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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, March 9, 2019

Drone - playa ventura y playas de Oaxaca (trailer)

CELSO PIÑA EN VIVO - CARNAVAL PUTLECO - Putla de Guerrero Oaxaca

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Cascada de Oaxaca Mexico

A watery, dreamlike tale of teenage runaway in 1980s Mexico


A watery, dreamlike tale of teenage runaway in 1980s Mexico

Fiction: Sea Monsters

Chloe Aridjis

Chatto & Windus, hardback, 192 pages, €18.19

Restlessness: Aridjis based the book on an episode from her youth2
Restlessness: Aridjis based the book on an episode from her youth
Francesca Carington
Despite its rompy premise - 17-year-old Luisa runs away to a beach in Oaxaca with a mysterious boy to search for a troupe of Ukrainian dwarves - Sea Monsters isn't a picaresque Ferris Bueller-style caper or finding-myself odyssey, but rather a meandering account of stasis; a big old "what now?"
Chloe Aridjis's third novel is based on an episode from her teenage years in late 1980s Mexico and its brilliance lies in capturing so convincingly that state of adolescent restlessness. The only drawback is that this story of a teenage runaway could stand to be a bit more fun.
Luisa, the daughter of an academic and a translator, lives in Mexico City and goes to a rich kids' school. She's clearly smarter than her classmates and cooler, too, hanging out with artists and punks. She takes up with 19-year-old dropout Tomas, and, when she sees in the paper that 12 dwarves are missing from a visiting circus, the two board a bus to Zipolite, the "Beach of the Dead", to find them. This is where most of the introspective, elliptical novel takes place, unravelling Luisa's musings and wanderings, as she meets beachcombers, hippies, nudists, fabulists and a silent, solitary drinker she calls the merman.
Luisa's defining characteristic, beyond a melancholic obsession with shipwrecks, is passivity. She's an observer, and the narrative pauses constantly to tell the tales of others: the girl who overdosed in a posy nightclub; four Zapotec girls who drowned; the beachcomber who dreams of buying a metal detector. And the stories she doesn't know, she invents: a tale of father-daughter estrangement ("Yes, this was the story, I thought to myself"); an eastern European background for the merman; and of course Tomas, the object of her infatuation, is more romanticised than real. And when, unsurprisingly, he turns out to be a jerk, she is drawn instead to the still-enigmatic merman. "That was the problem with mysterious people, I explained, once you spend time with them they're not so mysterious after all." Shipwrecks exert such a pull over her imagination because they're submerged, ever unknowable. Even after Tomas has left the scene, Luisa remains on Zipolite, waiting, watching, as if by absorbing enough of other people's experiences she might figure something out about herself. The beach is a strange, liminal space, where it's always night and time seems to stand still.
"I'd intentionally left my watch at home, or perhaps I'd forgotten it, but what purpose, anyway, would it serve here on the beach? Oaxaca ran on Oaxaca time, Tomas on Tomas time, even the dogs ran on their own time." The sea, "vast and indifferent as a cathedral", does what it always does, continuing "to write and erase its long ribbon of foam".
Aridjis's languid prose lets these images wash over the reader, unfurling in comma-rich sentences that beautifully render a state of inertia.
When she's finally found by her father, she contemplates that "to imagine travel is probably better than actually travelling since no journey can ever satisfy human desire; as soon as one sets out, fantasies get tangled in the rigging and the dark birds of doubt begin their circling overhead." Sombre thoughts for a 17-year-old. But not altogether sad; Aridjis leaves us with the sense that Luisa's disillusionment, like everything else, is in flux.


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Lo mejor del Festival Nudista Zipolite 2019-2020 YouTube Lo mejor del Festival Nudista Zipolite 2019-2020. PrankZone TV. Loading... Unsubscribe from PrankZone TV? Cancel Unsubscribe. Working. Google Plus Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant


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#Psytrance #PsychedelicTrance #MrLemilica2 Methamill - Accidental Anticipation [Progressive Trance Mix] ᴴᴰ

Friday, March 8, 2019

Hello HANOI, VIETNAM! First Impressions of the City

Yalitza Aparicio not the only talent in the family: sister Edith a budding singer Her new YouTube channel has been well received Friday, March 8, 2019



Edith Aparicio is an artist in her own right.Edith Aparicio is an artist in her own right.

