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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

Friday, November 6, 2015

Simon Patterson – Open Up 144 – 05.11.2015 By edmtunes

Simon Patterson – Open Up 144 – 05.11.2015

By edmtunes






OFFICIAL Somewhere over the Rainbow - Israel "IZ" Kamakawiwoʻole Mountain Apple Company Inc

OFFICIAL Somewhere over the Rainbow - Israel "IZ" Kamakawiwoʻole




Very cool!  Love you sir.  Peace.  ivanJ






Margarita - Performed by Israel "IZ" Kamakawiwo'ole









Día de los Muertos in Oaxaca stays true to its roots Arts & CultureTravelby Alysa Hullett - Nov 5, 2015

Día de los Muertos in Oaxaca stays true to its roots

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Dia de los muertos in Oaxaca stays true to its roots, and people from all over Mexico come to celebrate the sprits of those who have died. (Photo by Alysa Hullett.)
Dia de los muertos in Oaxaca stays true to its roots, and people from all over Mexico come to celebrate the sprits of those who have died. (Photo by Alysa Hullett)
In the sprawling Xoxocotlan cemetery nestled in Oaxaca, Mexico, people with painted skull faces drink beer, light incense and tell stories around the graves of their loved ones.
The candlelit gravesite boomed with sound — mariachi bands, personal stereos playing hits, laughter. Dozens of tents line the site’s fence, offering everything from refried beans and cheese tlayudas to hotdogs. People place marigolds, mezcal, sugar skulls and other gifts as offerings to the deceased.
While Day of the Dead, which spans from Nov. 1 to 2, has commercialized or turned Halloween-like elsewhere in Mexico, Oaxaca remains a bit truer to the celebration’s roots. No movie stars, nurses or conventional Disney princesses marched along in the parades or gathered at the bars.
Most people paint their faces like La Calavera Catrina, or the elegant skull, an ode to the zinc etching drawn in the early 1900s by the famous Mexican artist José Guadalupe Posada. The female skeleton, adorned with a typical hat worn by an upper-class French woman at the time, satires the Mexican natives who Posada thought were desperate to adopt European aristocratic culture.
A far cry from Halloween, Day of the Dead is a two-day celebration of the spirits of the dead. Traditionally, on the first day, All Saints Day, children invite the angelitos, or spirits of dead children, to return to visit. On the second day, families honor the adult spirits.
Artisan Juan Toribio, born and raised in Oaxaca, said the festival is primarily to “remember those who have passed together — to remember them every year, every year, every year, so they’ll never be forgotten.
“Every flower, loaf of bread or bottle of mezcal we leave for them serves as a beautiful gift,” Toribio said. “May they rest in peace.”
Cindy Ferrell, an English teacher from Seattle, said she understands how Americans may have trouble understanding the spirit of the festival. At home, celebrating death may sound morbid, but in Mexico and other Latin countries, the deep-seated tradition intends to honor both life and death.
Historians trace the festival’s origins to a centuries-old observance by the Aztecs. Thousands of years before that, indigenous groups in the country were thought to celebrate the death of ancestors with similar rituals.
Oaxaca has become somewhat of a hub for the event that draws visitors from all over. Ferrell said she came back to Oaxaca for a second time for the event because of the beauty of the traditions and culture.
“It’s incredible,” she said. “We have nothing like this at home. … People don’t even know where Halloween started.”
Benita Clemente, from the Mexican state of Mazatlán, travels to the festival each year to sell her vibrant, hand-woven bags and wallets. She said Oaxaca’s Día de Los Muertos celebration is special.
“Everyone comes here for it, because everyone loves it here,” she said. “All the cultures from all the different [Mexican] states can get together and share.”
Dia de los muertos in Oaxaca stays true to its roots, and people from all over Mexico come to celebrate the sprits of those who have died. (Photo by Alysa Hullett.)
Dia de los muertos in Oaxaca stays true to its roots, and people from all over Mexico come to celebrate the sprits of those who have died. (Photo by Alysa Hullett.)
Dia de los muertos in Oaxaca stays true to its roots, and people from all over Mexico come to celebrate the sprits of those who have died. (Photo by Alysa Hullett.)
Dia de los muertos in Oaxaca stays true to its roots, and people from all over Mexico come to celebrate the sprits of those who have died. (Photo by Alysa Hullett.)
Dia de los muertos in Oaxaca stays true to its roots, and people from all over Mexico come to celebrate the sprits of those who have died. (Photo by Alysa Hullett.)
Dia de los muertos in Oaxaca stays true to its roots, and people from all over Mexico come to celebrate the sprits of those who have died. (Photo by Alysa Hullett.)
Dia de los muertos in Oaxaca stays true to its roots, and people from all over Mexico come to celebrate the sprits of those who have died. (Photo by Alysa Hullett.)
Dia de los muertos in Oaxaca stays true to its roots, and people from all over Mexico come to celebrate the sprits of those who have died. (Photo by Alysa Hullett.)
Dia de los muertos in Oaxaca stays true to its roots, and people from all over Mexico come to celebrate the sprits of those who have died. (Photo by Alysa Hullett.)
Dia de los muertos in Oaxaca stays true to its roots, and people from all over Mexico come to celebrate the sprits of those who have died. (Photo by Alysa Hullett.)
Dia de los muertos in Oaxaca stays true to its roots, and people from all over Mexico come to celebrate the sprits of those who have died. (Photo by Alysa Hullett.)
Dia de los muertos in Oaxaca stays true to its roots, and people from all over Mexico come to celebrate the sprits of those who have died. (Photo by Alysa Hullett.)

