Translate

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, December 22, 2014

Top 10 hostel rules: the don’ts of staying in a dorm room

http://www.lonelyplanet.com/travel-tips-and-articles/top-10-hostel-rules-the-donts-of-staying-in-a-dorm-room?affil=EML_EDITORIALNEWS_98


Top 10 hostel rules: the don’ts of staying in a dorm room

Staying in a dorm room with strangers can be a whole lot of fun, although it does come with challenges – cacophonous snoring, intimate smooching and offensive odours. Here are some handy tips to make your hostelling experience all the better.
'Shall we flip a coin to decide who sleeps on these moss-covered rocks?' Compromise is key to getting along with your fellow hostellers. Image by Jupiterimages / Getty Images'Shall we flip a coin to decide who sleeps on these moss-covered rocks?' Compromise is key to getting along with your fellow hostellers. Image by Jupiterimages / Getty Images

Don’t treat shared bathrooms like a spa

Picture the scene. After standing in the corridor for over 15 minutes waiting to use one of the hostel’s only two showers, another four people have joined the queue. The feisty hosteller in front of you is banging on the shower door. After what seems like an eternity, someone steps out of the cubicle amid billowing hot steam. But when you step in and switch the shower on, the water is barely a trickle. Somehow, gingerly splashing your nether regions with chilly water wasn’t the deep cleanse you were hoping for.
Pro tip: shower outside the rush hours of early mornings and late evenings to avoid queuing. If you’re guilty of long indulgent soaks, try to remember your equally sweaty and smelly bunkmates need a shower too.

Don’t be the late-night rustler

A rustling sound breaks the silence that has finally descended on your dorm room. Your bunkmate has leaped off the bed above you and is performing a series of packing rituals at the ungodly hour of 4am. One by one, he sorts his trainers, shoes and sandals into colour-coded plastic bags. Only when he finally leaves for his early-morning train does quiet return… that is, until a soundtrack of snoring erupts from the opposite side of the room.
Pro tip: when it comes to other people’s nocturnal noise, earplugs can be a great defence. If you’re noisy yourself, spare your roommates by packing the night before an early start, and use a backpack with a side-zip to access your stuff (it cuts down the rummaging). And if you’re known for breathing a tad heavily, try to doze off in your less snore-prone position.
Sure you can keep your rucksack and flammable clothing right next tothe lamp, it's not like there aren't clearly marked fire exits... oh. Image by Gabe Rogel / Aurora / Getty ImagesSure you can keep your rucksack and flammable clothing right next to the lamp, it's not like there aren't clearly marked fire exits... oh. Image by Gabe Rogel / Aurora / Getty Images

Think before you hit the light switch

You’re just about to drift off to sleep when the dorm room light comes on. With a single flick of a switch, your new hostel friends just became foes. Hostels are packed with jet lagged and exhausted travellers, so light switch wars are a common source of tension. If you find yourself in the crossfire,  try to win over your roommates by staying positive and friendly. If negotiation and common courtesy fail, try and see the humour in the situation – you’ll be telling the story of your jerk roommates for weeks after your trip.
Pro tip: need to navigate back to your bunk after lights-out? Use your phone as a torch, or download a torch app (just don’t flash it in your roommates’ faces). And if you’re the one blinded by the lights, consider packing a pair of eyeshades.
'Off': it's hostel speak for 'there's people sleeping in here, numb-nuts.' Image by Paul Cross / CC BY 2.0'Off': it's hostel speak for 'there's people sleeping in here, numb-nuts'. Image by Paul Cross / CC BY 2.0

Leave romance at the dorm room door

An unfamiliar sound wakes you, followed by heavy panting – a couple in the bunk next to yours have had a caipirinha too many. They are shushing each other, she lets out a little giggle, and a full re-enactment of R Kelly’s Bump n’ Grind is unfolding. When travellers are on the road for a while, sparks inevitably fly. But there are better venues for romance (a capsule hotel or behind a sand dune?)
Pro tip: guilty of a little dorm room romance? No matter how quiet you think you are, you can bet your life your roommates are reaching for the popcorn. Keep it classy and find a different location. If it’s your bunkmates dancing the horizontal tango, see the next section for ways to decelerate their romance.

