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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

Saturday, January 7, 2017

Celebrate Kings Day with rosca de reyes Mexico News Daily At the market in the Zapotec village of Teotitlán del Valle, Oaxaca, where I live, the bread section is given over to roscas. “The recipe is a secret.


Celebrate Kings Day with rosca de reyes
At the market in the Zapotec village of Teotitlán del Valle, Oaxaca, where I live, the bread section is given over to roscas. “The recipe is a secret.

Celebrate Kings Day with rosca de reyes

Traditional and delicious bread best served with hot chocolate



For a sweet start to the new year you can’t beat the Mexican tradition of Three Kings Day, a festive holiday held January 6 that officially marks the end of the 12 days of Christmas and pays tribute to the Three Wise Men bearing gifts for the baby Jesus.
Before the invasion from El Norte by Santa Claus, along with sparkling lights and gift giving on December 25, Mexican families sat around the dining table tearing off hunks of rosca de reyes and into dipping them into steaming cups of hot chocolate, usually made with water. Many still do.
Rosca de reyes, literally the kings’ wreath, is a yeast dough enriched with whole eggs. A treat of baked deliciousness, it is laden with candied fruits and sometimes nuts and the best are made with pure butter.
The bread comes in various circumferences, round and elliptical. Bakers use their own creative ingenuity to embellish the decoration but each year, it seems, the rosca becomes more elaborate.
This year I saw the loaves topped with chocolate cookie dough, reminiscent of the concha, Mexico’s favorite breakfast sweet roll.
January 6 is a day of visiting, too. Godparents, the padrinos who were asked by the parents to sponsor a child’s baptism, will usually visit their godchildren today. Like the Three Wise Men, they bring gifts, a rosca de reyes and chocolate for making the hot drink.
They will sit a while, dip bread into hot chocolate, exchange news, bounce babies on knees or talk to the grandparents. No one is in a hurry. Relationships take time.
At the market in the Zapotec village of Teotitlán del Valle, Oaxaca, where I live, the bread section is given over to roscas. “The recipe is a secret. I will go to my grave with it,” said a woman selling roscas at a popular puesto, or stall, when I asked her to share the ingredients. I assured her I wasn’t asking for the recipe. Nevertheless, she was stalwart.
Hints of the ingredients came at my next stop. Elisa Vicente Martínez, who speaks perfect English, advised me that the bakers in her family use flour, eggs, water, butter, yeast and sugar.  She, too, would not give away the family recipe.
Her husband and mother-in-law carry on a long family tradition. Elisa, who grew up in Moorpark, California, returned to the village three years ago at age 17 to get married. She lives and works with her husband’s family, as is the tradition.
Some families use a mix of vegetable oil and butter, perhaps fewer eggs. You can often tell because the dough is more white than yellow, a sign of the difference in quantity and quality of ingredients.
In this village, the cost of the rosca de reyes may only vary by five pesos from one vendor to the next. The smallest is 10 pesos for a six-inch-diameter bread. That’s about 50 cents US. The price goes up to 150 (US $7.50) for a bread to serve a family of 10. In Oaxaca city, a rosca de reyes can sell for 240 pesos or more.
Grisel Maldonado, who just moved back to Teotitlán del Valle with her family after living in La Puente, California, for 12 years, tells me her family hasn’t raised bread prices even though fuel and food costs have risen.
They are here because they like the traditions of their culture. She is 18, trilingual (Spanish, Zapotec and English) and wants to go to university.
A unique feature of this bread is that small plastic dolls are incorporated into the dough before baking. I’ve also discovered, after years of eating this New Year’s treat, that there seem to be many more plastic baby dolls in the bread now.
And for good reason. Whoever has the luck of getting the little doll, a symbol of the baby Jesus, embedded in their slice is called upon to host a large family tamale party on the Día de la Candelaria, or Candlemas, February 2.
Everybody loves tamales and not many escape this honor. This date closes the Christmas season and begins the transition to Easter with Mardi Gras and Lent.
Mexican life revolves around the cycle and celebration of festivals as we pass through the seasons, a seamless series of events that bring family and friends together. From the largest cities to the smallest villages, these traditions are respected, observed and honored.
Three Kings Day becomes part of how the New Year brings sweetness home and continues the tradition of gift giving – gold, incense and myrhh – established millennia ago.
Today, bakeries, pastry shops and markets throughout Mexico will be filled with rosca de reyes. You may even see home bakers setting up tables on sidewalks outside their front doors.
In villages throughout Mexico, the bakers are usually men and the women are charged with selling. I met Lourdes Bautista Martínez in the Teotitlán del Valle market selling rosca de reyes with her brother Francisco and his brother-in-law, Reynoldo Martínez Sosa, both bakers.
As I drove through the Jalatlaco neighborhood of Oaxaca city, I spotted the Inéz Sánchez Echeverria family selling their version of rosca de reyes, a sweet pound cake called panque adorned with fruits made in the family kitchen by mother and sons.
How will you celebrate Día de Los Tres Reyes? Perhaps Day of the Three Kings is an opportunity to connect with friends and neighbors or nearby family, to break bread together or share a rosca.
Don’t forget to dip the sweet bread into hot chocolate. It’s a great way to start a New Year tradition with Latin American roots. Enjoy. Buen provecho!
Norma Schafer is a writer and photographer based in Oaxaca, Mexico, and contributor to the guidebook, Textile Fiestas of Mexico. She travels the country to explore its art and culture and offers study tours and workshops that investigate the textile traditions of weaving, natural dyeing and related handwork. Her bio, blog and website are at http://oaxacaculture.com.
- See more at: http://mexiconewsdaily.com/mexicolife/celebrate-kings-day-with-rosca-de-reyes/#sthash.iSK1jur8.dpuf



