the city lights, a universe awaits.


Zipolite "La Playa De Los Muertos" - Beach | Facebook Zipolite "La Playa De Los Muertos". 0 likes · 0 talking about this · 1 checkins. Local Business. https://www.facebook.com/pages/...La.../633206153376019

Zipolite "La Playa De Los Muertos" - Beach | Facebook
Zipolite "La Playa De Los Muertos". 0 likes · 0 talking about this · 1 checkins. Local Business.
https://www.facebook.com/pages/...La.../633206153376019

Sarah Darling - Little Umbrellas (Official Video)

Posada Mexico Presenta Reapertura Reopening Ristorante Italiano Bar Pizzeria Musica En Vivo Maica


Playa San Agustinillo

Playa San AgustinilloPlaya San AgustinilloPlaya San Agustinillo

EL Delfin Taqueria

Jimi Hendrix - Jimi Hendrix - Red House - Denver Pop 1969

EXPLORE THREE LEVELS OF HUATULCO, MEXICO




Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Mike- The Jewelry Vendor

Hamburgesas y Hot Dogs- Zipolite

Zipolite Sunset

Hair Braiding- Puerto Angel & Playa Zipolite

COME TO ZIPOLITE NOW

Super Tour a Zipolite Oaxaca verano 2013

rrecorrido en lancha playa de Puerto Angel

Fifteen Mexican States have Elections Scheduled for July 7 By Allan Wall

Monday, July 1, 2013
Fifteen Mexican States have Elections Scheduled for July 7
By Allan Wall
Last year, 2012, Mexico held presidential and congressional elections.  The next congressional elections aren’t scheduled until 2015, and the next presidential election in 2018.
This year, on Sunday, July 7th, there are local elections being held in 15 states in Mexico.
Only one governorship is up for grabs, in the state of Baja California.
Each of Mexico’s 31 states has a unicameral legislature, the representatives in these legislatures are called diputados in Spanish.  In this summer’s elections, diputados are being elected in 12 states, plus one other state has a  special election for only one suchdiputado.
Mexico’s states are divided intomunicipios.  In the United States, a Mexican municipio would be something of a cross between a municipality and a county.  The mayor of a municipio is known as the alcalde, or presidente municipal, and he and the municipiocouncil together form the ayuntamiento. About 1,350 municipios are up for grabs on July 7th.
Let’s start on the far southeastern edge of the country and work our way north and west:
1.       QUINTANA ROO – This is Mexico’s easternmost state, home of the famous Riviera Maya tourist area. In Quintana Roo, 25 diputados and tenayuntamientos are being elected. 2.     OAXACA – In this state, located on Mexico’s southern Pacific Coast, 42 diputados are being elected, and 570 ayuntamientos.  Oaxaca is a mountainous state and the state has more municipiosthan any other in Mexico.  In all of Mexico there are 2,378 municipios, and Oaxaca has 570, which is about a quarter of the total in the whole country.       Additionally, out of the total of 570 municipios in Oaxaca, 153 are chosen in the regular way, with ballots and political parties, with the remaining 417 chosen using indigenous customs, in customary town meetings.3.      PUEBLA – In the state of Puebla, which is north of Oaxaca, elections are being held for 41 diputadosand 217 ayuntamientos. 4.     TLAXCALA – This small state is nestled between Puebla and Hidalgo, and voters in Tlaxcala are choosing 32 diputados, 60 ayuntamientos, and 391presidentes de comunidad.5.      HIDALGO lies northeast of the state of Mexico. Hidalgo’s voters are electing 30 diputados6.     VERACRUZ is a long state sprawled along the coast of the Gulf of Mexico.  Its voters are choosing 50 diputados and 212 ayuntamientos7.      TAMAULIPAS is Mexico’s northeasternmost state, along the Gulf of Mexico. Its voters are selecting 36 diputados and 43 ayuntamientos8.     AGUASCALIENTES is, geographically speaking, at the center of Mexico.  Voters there are electing 27diputados and 11 ayuntamientos9.     ZACATECAS is north of Aguascalientes. Zacatecas is electing 30 diputados and 58ayuntamientos.10.  COAHUILA is north of Zacatecas, on Mexico's northern border, where it is contiguous with Texas, U.S.A.  Voters in Coahuila are electing 38ayuntamientos11.   DURANGO is located between Sinaloa and Zacatecas, and voters in Durango are electing 30diputados and 39 ayuntamientos.  12.  SINALOA is on the Pacific coast, west of Durango. Sinaloa voters are electing 40 diputados and 18ayuntamientos.13.  CHIHUAHUA is Mexico’s biggest state, which borders Texas and Arizona to its north.  Chihuahua voters are electing 33 diputados and 67ayuntamientos.14.  SONORA is a northwest Mexican state that borders Arizona in the U.S.  The Sonora election is a special election, to elect only one state diputado for District XVII. 15.  BAJA CALIFORNIA is Mexico’s northwesternmost state, the northern portion of the Baja California peninsula.  Its five municipios have elections for the ayuntamientos, while 25 diputadosare to be chosen.
Baja California was the first Mexican state after the Mexican Revolution (1910-1920) in which the PRI (Partido Revolucionario Institicional) was defeated in a gubernatorial election. That was in 1989, when the PAN (Partido Acción Nacional) won the governorship. 
This was followed nationally by the PRI’s loss of a congressional majority in 1997, and the first PRI loss of the presidency in 2000.  So, that 1989 PAN victory was an important part of Mexico’s political development.
The PAN has held onto the Baja California governership since 1989, for the past 24 years, which is impressive.  The current governor is PANista Jose Guadalupe Osuna Millan, whose six-year term is scheduled to expire on Halloween of 2013, four months hence.
The three candidates up for election on July 7th are Francisco Vega de la Madrid, of the PAN coalition (which also includes the PRD, the Nueva Alianza party, and thePartido Estatal de Baja California); Fernando Castro Trenti, of the PRI coalition (which includes the Green Party, the Labor Party, and the Social Encounter Party); and Felipe Ruanova Zarate, of theMovimiento Ciudadano.