Lay off the beans

A powerful odour wafts through the dorm. A thunderous fart has awoken the entire room. While the other travellers shift uneasily under their sheets, you’re left wondering whether to stay put, leap for the door or start lighting matches. And you push from your mind the awful possibility that you might be the culprit...
Pro tip: we’re all human. But in close quarters an ‘excuse me’ goes a long way, as does quarantining yourself in a bathroom stall if you’ve had an especially heavy night on the refried beans. If you’re the victim, some passive-aggressive spraying of aerosol deodorant should make your point.
Delicious beans. But for some reason, eating them right before bed has a tendency to, ahem, backfire. Image by Jessica Rossi / CC BY-SA 2.0Delicious beans. But for some reason, eating them right before bed has a tendency to, ahem, backfire. Image by Jessica Rossi / CC BY-SA 2.0

Keep your clothes on

You’re happily packing away when a furry shape pops into your field of vision: a stray wombat, or the elusive yeti? No, just your roommate strolling around butt naked. Seeing an exceptionally hirsute backside on the bunk below me first thing in the morning wasn’t the best way to start my day when I shared a room with a nudist in an Australian hostel, and some tact is often required to ask them not to leave it all hanging out.
Pro tip: wanting to ‘get back to nature’ doesn’t equate to nudity, whether you’re male or female, average-looking or a love-god. Be sensitive that your neighbours might have differing comfort levels when it comes to big ol’ naked you – and don’t be shy about offering your exhibitionist bunkmates a towel.

Don’t be the guy with the phone

A loud ringtone breaks the early evening chatter, sending a wave of eye-rolling around the room. Your roommate frantically rummages in his backpack. The ring tone reaches a crescendo of vibrations and tinny Nokia beeps. He eventually retrieves it and lies back on his bed, squealing down the phone in excitement to his family back home.
Pro tip: leave your phone on vibrate, especially in the evenings. And if you’re going to answer, take it outside. It may be important to you, but no one else wants their socialising (or sleep) interrupted by what uncle Max has to tell you from back home.
Your dorm room should not look like a Mumbai laundry. Image by Andreas Eldh / CC BY 2.0Your dorm room should not look like a Mumbai laundry. Image by Andreas Eldh / CC BY 2.0

Don’t be the dorm room slob

Your roommate is munching on her fifth pack of crisps as she lies on her bed, headphones in ears, bathrobe loosely wrapped around her. A gentle snow of crumbs drifts downwards as she dusts off her hands, descends from the bunk, and nimbly leaps over the heap of towels, travel guides and headphone cables that she’s dumped on the floor. Those lessons about tidiness you ignored while growing up? They’re coming back to haunt you.
Pro tip: in-room lockers are a godsend when it comes to stashing your gear safely in one place – use them, and nudge any slovenly roommates in their direction. If that fails, commenting loudly on how you’ve always wanted a pair of those expensive headphones is a good way to get your roommates to stow their gear out of sight.

Don’t lounge with laundry

The crisp-muncher is back, and this time she’s got laundry. She hangs her just-washed trekking gear around the dorm room, looping bras around bedposts and stringing her socks over the windowsill. As if that musty smell wasn’t enough, a pair of damp knickers has just fallen onto your pillow. Perfect.
Pro tip: most hostels have drying rooms where guests are encouraged to hang their wet clothes. Don’t be shy to remind your roomies if their smalls are decorating your bunk. If the drying racks are full, it’s a nice gesture to fold other people’s clothes (instead of tossing them to the side) before hanging yours up.
Donning the shower cap too early: rookie mistake if you're a hosteller. Image by Michael Coghlan / CC BY-SA 2.0Donning the shower cap too early: rookie mistake if you're a hosteller queuing for a shared bathroom. Image by Michael Coghlan / CC BY-SA 2.0

No pinching

You’ve just got back from a long trek in the Peruvian Andes and you’re itching (literally) for a shower. You grab your shampoo, reach for your towel – and your hand brushes thin air. Someone has taken your one and only towel. While borrowing someone’s belongings is fine if you have their consent, taking them altogether is quite another.
Pro tip: your moral compass knows the difference between using a squirt of someone’s shampoo in moments of desperate need, and taking an item that isn’t yours (side note: that towel has likely rubbed areas you would otherwise not go anywhere near). If you need to borrow, ask. And try to keep your own essentials out of sight.


