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

Wednesday, January 21, 2015

Travel > Americas Mexico's street food: Beyond burritos Yolanda Zappaterra travelled to Oaxaca for a taste of savoury chocolate sauce, slow-cooked pork stew and toasted grasshoppers

Mexico's street food: Beyond burritos

Yolanda Zappaterra travelled to Oaxaca for a taste of savoury chocolate sauce, slow-cooked pork stew and toasted grasshoppers




With its elegant colonial buildings, an impressive arts and crafts scene, top-class museums and markets selling mounds of mole (sauce) and the state’s other favourite food, chocolate,  Oaxaca is a city that both looks and tastes  good. The regional cuisine encompasses fiery, earthy mountain dishes and delicate seafood, crowned by stand-out restaurants such as  Casa Oaxaca – one of the two Oaxacan establishments on the World’s 50 Best Restaurants list. The other is Pitiona, whose chef Jose Manuel Baños Rodriguez has done stints  at elBulli and Arzak.
To make up for missing the radish fest, I delve into Pitiona’s six-course tasting menu at a courtyard table with a kitchen view. I watch chefs craft complex dishes such as sopa de fideos, a noodle and bean soup that is presented with delicate globes of cheese that burst into liquid in the mouth. Each course is paired with a Mexican wine, craft beer or mezcal from small producers that now thrive as part of the country’s burgeoning gourmet scene.
I also sample dishes at Casa Oaxaca, El Típico, La Biznaga and La Olla. The range of flavours, spices and textures is as varied as the ingredients, which include delicate squash blossoms and mole chichilo (beef stock, chillies, onion, garlic and lime-cured flour). However, to get to the heart of Oaxacan cuisine, I need to visit the food markets.
Here I find the country’s finest selection of moles – salsas made from a base of black chillies, chocolate and sesame seeds to create mole negros; and more unusually from yellow or red chillies, tomatillos and fresh herbs, or ground pumpkin seeds, to create moles such as amarillo, coloradito, salsa verde or pipián.
At Mercado Sánchez Pascuas, I join scores of Oaxaqueños at tiny family-run fondas (food stalls) to try some of the seven varieties  of moles on offer, memelas (tortillas topped with lard, cheese and salsa verde) and grilled empanadas – pastry filled with fiery chicken and yellow mole sauce. During the rainy season, huitlacoche, a fungus that grows on corn, is added to the mix to give an earthy flavour quite unlike anything else. These antojitos, or little snacks, are as cheap and homely as Mexican food gets, but just as delicious as refined restaurant dishes.
At the shops along downtown’s Mina Street, I watch hair-netted, masked men toil over industrial mills to grind cocoa beans into chocolate and moles, all available to sample and buy for the equivalent of pennies. Just north, at Mercado 20 de Noviembre, the huge clouds of curling smoke and burly butchers pressing me towards slabs covered with wafer-thin meat may make the huge pasillo de carnes asadas (passage of grilled meats) look like a modern Hieronymous Bosch scene of hell. However, it smells like heaven – the meats are grilled and served in beef or pork tacos. Equally appealing are the signature Oaxacan tlayudas – huge baked corn tortillas topped in the manner of pizzas with everything from pork lard and the local stringy, mozzarella-like cheese, quesillo, to avocado and tomatoes.
Across the road at Oaxaca’s oldest market, Benito Juárez, women sit beside mounds of chapulines – grasshoppers toasted with garlic, lime juice and salt. They are an acquired taste which, despite two or three attempts, I never get the hang of. More palatable, I’m assured later, are the caviar-like escamoles: ant larvae. Another local – and cheaper – flavour is nopal, the slimy prickly pear cactus leaves that offer another distinctive taste.
I’m much more enamoured of the agua frescas on sale everywhere – flavoured, natural waters. I chose a Jamaica – made using dried hibiscus flowers – from the huge selection at Casilda’s stall in Benito Juarez market, where the crowds are three-deep and the everyday pastel-coloured plastic jugs belie the beauty of their contents. I join the throng, knowing that it will be worth the wait, and that in half an hour’s time, I’ll be ready for another antojito – though maybe not the grasshoppers.
Getting there
Mexico City is served from Heathrow by British Airways (0844 493 0787; ba.com) and Aeroméxico (0800 977 5533;aeromexico.uk.com). Volaris (volaris.com),  Aeroméxico and Interjet (interjet.com) fly daily from Mexico City to Oaxaca.
Eating and drinking there
Pitiona, Allende 108 (00 52 951 514 0690; pitiona.com).
Casa Oaxaca, García Vigil 407 (00 52 951 514 4173;casaoaxaca.com.mx).
El Típico, Zarate 100, off  El Llano square (00 52 951  518 6557;facebook.com/ RestauranteTipicoOaxacaEnMexico).
Biznaga, García Vigil 512 (00 52 951 516 1800;labiznaga.com.mx).
La Olla, Reforma 402-1 (00 52 951 516 6668; laolla.com.mx).
Mercado Sánchez Pascuas, Porfirio Díaz and Callejón Hidalgo.
Mercado 20 de Noviembre, Ignacio Aldama and 20 de Noviembre.
Mercado Benito Juárez, Flores Magon and Colon.
More information
visitmexico.com
On 10 February, Alejandro Ruiz, from Casa Oaxaca, will be cooking in London at Wahaca, Covent Garden in the the first of a Culinary Trip Through Mexico series. Four-course meal with coffee, £40 (wahaca.co.uk/blog).