(((Return to Instinct))) DUBSTEP SET IN AWESOME@Bar Take By dub-stracter 1 57m

(((Return to Instinct))) DUBSTEP SET IN AWESOME@Bar Take

By dub-stracter

157m




Foto de Oaxaca Expediciones - Day Tours: cañonismo desde Zipolite o Mazunte Oaxaca Expediciones - Day Tours Bahias de Huatulco, Huatulco, México Clasificado como N.º57 de 76 Atracciones en Huatulco | 108 opiniones “Excelente agencia” 30/08/2015 | “FUE UN DIA INCREIBLE” 09/07/2015

Foto de Oaxaca Expediciones - Day Tours: cañonismo desde Zipolite o Mazunte

Oaxaca Expediciones - Day Tours
Bahias de HuatulcoHuatulcoMéxico
Clasificado como N.º57 de 76 Atracciones en Huatulco
| 108 opiniones
Excelente agencia” 30/08/2015 | FUE UN DIA INCREIBLE” 09/07/2015


Esta foto de Oaxaca Expediciones - Day Tours es cortesía de TripAdvisor



Cuadros Decorativos: Zipolite

Cuadros Decorativos: Zipolite






KOSMIKSHAPE - ASTROPOLIS #21 TREMPLIN 2015 - DUB TECHNO By KOSMIKSHAPE

KOSMIKSHAPE - ASTROPOLIS #21 TREMPLIN 2015 - DUB TECHNO

By KOSMIKSHAPE






Dj Andersen - Love Deep Session Vol.14 By Evgeny Shamansky

Dj Andersen - Love Deep Session Vol.14

By Evgeny Shamansky





ZIPOLITE OAXACA FOTOS



A lot of travel writers allude to Zipolite as being the quintessential hippie or backpacker haven. And with many dirt-cheap cabanas available, even in the high season, it is that. But this kilometer and a half long beach actually attracts a much wider variety of people than that — surfers in search of good waves, gay bourgeois Mexicans looking for a safe vacation haven, and a lot of garden-variety alternative lifestyle families looking for an alternative to the beach resorts, just to name a few. All of which seem to be mingling happily among themselves. - See more at: http://www.oaxacanotes.com/Zipolite,_Oaxaca#sthash.qIkMkwGo.dpuf

http://www.oaxacanotes.com/Zipolite,_Oaxaca





Zipolite-Oaxaca


Heriberto Sandoval

Heriberto Sandovahttps://www.pinterest.com/heribertosandov/zipolite/















Thursday, November 5, 2015

How To Make Grasshopper Trail Mix With Oaxacan 'Chapulines' Huffington Post If you consider yourself a foodie and you want to take a trip, look no further than Oaxaca, one of Mexico's most important gastronomical hubs, for a ...

How To Make Grasshopper Trail Mix With Oaxacan 'Chapulines'
If you consider yourself a foodie and you want to take a trip, look no further thanOaxaca, one of Mexico's most important gastronomical hubs, for a ...

How To Make Grasshopper Trail Mix With Oaxacan 'Chapulines'

El Chapulin Colorado would be not be happy about this.





Posted: 11/03/2015 10:32 AM EST
If you consider yourself a foodie and you want to take a trip, look no further than Oaxaca, one of Mexico's most important gastronomical hubs, for a unique culinary experience.

The southwest state's cuisine is rooted in indigenous traditions that attract food tourists from across the world, including the Travel Channel's Andrew Zimmern. The host of "Bizarre Foods with Andrew Zimmern" traveled to the region to try several of its delicacies, including the specially seasoned chapulines, or grasshoppers.

In an exclusive clip for The Huffington Post, Hugo Sandoval and Roberto Perez of the Imalim company in Oaxaca show Zimmern the step-by-step process of how to properly cook grasshoppers. The business owners have studied the centuries-long "art" and tradition of preparing chapulines for more than 10 years, and are now attempting to ship their Oaxacan trail mix abroad.