Read more: http://www.lonelyplanet.com/budget-travel/best-of-budget-travel/content/travel-tips-and-articles/top-10-hostel-rules-the-donts-of-staying-in-a-dorm-room#ixzz3Mgd6neZn

Try2Fly - 2 Hours Special Mix [Dragonfly Radio,Greece]

Joe Cocker - You are so beautiful (nearly unplugged)

JOE COCKER -With A Little Help From My Friends- 1969 Woodstock..

Festival De Circo Mazunte 2015


5º Festival de Circo en Mazunte

5º Festival de Circo en Mazunte

When:

Saturday 21st February 2015 - Sunday 1st March 2015

Where:

Mazunte Oaxaca, Santa María Tonameca

Website:

http://www.festivalcircomazunte.com/ 

Blurb

ESPAÑOL:

El Festival de Circo en Mazunte, es un encuentro de intercambio formativo y artístico enfocado a potenciar el circo como una de las expresiones culturales de este lugar, por sí mismo de gran interés turístico y ecológico. Y que tiene como objetivo aportar un bien educativo a la comunidad y aumentar su riqueza cultural y de intercambio. Organizado siempre con consciencia ecológica y en predisposición de armonizar con el Medio Ambiente.

El Festival de Circo de Mazunte es un evento donde se juntan diferentes formas de expresión artística y artistas de diferentes nacionalidades.

Durante el encuentro, los amantes del circo tienen el privilegio de mejorar o (re)descubrir técnicas circenses y las noches del Festival son iluminadas por compañías invitadas y cabarets. A lo largo del día, los paseantes se cruzán con olimpiadas y espectáculos itinerantes.

Además Mazunte ofrece un entorno natural para practicar actividades como sesiones de Chi Kung y/o masajes tailandeses en la playa....

============================================================================================

ENGLISH:

The Circus Festival in Mazunte, is a gathering of educational and artistic exchange focused on enhancing the circus as one of the cultural expressions of this place, in itself of great tourist and ecological interest. And it aims to provide an educational good for the community and increase their wealth and cultural exchange. Always organised with ecological awareness and willingness to harmonise with the environment.

The Mazunte Circus Festival is an event where different art forms and artists from different nationalities meet.

During the meeting, circus lovers have the privilege of improving or (re)discover circus techniques and nights of the festival are illuminated by guest companies and cabarets. Throughout the day, passers cross Olympics and travelling shows.

In addition Mazunte offers a natural setting for activities such as Chi Kung sessions and / or Thai massage on the beach ....

Who's going

Are you involved with or will you attend 5º Festival de Circo en Mazunte? If so please log in or sign up to add yourself as an attendee.

5º Festival de Circo en Mazunte elsewhere on the Edge

Sunday, December 21, 2014

Oaxaca Day of the dead - Dia de muertos Santo Domingo

Avistamiento de Ballenas en Puerto Escondido, Oaxaca

Van Halen - For Unlawful Carnal Knowledge [Full Album]

Big Al - Let it Snow

3 HOURS Reiki Zen Meditation Music | Relax your mind, study and concentrate | Soothing Music

NIGHTTIME IN THE OAXACA MARKET

Oaxaca Rock Climbing Boarding and Surfing

Casa Oaxaca Zipolite kayak.co.jp Casa Oaxaca Zipoliteの概要。KAYAKでOaxaca、ZipoliteにあるCasa Oaxaca Zipoliteの最安価格を見つける。


Casa Oaxaca Zipolite
Casa Oaxaca Zipoliteの概要。KAYAKでOaxaca、ZipoliteにあるCasa Oaxaca Zipoliteの最安価格を見つける。


Playas-de-pochutla-zipolite

Kanc Cover - Winter Solstice 2014 [DI.FM.]