C.C. Catch Long Mix C.C. Catch Long Mix By DJ-POWERMASTERMIX Dj Mix

Cabana

Tonight's The Night (Gonna Be Alright) - Rod Stewart (1976) HQ Audio Remaster HD Video

Region De Pochutla

Tuesday, January 20, 2015

What To Do If You Lose Your Wallet While Traveling by paradise

New post on This Way To Paradise-Beaches, Islands, And Travel




What To Do If You Lose Your Wallet While Traveling

by paradise
Whether you are traveling locally or abroad, getting away from the usual places and routine is always a thrill. Ideally, you have all your travel documents in order if you are traveling abroad, and you have taken care of the finances. However, things don't always go according to plan when you are traveling. One of the worst things that can happen is that you lose your wallet. It can create a real crisis if your credit or debit cards were in there as well as travel documents like your passport or visa.
Whether you misplaced your wallet somewhere or you got mugged, there are precautionary steps that you need to take immediately. One is to cancel your credit or debit cards. Submitting a report before an ATM card is used means that you have no liability whatsoever. With credit cards, the same rule applies but your liability is limited to a certain amount if you do not submit a report.
If you are abroad, you'll need to report to the Embassy or Consulate of your country. They will verify your identity and help you with the process of replacing your passport and visa so that you can go back home.
You should also take the precaution of initiating a fraud alert from one of the credit reporting bureaus. This way, should someone try to take a loan in your name or initiate another large transaction, you will first be called to confirm the transaction.

What about emergency funds?

If you are in your country, you can dial a customer care line, report the loss to your financial institution and they can rush new cards to you after the cancel the missing ones, perhaps by courier. If you are abroad, you can make an emergency collect call to your credit or debit card company.
Financial institutions will handle situations differently most if not all will want to do all that they can to help their clients in a situation where they have no funds at all. One quick solution is for finances to be remitted to you online. If you are in a situation where you have no money at all even for your next meal or take a cab, you can ask that finances are remitted to you online.
The financial company will check the status of your credit or debit card and they will usually be perfectly willing to send money to you online. You can access your funds as soon as they are remitted online and you can go on with your trip. If not your financial institution, then you can always call on a friend or family member and ask them to send money to your online account as you wait for replacement cards.
Apart from being fast and convenient, international money transfer services can be used in most countries in the world. Neither do you have to worry about cost. The transaction is done electronically so it is very cheap. You don't have to worry about expensive fees, especially in another currency.

Err on the side of caution

You may not see the need to have an online account. Even though, open one just as a precaution. You can even put some funds in it so that if you lose the cards in your wallet, all you will to access your emergency funds is a computer or internet-enabled cell phone. To this end, Azimo is one of the fastest, safest and cheapest international money transfer services available.
photo credit: GuySie via photopin cc

A peso for a taco was too much Juana Reyes and fellow citizens took up arms two years ago in Tepalcatepec

http://mexiconewsdaily.com/news/peso-taco-much/?utm_source=Mexico+News+Daily&utm_campaign=22df5c9c10-Jan+20&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_f1536a3787-22df5c9c10-348153685