Check it out below:


Jimi Hendrix - Freedom JimiHendrixVEVO

Jimi Hendrix - Freedom






Master Dee - Have a Nice Trip Vol 1 [Progressive Trance Mix] MrLemilica2

Master Dee - Have a Nice Trip Vol 1 [Progressive Trance Mix]






Pot gets green light from Supreme Court Ruling applies only to the four appellants, but opens door to legalization

Pot gets green light from Supreme Court

Ruling applies only to the four appellants, but opens door to legalization




A landmark Supreme Court ruling contradicting Mexican law opens the door to the legalization of marijuana.
By four votes to one, the court’s first chamber approved the cultivation, processing and possession of cannabis for personal use. However, the ruling will only apply to four activists – Josefina Ricaño Vàndala, Armando Santacruz González, José Pablo Girault and Juan Francisco Torres Landa Ruffo – who challenged the law by applying to set up a marijuana club in 2013 for recreational, non-commercial use.
They will now be able to proceed with their plans – knowing full well that in doing so they have successfully used the legal system to undermine the law against cannabis use.
However, the government stressed that the court ruling does not mean that anyone else is now free to cultivate cannabis for personal consumption and that the General Health Law outlawing marijuana still applies to others.
“The ruling will only apply to the persons it protects – the resolution of the first chamber does not legalize the supply or sale [of cannabis],” said Humberto Castellejos, legal counsel in the office of the president. “Growing it with any other objective, even for recreation, is a crime according to the law.”
Nevertheless, campaigners for legalization including the four activists who challenged the law, are optimistic that the ruling will pave the way for an eventual dismantling of Mexico’s strict marijuana laws.
“This is a tremendously powerful decision that could open the way for real change,” said Santacruz Gonzàlez. “We’ve made history. It’s the first hole in the dike.”
The ruling is the first of its kind and establishes a precedent for similar cases in future. Four more like it would establish jurisprudence and require the federal government to change Mexico’s cannabis laws.
Another legalization campaigner, Hector Aguilar Camín, also welcomed the ruling. “This is a watershed decision; we have to start separating the substance from the hell produced by its persecution,” he said in reference to Mexico’s drug wars, which have killed thousands of people.
“Our objective was always to change drug policy in this country, which is one of the main motors for the violence, corruption and the violation of human rights in Mexico,” said Santacruz Gonzàlez.
Mexican law permits possession of up to five grams of cannabis, but activists say this is a halfway measure as few users buy such small amounts.
Despite the media coverage the case has garnered, and the estimated US $1.5 billion a year marijuana generates for the criminal cartels that produce and traffic it, cannabis use in Mexico is believed to be low – about 2% of the population according to one estimate in 2011.
Moreover, a recent poll put the number of Mexicans in favor of legalizing it at just one in five, as opposed to 77% who opposed such a measure.
Supreme Court Judge Arturo Zaldivar, who proposed the ruling, based his argument on the human right to “personal development” and recreation that did not harm others. However, Zaldivar’s 88-page report did not make any reference to cannabis seeds, an omission cited by the one judge who opposed the ruling, Jorge Mario Pardo Rebolledo.
“How does one guarantee the right to exercise consumer rights. Where are they going to get the seeds from?” he asked, suggesting that the four activists would still be breaking the law by seeking to acquire cannabis seeds to facilitate personal cultivation.
Source: Milenio (sp), El Universal (sp)



Sicht auf Puerto Angel 104

Sicht auf Puerto Angel 104

Beschreibung von Ferienwohnung, in Playa Zipolite, Mexiko

Aussichtspunkt Puerto Angel 104

Wenn Sie von einem tropischen Paradies träumen, halten Sie von Aquamarin Farben träumen. Oder der feurige Rosa und Rot des Pazifischen Ozeans Sonnenuntergang. Dann sind Sie der Blickwinkel bei Puerto Angel, Mexiko führende Destination träumen. Viewpoint ist ein Mosaik aus Stimmungen und Erinnerungen. Es ist die sinnliche Brise vom südlichen Pazifischen Ozean und das malerische Dorf von Puerto Angel, Mexiko. Es ist die herzliche und warme Menschen, die Sie herzlich willkommen in mit offenen Armen. Es ist ein ein von einer Art Entwicklungs auf einer spektakulären Halbinsel BIETEN endlose Aussicht. Verbinden Sie dieses mit Meilen von pulverförmigen, einsame Strände und Sie werden sehen, warum diese Region von Mexiko ist schnell zu den nächsten großen Ziel. Sie würden nicht zu besitzen irgendwo sonst in Mexiko ... Viewpoint am Puerto Angel träumen.
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  • Für Kinder geeignet
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Inseriert seit 2013
 
Kontaktsprache: Englisch





Giuseppe Ottaviani – GO On Air 167 – 02.11.2015 By edmtunes

Giuseppe Ottaviani – GO On Air 167 – 02.11.2015

By edmtunes






Customers Forced into Same Changing Room - Throwback Thursday Just For Laughs Gags

Customers Forced into Same Changing Room - Throwback Thursday