MexiData.info noteFor details and information on the 2013 elections, go to the local electoral institute sites in each of the aforementioned 15 states.  In Spanish.

——————————
Allan Wall, an educator, resided in Mexico for many years.  His website is located athttp://www.allanwall.info.

Monday, July 1, 2013

Zipolite


Hurricane party and Mazunte. | Travel Blog Howdy people, Just back from Mazunte's turtle reserve so I figured a blog is in order before I nap and decide whether or not I'll go out tonig. www.travelblog.org/North-America/.../blog-792717.html

Hurricane party and Mazunte.

North America » Mexico » Oaxaca » Puerto Escondido


Mexicos flagPublished: June 22nd 2013North America » Mexico » Oaxaca » Puerto Escondido
June 22nd 2013 

High stakes poker!High stakes poker!
High stakes poker!

Otto (left) and Expo (right) play 200 peso per hand poker at Brads most Saturday nights.
Howdy people, 

Just back from Mazunte's turtle reserve so I figured a blog is in order before I nap and decide whether or not I'll go out tonight. 

The Hurricane party was a remembrance of Carlotta from last year. Held at Brad's split coconut bar. Bar name is fitting since the hurricane nearly killed brad haha! There was a live band covering Led Zeppelin tunes....but they sucked! So I didnt hang out long and wound up wandering towards home slowly where I ran into a local teacher I'd seen earlier at Brad's. She invited me to sit down and listen to the Latin band playing so I did for a bit until at midnight we shuffled to another spot where I strangely found my pasty white a** dancing....haha. 

Ok so this morning I woke at 445am to ready myself for the lunchbox trip to Mazunte. As I entered the main palapa, the usual suspects were still partying from the night before! I am glad I'm too old to pull off crap like that anymore. An uneventful trip down although I arrived wayyyyyy too early so I found a little restaurant got to know the owner and she and 

The Latin band.The Latin band.
The Latin band.