A peso for a taco was too much

Juana Reyes and fellow citizens took up arms two years ago in Tepalcatepec

  6  0
It was a one-peso surcharge on the price of a taco that drove Juana Reyes to take up arms nearly two years ago in the town of Tepalcatepec.
After 12 years of oppression by the criminal gang Caballeros Templarios, Reyes had had enough.
She had decided to open a taquería in January 2013 when a man paid her a visit: the Caballeros would take one peso for each taco she sold.
“I felt a boundless rage,” recalled Reyes in an interview with Milenio.
At a subsequent meeting of taco vendors, she asked gang representatives how they would know how many tacos she had sold. The charge would be based on the amount of meat they purchased from the butchers, whose sales would be monitored, they explained.
In the end, Reyes paid not a single peso.
On February 24 of that year, with a megaphone in hand, she stood in the town’s central square and called on the citizens to take up arms and defend themselves. A civil defense movement was born and Reyes became it spokesperson and earned the name, La Comandanta.
By all accounts the first year was not an easy one. “It was a year of terror because every day we went out we were scared we wouldn’t return.”
For a dozen years the municipality of 15,000 in the Tierra Caliente region of Michoacán had suffered under the yoke of the drug gang that operated with impunity, dealing in extortion and violence and death.
They charged levies and kidnapped, and stole vehicles, plots of land and houses. But now they’re gone, said Reyes, and economic growth has come instead: Tepalcatepec is in peace.
The same cannot be said for other communities in Tierra Caliente, such as La Ruana where two rival community police leaders had a shoot-out December 16 that left 11 dead. Reyes said the difference in her community is that they made their agreements with the federally-appointed security commissioner, Alfredo Castillo, and lived by them.
They put down their arms as civil defense militia and joined the officially-sanctioned Fuerza Rural. But in other towns there were those who did not want a pact with the government and had their own interests to serve.
Sooner or later, says Reyes, that will change and all of Tierra Caliente will be at peace.
Today, Juana Reyes is no longer the militia leader nor is she a member of the new community police force. And the taco stand never did get off the ground.
An agricultural engineer by training, she has embarked upon a project that was a dream for several years, but only a dream as long as the Caballeros Templarios were around.
By March her artisanal cheese-making cooperative, Tepemich, will employ its 12 members along with five other local residents.
And not a single peso will go to the Caballeros Templarios.
- See more at: http://mexiconewsdaily.com/news/peso-taco-much/?utm_source=Mexico+News+Daily&utm_campaign=22df5c9c10-Jan+20&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_f1536a3787-22df5c9c10-348153685#sthash.LqvE0cPB.dpuf

SURF | Dave Rastovich | Magic Carpets

Sunday, January 18, 2015

Zipolite is a small town on the Mexican Pacific Coast in the state of Oaxaca. It has one of the best and most famous nudist beaches in Mexico, visited by foreign tourists who enjoy sports in the open sea, about two kilometers long, golden sand, moderate slope and warm clear waters with greenish-blue .

http://www.turismoenfotos.com/4186:playa-de-zipolite?dim=2


Fullness Fullness Ft. Refuelled - 123 (un-Official Preview) (W.I.P)

Timelapse Salina cruz-Ventosa Oaxaca

Buenos y soleados días! #Oaxaca #Zipolite #Morning #Beach #beach #oaxaca #zipolite #morning

Buenos y soleados días! #Oaxaca #Zipolite#Morning #Beach




Long Relaxing and Sleep Music | Relaxation Music by RELAX CLUB

Buceo en Huatulco, feliz 2014

Fresh, local coconut oil is super-tempting, but when I hit the beach I stick with

lipglossandabackpack
14 hours ago
Fresh, local coconut oil is super-tempting, but when I hit the beach I stick with sunscreen, thanks! #beauty #skincare #spf#Mexico #Oaxaca #Zipolite #healthy#natural #organic #beach #plage #playa#travel #backpacking



10 Hour Gentle Rain Sound for Sleep, Relaxation and Study (Rainy Black Screen) by RELAX CHANNEL

#dog taking a beak after swimming #Zipolite #oaxaca #mexico










#dog taking a beak after swimming#Zipolite #oaxaca#mexico

Playa Nudista Zipolite Oaxaca By Mel Figueroa


Hashashin - Psymba (VA 5th Dimension / Northern Psylight Records)

Hashashin - Magnetic Sphere (EP Acoustic Energy / Green Tree Records)

Packing Hacks

(Photo: Caroline Costello)
Discover how to get organized, travel light, and bring absolutely everything you'll need (and nothing you won't) with our 10 rules for packing the perfect weekend bag. ... read more»
To become the lightest version of your traveling self, you'll likely have to rethink your packing habits and get into the nitty-gritty of lightening your load. ... read more»
(Photo: Caroline Costello)
Packing Hacks challenge: Can you pack everything you'll need for a week on the road in just one (airline-approved) piece of luggage? Yes, you can! We'll show you how. ... read more»
(Photo: Getty Images)
Choosing the perfect carry-on bag isn't easy. But we can help: From price to size, from form to function, these are the things you need to look for when picking out the best bag for your trip and style of travel. ... read more»
(Photo: Getty Images)
Let's talk junk. Suitcase junk, that is, and how to control it. Drop the clutter that weighs you down with our straightforward strategies for suitcase organization. ... read more»
(Photo: Getty Images)
Rolling vs. folding. Cubes vs. bags. Packing is tougher than you think. After all, it's not just what you should bring, it's how you should bring it. Read on for a packing primer. ... read more»
(Photo: Shutterstock)
There are so many suitcase options out there, and it can get pretty overwhelming. So how do you know what to look for when shopping for a new carry-on or checked bag? We're here to help. ...read more»
We're celebrating the New Year with a 31-day series devoted to helping you become an expert packer! Each day, we'll offer advice on how to pack smarter, and we'll give you opportunities to win fabulous prizes along the way. ... read more»