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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

Wednesday, December 16, 2015

Where in the World Are William and Kelly...

Playa Zipolite. Welcome To The Beach Of The Dead!: Zipolite Where in the World Are William and Kelly...: Where in the World Are William and Kelly? A Journal of an Expat's Winter in Southeast Asia ...

Zipolite Where in the World Are William and Kelly? A Journal of an Expat's Winter in Southeast Asia





Sunday, January 23, 2011




Zipolite

We have made it to what certainly feels like the end of the road.  And in a way, it is.  A mile or so stretch of sandy beach wedged between two large rocky crags on each end, sheltering this little resort from the rest of the world.  This is Zipolite.  Fabled travelers hangout and the coolest spot of paradise you have yet to visit.  A guy from New Zealand we met on our second day sums up this place perfectly: "I came here for a week´s vacation... but that was two and a half months ago."
lassiez-faire
It makes for exciting swimming, though!

Our first night in Zipolite, we decide to rough it a bit and sleep in hammocks.  For only 70 pesos each, we secure the right to hang all night on the second floor of a mostly deserted hostel with only the crashing waves as company. 


This sounds wonderful and romantic and the stuff of dreams.  It isn´t.  Hammocks are generally fine for a nap, but a full night´s sleep is pushing it.  Neither of us can get comfortable and William has bad dreams all night and I don´t think I actually slept until I finally passed out from sheer exhaustion right after sunrise.  Oh well.  Mark that one off the list!

We amble into "town" - which is basically one street.  One block, actually.  A few beachwear shops, an internet cafe, some bars and restaurants, and handful of stores not selling much.  It is really hot in the middle of the day.  Everything is dusty.  No one wears shoes.  According to our hypotheosis that everyone is most likely stoned, most businesses keep hilariously irregular hours.  One or two will open in the mornings (but not every morning), a few more open around dinner time, a some don´t open for several days.  You may enjoy a nice dinner one night at a little sidewalk cafe, only to return the next night to see it completel abandonded as if it never existed.

A photo is worth a thousand words, they say.  So let me save a few here:



We find a new hostel, run by an ebuillent French expat named Sylviana.  She immediately welcomes us into her ramshackle little place, which is not much more than a few bamboo huts and some mosquito nets set around a tropical garden.  There are no floors here, one or two lightbulbs, and the sanitation is unmentionable.  But we love it and move in for three days.  We have our own hut with a palm thatched roof and a bed draped in mosquito netting.  You can hear the waves crash as you fall asleep at night.


tlayuda
We are relaxed, blissful, and happy.  But we have to move on.

Oh!  And I found some real, green broccoli.  We took a walk for a few miles to a neighboring town and there it was.  Sitting there waiting for me.  I paid 8 pesos and took him home and cooked him up.  Scrambeled with some eggs and leftover spaghetti.  (We´ve had to get pretty creative with our survival cooking here...)

Up next... Zipolite to Pochutla to San Cristobal de las Casas.....

Monday, December 14, 2015

Playa Zipolite. Welcome To The Beach Of The Dead!: The Definitive Xmas Mix - The best 50 Christmas tr...

Playa Zipolite. Welcome To The Beach Of The Dead!: The Definitive Xmas Mix - The best 50 Christmas tr...: The Definitive Xmas Mix - The best 50 Christmas tracks over 50 years By  Conor Ward    FOLLOW 263 2h3 The Definitive Xmas Mix - Th...

Playa Zipolite Instagram Foto scattate e video registrati presso "Playa Zipolite" su Instagram.


Playa Zipolite
Foto scattate e video registrati presso "Playa Zipolite" su Instagram.

Zipolite, Oaxaca Mexico Instagram Фото и видео, сделанные в месте «Zipolite, Oaxaca Mexico», в Instagram

Zipolite, Oaxaca Mexico
Фото и видео, сделанные в месте «Zipolite, Oaxaca Mexico», в Instagram

I Just Want To Be A Unicorn Splay Danmark

I Just Want To Be A Unicorn





Thursday, December 10, 2015

Roller Coaster by Vanessa Deliz featuring David Archuleta

Roller Coaster by Vanessa Deliz featuring David Archuleta





DJ Earworm Mashup - United State of Pop 2015 (50 Shades of Pop) Dj Earworm

DJ Earworm Mashup - United State of Pop 2015 (50 Shades of Pop)