Friday, January 6, 2017

Day 5 of gas protests: blockades in 12 states Mexico News Daily Those states are Veracruz, Nuevo León, Campeche, Hidalgo, Puebla, Tamaulipas, Oaxaca, Zacatecas, Chihuahua, Sonora, Morelos and Chiapas.


Day 5 of gas protests: blockades in 12 states
Those states are Veracruz, Nuevo León, Campeche, Hidalgo, Puebla, Tamaulipas, Oaxaca, Zacatecas, Chihuahua, Sonora, Morelos and Chiapas.



Day 5 of gas protests: blockades in 12 states

Violence reported in Hidalgo; one police officer died yesterday in gas station assault

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Gas price protests continued for the fifth day today, with 12 states still being affected by highway blockades as of 4:00pm, according to Federal Police.
Those states are Veracruz, Nuevo León, Campeche, Hidalgo, Puebla, Tamaulipas, Oaxaca, Zacatecas, Chihuahua, Sonora, Morelos and Chiapas.
While police reported that most blockades were retired without incident, an attack on a gas station yesterday turned fatal.
One police officer died after being struck by a car while investigating an assault on a gas station in the Miguel Hidalgo borough of Mexico City.
The officer and a colleague were attempting to stop 40 people from assaulting station employees yesterday evening when the victim was hit by a vehicle allegedly carrying participants in the assault. He died later in hospital.
Efforts to remove a highway blockade on the Mexico City-Laredo highway in Ixmiquilpan, Hidalgo, were thwarted today and two Federal Police officers detained by local residents. They were nabbed during a confrontation by protesting residents and local police, who were trying to remove the blockade that had been in place since Monday.
The federal officers had arrived in a truck, from which one was removed. The driver remained inside the armored vehicle but was forced out when rockets and smoke were fired inside the vehicle, and the windows broken.
The officer was beaten until other protesters persuaded them to stop so the two could be used as a bargaining chip, as two local residents had been arrested earlier by police.
There have been at least three blockades on the highway since Monday.
Meanwhile, a chain of pawnshops said today that 20 of its branches in four State of México municipalities were vandalized and robbed of more than 100 million pesos in cash, jewelry, electronics and cell phones between yesterday and early this morning.
The president of Amespre said the actions had nothing to do with protests against higher gas prices, but instead were the acts of criminals taking advantage of the social unrest those increases have brought on.
Much of the looting reported in the last two days has affected larger chain stores such as Bodega Aurrera and Coppel, but yesterday a small vendor of cell phone accessories was a victim.
The owner of the store in Mexico City told the newspaper El Universal that between 30 and 40 individuals arrived in trucks, a car and motorcycles and vandalized the premises, destroying everything with sticks, breaking glass and stealing merchandise.
“In less than 15 seconds they took everything, all my effort over the years,” said the owner, who opened her small store 19 years ago.
Her husband sought help from two police officers who were nearby but they said they could do nothing about it.
Former president Felipe Calderón today described those responsible for looting stores as “anarchists, parasites and common thieves taking advantage of discontent” and that no one should be fooled by their game.
Source: Milenio (sp), El Universal (sp), Reforma (sp)
- See more at: http://mexiconewsdaily.com/news/day-5-of-gas-protests-blockades-in-12-states/#sthash.UeHs0h56.dpuf

Tulum or Isla Holbox and Playa Zipolite or Puerto Escondido Lonely Planet Hi all and happy new year! So I have booked my flight - I will be in Mexico for 4 weeks and will be flying into Cancun in Feb and…


Tulum or Isla Holbox and Playa Zipolite or Puerto Escondido
Hi all and happy new year! So I have booked my flight - I will be in Mexico for 4 weeks and will be flying into Cancun in Feb and…