Yalitza Aparicio not the only talent in the family: sister Edith a budding singer

Her new YouTube channel has been well received

Oaxaca actress Yalitzia Aparicio is not the only talent in her family. In fact, she owes her success on the silver screen to her sister: it was she who planned to attend the casting for Alfonso Cuarón’s award-winning film, Roma.
But Edith Aparicio couldn’t make it because she was pregnant at the time of the auditions. Instead, Edith encouraged Yalitza to attend in her stead, and the rest is history.
In an interview with the newspaper El Universal, Edith said her sister had never imagined becoming a movie star.
“Never, never! It’s actually funny for us because it’s been me who has expressed herself in that manner the most, what she liked the most . . . was reading, poetry, painting . . . she never said she wanted to be an actress.”
Edith Aparicio is the opposite: “I’ve sung and I’ve danced and I like it a lot. I’m getting a lot of work and I go wherever they invite me or pay me.”
Her audience has grown since January when she created a YouTube channel, where she has posted eight videos featuring traditional songs accompanied by a mariachi band or by a guitar that she often plays herself.
The videos have earned over 255,000 views, receiving positive comments from users who have encouraged her to continue to pursue her dream.
Source: El Universal (sp)



Truck Tears off Car Door

Oaxaca Mexico exploration

RIDING THE RUT! | Riding Oaxaca in Mexico!

How to surf Puerto Escondido MARCH 7, 2019 | SURFING

How to surf Puerto Escondido

MARCH 7, 2019 | SURFING
Puerto Escondido: home of the infamous Playa Zicatela | Photo: WSL

Puerto Escondido is a laid-back coastal community located in Oaxaca, Mexico. It is the home of one of the heaviest and most dangerous waves in the world.

The town's most famous surf spot is Playa Zicatela, a pounding and temperamental beach break capable of producing big, powerful, and bone-breaking tubular waves.
Surfers discovered Puerto Escondido and its beaches in the late 1950s, but it was the explosion of shortboard revolution in the 1970s that really opened the town to the surf world.
With its humid and tropical climate, Puerto Escondido has become one of the most important surf destinations in Mexico and Central America. For many, it's the ultimate proving ground.
Playa Zicatela is a force of Nature and has a long and infamous track record of regularly breaking surfboards into pieces. Make no mistake - it's a deadly wave that has already made victims.
Ron Cassidy (2007), Noel Robinson (2011) and Jay Adams (2014) lost their lives surfing Puerto Escondido, but hundreds barely survived its thundering waves.
Paddling out at Puerto Escondido's sand-bottomed peaks if often as scary as taking off on the waves and, during epic swells, you need to time the go-for-it moment right; otherwise you'll get caught inside and suffer the consequences.
Playa Zicatela: one of the heaviest beach breaks in the world | Photo: Hinkle/WSL

The Gear You'll Need

If you're planning a visit to Puerto Escondido and surfing challenging waves is your top priority, you should ideally travel with, at least, three or four boards.
The reason why you should bring a quiver is that you could easily break one or two boards in the pounding shore break.
The best board to surf Puerto Escondido is the semi-gun. A long surfboard offers extra paddle power and will get you into the wave faster in order to pull into the barrel and get spit out it more quickly.
It is also recommended that you bring a first-aid kit, a helmet, and an inflatable life vest. They could very well save your life in case of a wipeout.
You will not need a full wetsuit. The average air and water temperature are stable throughout the year around 80°F (27°C).
Puerto Escondido: Playa Zicatela is also known as the Mexican Pipeline | Photo: Hinkle/WSL

Advanced Surfers Only

Puerto Escondido's Playa Zicatela is not a wave for beginner surfers, and even intermediate wave riders will struggle to get comfortable with the spot.
If you're new to surfing or simply want to have fun without putting your life at risk, try La Punta, Carrizalillo, and Playa Marinero.
When the surf hits the 10-foot plus range, surfers need to know how to read each wave before committing to their favorite roller. Note to self: don't take the first wave of the set.
And if you think the Mexican Pipeline is all about picture-perfect barrels, then you've been misled by finely edited videos and magazine covers. There are many thumping close-outs at Puerto Escondido that can be as spicy as a chili pepper.