Exploring CALI, Colombia: Salsa Dancing & Amazing Graffiti Art Gabriel Traveler

Exploring CALI, Colombia: Salsa Dancing & Amazing Graffiti Art




The Prayer - David Archuleta & Nathan Pacheco #ASaviorIsBorn David Archuleta

The Prayer - David Archuleta & Nathan Pacheco #ASaviorIsBorn






Bad year for growers of coffee and sorghum Climate change blamed for rare form of roya fungus and yellow aphids




Bad year for growers of coffee and sorghum

Climate change blamed for rare form of roya fungus and yellow aphids

  11  1
The unpredictability of the effects of climate change have environmentalists and others worried about the future, but minute shifts in weather patterns have already been registered and the effects have been all too clear for coffee growers this season.
Rare pests and ailments have severely affected coffee and sorghum crops in the state of Oaxaca and as far as the Agriculture, Fisheries and Aquacaulture Secretary is concerned, climate change is to blame for the losses suffered by local producers.
Jorge Carrasco Altamirano reported this week that coffee production is down 40% because of a rare and very aggressive variety of roya fungus, or coffee leaf rust.
The losses to the coffee industry are estimated at several million pesos, said Carrasco, as production dropped between 80,000 and 100,000 quintals (a unit of weight equal to 100 kilograms).
The harvest began in November and continues until February, but losses of between 30 and 40% have already been registered, which in the long run will negatively affect the industry’s financial health.
“The federal government has pledged 30 million pesos (US$ 1.8 million) to save coffee crops from this problem. Let’s hope that it becomes more than just a promise,” said the secretary.
An alliance of local governments and agriculture authorities said a month ago the harvest would be the worst in the state’s history. Spokesman Jaime Martínez Ayala, the mayor of Pluma Hidalgo, blamed the state government for lack of action to combat the roya fungus despite meetings that began last February.
Sorghum farmers have not been spared either. Crops in the Isthmus of Tehuantepec were attacked by yellow aphids, which have never been seen in the state.
Farmers in the region lost all their production, said Carrasco, adding that the state government is looking for the means to compensate them. “We’re providing them with technical assistance so they can salvage their lands and plant a pest-resistant strain next year.”
Without specifying the causes, Carrasco also reported that corn production is below expectations, currently yielding only 600 tonnes per year, rather less than the minimum expectation of 800 tonnes. But Carrasco said that production should be at normal levels by next year.

9 hours - no electricity — Zipolite, Mexico News reader 9 hours - no electricity — Zipolite, Mexico.


9 hours - no electricity — Zipolite, Mexico
9 hours - no electricity — Zipolite, Mexico.

Flag of Mexico  Pacific Coast
Wednesday, December 9, 2015

 
 
Plenty of clouds this morning!  Lightning flashes for quite a while last night, but no rain here.  Looked like it was to the east.  

 
Moving on in the morning.  Going to check out one last beach area: Huatulco.  The Mexican tourism board designated, and began development of, this area for tourism ( same as Los Cabos, Cancun, and others).  Don't know if I'll be able to afford to stay anywhere nearby: I'm running right up against their busiest time - Christmas.  Did a little research yesterday and found some reasonable room prices.  Need to go to Pochutla first: need money and drugs (doesn't everybody down here?)  

 Electricity died at 8am.  Didn't get it back 'til 5pm.  

No internet - read all day.  Finished another story.  When I got the internet back, I went shopping for free kindle books.  I'm set for a little while now.  

I mentioned that the surf was loud here: sometimes like the rumble of thunder, even as loud as a jet engine.  I like having my door open all the time, even at night, though sometimes the surf will wake me.  Found that shutting my door and window shuts out about 90% of the sound: pretty good doors and windows!

 

Sunset was okay.  Nothing too exciting.  


Blog's done.  Start a new book.  Go to bed. 

ZipoliteSal Y Pimiento的圖片 TripAdvisor On the beach, Zipolite, Mexico. Zipolite排名第3 (共23 家餐廳). | 共54 則評論 ... 舉報不合適內容. Sal Y Pimiento, Zipolite照片 (Barbara C, 2015年11月).


20151031_180520-01_large.jpg - ZipoliteSal Y Pimiento的圖片
On the beach, Zipolite, Mexico. Zipolite排名第3 (共23 家餐廳). | 共54 則評論 ... 舉報不合適內容. Sal Y Pimiento, Zipolite照片 (Barbara C, 2015年11月).


此 Sal Y Pimiento 的照片由 TripAdvisor 免費提供