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Hi all and happy new year!
So I have booked my flight - I will be in Mexico for 4 weeks and will be flying into Cancun in Feb and out of San Luis Potosi. I plan to spend half this time on the beach.
As Mexico has a wealth of beautiful coastline, my dilemma is deciding where to go. I have narrowed my choices down to: Tulum or Isla Holbox and Puerto Escondido or Playa Zipolite.
Tulum or Isla Holbox seem like good options to begin my trip - Tulum is well established and easy to get to and the beach has the wow factor. I have read positive things about Isla Holbox and like the fact that it is a bit more low key but I do wonder whether it will too quiet for the start of my trip. I am not looking to party but would like to enjoy a beverage at a convivial bar in the evening. I know Tulum is great for swimming but don't know if Isla Holbox is as well. Was wondering how both places compare and if anyone can shed any light.
Time permitting - I would like to spend some time on the Pacific Coast. Puerto Escondido (PE) and Playa Zipollite (PZ)both sound like they have great ambiance and was wondering how they compare as beginner surf destinations. At this very early stage, I am leaning towards PZ, I like the fact it has a bit of a counter culture vibe about it and it attracts an eclectic mix of people of all ages. Can anyone share any insight.
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The beaches in the Tulum Hotel Zone are the best. However is is expensive but it is just so lovely there. A runner up would be the beaches in Playa del Carmen where you can find cheaper places to stay. White soft sand that never gets hot and lovely clear waters.
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I'd also pick Tulum for ease of getting around to see other sites like ruins, cenotes, other beaches, eco parks if so inclined. Plus it has the beautiful blue water vs more green water since Isla Holbox is in the Gulf.
Isla Holbox might be of interest if it was whale shark season, but that doesn't start until May or June and I can't see spending a couple of weeks there.
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My fave is the Pacific coast especially Oaxaca....lots of great beaches, but Zipolite is not really a surfing beach, especially for a beginner I would think. It is known for its dangerous undertow and used to have regular drownings until they got volunteer lifesavers. I luv the vibe in Zipolite. It consists of less than a handfull of streets. It does have nudism, gays, aging hippies, drugs and I hear the problems that go along with that. There are at least 4 other nice beaches within walking or a short camioneta ride away.
Playa Zicatela in Puerto Escondido is the surfing beach...also Playa Carazillo for beginners. PE has several beaches, a large choice of accomadations in all price ranges and lots of meal options and is a much larger town. There you could easily take surf lessons and meet other surfers .
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Yes, if you're interested in surfing definitely go for Puerto Escondido as there are many more options -- from La Punta to Playa Carrizalillo. If you stay in the La Punta or Zicatela area you'll get a bit more of the counter culture vibe you're looking for in terms of accommodations, parties and restaurants. There's really no surfing at Zipolite (and the undertow is quite dangerous) but San Agustinillo is a great little beach town for just hanging out in. You can easily do both destinations --- the Sur bus goes up and down Hwy 200 so stay for a few days around Mazunte/Zipolite and then go to Puerto.

Zipolite Beach, Lodging on Oaxaca's Best Pacific Coast Beach

Zipolite Beach, Lodging on Oaxaca's Best Pacific Coast Beach




Zipolite Beach, Bus Travel OaxacaPacific Coast

Zipolite Beach, Bus Travel OaxacaPacific Coast




Zipolite Beach on Oaxaca's Pacific Coast offers some good restaurants and interesting clubs such as Posada Mexico, above. La Providencia and Piedra el Fuego Restaurants are just off the main street at Colonia Roca Blanca, the west end of Zipolite Beach. For breakfast try, "A Nice Place on the Beach," three eggs, Canadian Bacon, home fries, 50 pesos. Air Travel to Oaxaca Puerto-Escondido-Camping Zipolite Area, Puerto-Escondido-Oaxaca-Pacific-Coast-Beaches Zipolite Area, Puerto-Escondido-Surfing-Oaxaca-Zicatela-Beach-Mexico Surfing-Beaches-Mexico-Pacific-Coast-Surfing. Zipolite-Beach-Bus-Travel-Oaxaca-Pacific-Coast-Mexico Zipolite-Beach-Lodging Zipolite Area Map Huatulco-To-Zipolite-Bus-Service-Route-200-Mexico. Zipolite Hotels Posada Camping Lodging Zipolite Oaxaca Zipolite Area, Mazunte Mexican Turtle Center Turtle Museum Mazunte Oaxaca Zipolite Area, Mazunte Camping Budget Lodging Oaxaca Pacific Coast Beach San-Cristobal-de-las-Casas- Explained: Mexico-Transportation:Taxi , Colectivos, Camioneta, Bus First Class Second Class. Ordinario, Local La Providencia, elegant menu, artistic decor Piedra de Fuego, grilled fish over wood fire A Nice Place On The Beach, three egg breakfast with home fries Pochutla Collective taxis can not pick up passenger in Pochutla's main street near the bus station but do pick up at the Route 200 crossroads and at a stop a block walk after turning right out of the bus station. Take a collective taxi for 12-15 pesos to Zipolite Beach. Zipolite Beach Dining

Zipolite Beach on Oaxaca's Pacific Coast offers some good restaurants




zipolite!!! Pinterest Explore a pasta "zipolite!!!" do Heber Reyes no Pinterest, o catálogo de ideias do mundo todo. | Veja mais sobre Oaxaca, Oaxaca, México e México.


zipolite!!!
Explore a pasta "zipolite!!!" do Heber Reyes no Pinterest, o catálogo de ideias do mundo todo. | Veja mais sobre Oaxaca, Oaxaca, México e México.





El Jardin Zipolite Bungalows Blog di Zingarate Sconti, promozioni e vacanze a basso costo in Mexico, El Jardin Zipolite Bungalows.


El Jardin Zipolite Bungalows
Sconti, promozioni e vacanze a basso costo in Mexico, El Jardin Zipolite Bungalows.