The Wave

Zicatela starts working with southwest groundswells and westerly hurricane swells and quickly transforms into a fast left and right and barreling heaven.
When swell lines reach the shore they're welcomed by an offshore deep water trench that increases wave height like a magnifying glass.
Exiting a triple overhead barrel at Puerto Escondido is probably the ultimate surfer's goal, but it can be a rare feat even during historical, macking swells.
But if you're into roundhouse cutbacks and aerial moves, you can always get the most out of the ramps that form on the shoulder of a tubular green cylinder.
Despite being an experts-only wave, the infamous Mexican beach break can get crowded. If you're new in town, make sure to respect the locals and ask for advice whenever you need it.
The best time of the day to surf Playa Zicatela is early in the morning when the offshore winds are blowing, and there are fewer people in the water.
Playa Zicatela: the beach breaks produces thumping barrels and gnarly close-outs | Photo: WSL
If you're not a fan of beach parties, late afternoon Corona beers, and nightlife, you may enjoy the regular glassy sessions that take place around sunset when the wind dies down.
Remember that Puerto Escondido is a collection of volatile, unpredictable and neurotic big wave spots that will change and get bigger at the blink of an eye.
Before paddling out, take a few minutes to observe how rip currents could work in your favor, and why some wave detonate like bomb and others don't.
Also, beware of leashless surfers and their boards. You don't want to get pummeled by a gun while duck diving a monstrous wave.
Today, Zicatela is one of the selected venues for the world's best big wave surfers and bodyboarders to test their skills. Brad Domke surfed the biggest ever skimboarding wave here.
The reputation of the Mexican Pipeline lives on. Why? Because it's rarely flat and it may offer you the wave of a lifetime.

Puerto Escondido, Oaxaca, Mexico | When and How To Surf It

Type of Break: Beach Break
Swell Size: 2-10 feet
Swell Direction: SW/W
Wave Height: 4-25 feet
Wind: Offshore NE/N
Tide: All Tides
Season: April-October
Gear: Semi-Gun Boards, Boardshorts, Inflatable Life Vest, Helmet, First-Aid Kit
Watch Out For: Close-outs, Muggers, Bandits, Pickpocket Gangs and Insects

Wednesday, March 6, 2019

Volcano ash alert in several parts of Mexico City after explosion at El Popo It's Ash Wednesday although Easter is some time off yet

An explosion this morning at El Popo.An explosion this morning at El Popo.

Volcano ash alert in several parts of Mexico City after explosion at El Popo

It's Ash Wednesday although Easter is some time off yet

It’s Ash Wednesday but only in southern Mexico City after an explosion at the Popocatépetl volcano early this morning triggered an ash fall alert.
The explosion was recorded at 8:26am, expelling an ash plume that extended 1,200 meters above the volcano. Winds sent the ash to the west of the volcano, covering an area in southern and southeastern Mexico City that encompasses the boroughs of Magdalena Contreras, Tlalpan, Coyoacán, Xochimilco, Milpa Alta, Tláhuac and Iztapalapa.
Authorities advised residents of those areas to cover their mouths and noses with damp handkerchiefs, clean their eyes and throat with water and avoid using contact lenses, as these contribute to eye irritation in the presence of ash.
Drivers are advised to keep their windows closed and to moderate their speed, as the ash can reduce traction. The use of air conditioning is not advised, and drivers should listen to the radio for updates on air quality conditions.
Residents are urged sweep up the ash and deposit it in bags, avoiding the use of water. Mixing water and ash solidifies when it dries and can clog storm drains.
Source: El Financiero (sp)