MERRY CHRISTMAS MIX 2014 By Dj Kosta

Bee Gees - The Bee Gees Megamix

Saturday, December 20, 2014

Car Insurance South of the Border Topics: Transportation Published: Thursday, December 11, 2014

Car Insurance South of the Border

Topics: Transportation
Published: Thursday, December 11, 2014
Car Accident
According to data published by the US Department for Transport, over 60 million personal vehicles cross the border between the US and Mexico each year, a statistic that provides an insight to the colossal volume of road traffic that moves back-and-fro across the US-Mexico border.
Some people cross the border by road into Mexico for short periods—to work, do business, or to shop—while others will travel further into the country, crossing the 35km ‘free zone’.  Regardless of whether you stay in the free zone or travel further into the Mexican interior, any coverage your US or Canadian insurance policy provides will be, at best, very limited.
Most US and Canadian insurance policies for personal vehicles provide damage cover to your own vehicle; however none of them provide the coverage you really need—liability to third parties.  They don’t because by law, they can’t: foreign insurance policies hold no legal jurisdiction in Mexico.
As a result, a brisk trade exists in the provision of specialized insurance policies to cover drivers, their vehicles, passengers, and property while the vehicle is in Mexico.  These insurance policies are crafted in association with Mexican insurance companies, so the policy is presented in English, sold to customers with vehicles registered in the USA or Canada, and sold by insurance brokers who are licensed north of the border—but the insurance policy is underwritten by a licensed Mexican insurer—and thus valid in Mexico.
Driving uninsured in Mexico can lead to problematic situations arising in the event of a mishap. In the event of a serious car accident, the drivers involved will be arrested pending investigations, even those not at fault.  A complex legal process will thus ensue, and if you are not adequately insured, you will have to raise your own bail bond; and if you are judged to be at fault, you will be personally liable to third parties, including payment for any damaged road infrastructure. Having an adequate insurance policy in place will settle your third party liabilities, and better policies will also provide legal counsel and bail bond payment as part of the coverages.
The process of choosing an insurance policy for driving in Mexico that suits your needs is made simple and straightforward by online quotation systems which capture key information about your vehicle and requirements, and provide a live price quote.  Insurance cover can be arranged instantly online and, in the event you need to make a claim, you will be able to dial a toll-free number and talk with English-speaking staff.
The most important consideration when choosing your policy is not the brokerage firm that supplies it, or the fees; it is the insurance company that underwrites your cover.  Less expensive policies might appear good value for money on the surface—but in the event of a claim, a cheaper policy could reveal its limitations. The key is to strike a balance, finding a policy that serves your personal needs, and which is backed by a solid underwriter.  Good insurance brokers will offer policies underwritten by reputable and established insurers.
For full details about how to be properly covered on your next road trip to Mexico, connect to our Mexico Auto Insurance Guide, from which you can also link to instant online quotes and arrange your cover online.

Preparing for Christmas and New Year in Mexico Topics: Festivals and Events Published: Sunday, December 14, 2014

Preparing for Christmas and New Year in Mexico

Published: Sunday, December 14, 2014
Mexico Christmas Flower
December is one of the busiest travel months of the year in Mexico, with no less than three major events taking place nationally, and dozens of regional events also taking place throughout the country. December 12 is Dia de Guadalupe: coupled with Easter, this date marks the most important religious event on Mexico’s calendar.
Posadas Navideñas lead up to Christmas, and the New Year festivities. For visitors to Mexico and service providers focused on delivering leisure experiences, the period between December 20th and January 6th is unquestionably the busiest time of year.
If you plan to take a leisure break in Mexico over Christmas and/or New Year, you’ll need to book early to get the best choice of hotels. As of December 15th, flight prices increase and flight seat availability becomes ever-scarce. Internal domestic flights also become sold-out on the run-up to Christmas, as do international flights out of Mexico—as Mexicans and foreign expatriates living here leave to holiday or visit their families abroad.  Build-in some extra time for your journey to and through the airport, as the seasonal swell in passenger numbers slows everything down.
Buses and bus stations also fill-up as Mexican families travel to be with their loved ones over the festive period.  Although you can usually show up and buy a bus ticket on the day you are traveling—and be assured of a seat on the next bus out—if you plan to travel over the Christmas period, we recommend you go to the bus station and buy your tickets in advance.
Mexico City tends to empty-out during the week between Christmas and New Year, as Mexicans leave the metropolis to holiday abroad, visit family in the provinces, or take a well-earned break at one of Mexico’s many beach resorts. If you want to see the capital without the rush of crowds and traffic, mark Christmas Week on your travel calendar (along with Easter Week, when the same is true).
If you’re planning to drive in Mexico over the Christmas period, be aware that roads out of Mexico City (to Cuernavaca, Puebla, Toluca and Queretaro) get jam-packed in the week leading up the Christmas, and roads leading back in to Mexico City can get jammed on any days between December 30th and January 6th as holiday makers return to work and school.