For the life of me..I cant remember the bar name. Might be the Mescal's fault!
her husband fed me eggs and ham black beans and rice tortillas and juice and 3 beers for 30......yes 30 pesos!!!!! Had a fun chat session till the reserve opened then I shuffled on over to buy a ticket in. All told it was small and not very impressive but still worth the 27 peso entrance fee. (pictures to follow). So as it's 5 pm here and I've been up 12 hours and I'll be worthless should I decide to go out if I don't get rest, I'll post and annotate pictures and go shower and visit my hammock. 

Hasta pronto a todos


Mountain Biking Near Mazunte, Oaxaca » Tour in Tune Some dirt road mountain biking I found above Pochutla and Tonameca just north of Mazunte on the Oaxacan Coast. www.tourintune.com/mountain-biking-near-mazunte-oaxaca/

Mountain Biking Near Mazunte, Oaxaca » Tour in Tune
Some dirt road mountain biking I found above Pochutla and Tonameca just north of Mazunte on the Oaxacan Coast.
www.tourintune.com/mountain-biking-near-mazunte-oaxaca/



Mountain Biking Near Mazunte, Oaxaca

Whilst staying in Mazunte, I started getting cravings for some off-road exploring. Jenny’s Spanish maestro and local rafting guide, Daniel, kindly gave me some tips for some dirt road networks near Pochutla and Tonameca. I mapped out a few tracks for the Garmin and set off to explore!
Screen Shot 2013-06-09 at 22.12.46
This shows the routes that I actually rode as marked on Strava and overlayed together.
I created the map above to load some tracks onto my Garmin GPS. You can download the KML file and then convert it to GPX using GPSVisualizer.com
I was lucky to have stumbled on some fantastic riding on the quiet dirt roads. There is plenty of climbing with some great descents. You can cycle on the paved roads to reach Tonameca where it then turns to dirt for miles and miles. If you want to skip the paved roads, you can throw your bike in the back of a ‘collectivo’ truck for about $10-20 pesos (£0.55-£1.10).
2013-06-07-028.jpg
You can ride on the road from Mazunte or take a collectivo truck to get a headstart up the dirt roads above Tonameca.
2013-06-01-011.jpg
The collectivo trucks were still crossing this river when I took this photo. The water level has since risen a few feet after massive downpours. Now the collectivos stop at either end of the river banks. Who knows when they will finish the bridge!
2013-06-09-067.jpg
The river crossing for the collectivo trucks near San Francisco.
2013-06-09-070.jpg
It’s also pretty refreshing in the midday sun!
2013-06-09-073.jpg
Only the most clever of goats shall pass!
2013-06-01-017.jpg
Long, windy dirt roads with almost no cars; Just the way I like it!
2013-06-01-018.jpg
The flooding after the big rain takes its toll. Many of the roads become washed out and impassable for cars, whilst making for more technical mountain biking!
2013-06-01-022.jpg
I encountered far more animals than people and trucks. Aside from the goats, you might also be able to see the massive 3 metre snack in the bottom right corner. It was weaving up the side of the road with some sort of rodent in its mouth.
2013-06-01-027.jpg
I love water crossings and the rustic climbs on the other side!
2013-06-01-041.jpg
More dirt roads with no people, climbing up, over and back down to Mazunte.
2013-06-01-097.jpg
Happy to be riding on dirt without all the touring weight for a change!
2013-06-04-009.jpg
Another water crossing, before another big climb.
2013-06-04-026.jpg
A cloudy, smokey sunset looking SW about 15km northwest of Mazunte.
2013-06-04-048.jpg
The same clouds a few hills later.

Photos of Zipolite


un amanecer divino este pasado domingo en Zipolite


dalila strengthens

* Martes * Tuesdays * Ladie's Night * Free Cocktails * July 2 at 10:00pm in UTC-05 Playa Kabbalah in Puerto Escondido, Oaxaca






¿Quieres Bucear en Huatulco? La Sra. Silvia así lo hizo

Jimi Hendrix - Jimi Hendrix - Fire - Denver Pop 1969