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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, May 26, 2021

6 Ways to Embarrass Yourself in the TSA Line

 

6 Ways to Embarrass Yourself in the TSA Line
 
 
 
6 Ways to Embarrass Yourself in the TSA Line »
 




Mexico News Today Wednesday, May 26, 2021

 

WEDNESDAY, MAY 26, 2021

Candidates in crosshairs: 1 killed in Guanajuato, 1 kidnapped in Michoacán

Alma Barragán, a mayoral hopeful in Moroleón, was murdered Tuesday. Hours earlier, Michoacán candidate Omar Plancarte was taken. FULL STORY

US proceeds with downgrade to Mexico's aviation safety rating

The Federal Aviation Administration reassessed Mexico's air travel supervisory agency at Category 2, a level it shares with countries like Pakistan and Thailand. FULL STORY

Election observers issue alert over violence and illegal campaign funding

A Canada-based organization has raised concerns about attacks on politicians and illicit money in the lead-up to voting day on June 6. FULL STORY

Opposition questions 1.7mn peso loan to AMLO’s brother

According to El Universal newspaper, a federal bank granted José Ramiro López Obrador the questionable funding in 2019 while he worked in the Tabasco government. FULL STORY

Chief justice’s meetings with AMLO violate code of ethics

Arturo Zaldívar has met twice with President López Obrador in the past month to discuss electricity and hydrocarbon reform. FULL STORY

National Action Party politician files defamation complaint against AMLO

The former lawmaker, known as 'El Jefe Diego,' accused the president of making a mockery of the law and scorning those he governs. FULL STORY

AMLO: election fairness rules prevent federal government from attending to nation's drought emergency 

President López Obrador said his government cannot react to the dire water shortages — the worst in 30 years — because anti-electioneering rules prevent it from doing so. FULL STORY

Cancer victims’ parents reproach AMLO for dismissing their claims of shortages

'Mr. President ... with active indignation, we say to you that you lie...' they said in a statement rejecting President López Obrador's assertions that the government has ended previous medication shortages. FULL STORY

OPINION

When narcos are choosing our politicians, what solutions do we have left?

This bloody election season, it's clear that organized crime seeks to control most of Mexican society. Has it become impossible to stop, Sarah DeVries asks. FULL STORY

MEXICO LIFE

Cyclist on 4-year (and counting) trip to Alaska currently in Mexico

When the information technology worker first decided to bike from his Uruguay hometown to the U.S.'s 49th state, friends thought he'd be back in a month, Joseph Sorrentino writes. FULL STORY

Lack of irrigation water puts Chihuahua on brink of social and economic crisis

The shortage has caused 90% crop losses in some communities and rising food prices. "We are going to have a serious social problem that we hope will not become a problem of insecurity,” federal lawmaker Mario Mata warned. FULL STORY

Deer Park refinery will help Mexico achieve fuel self-sufficiency by 2023: AMLO

The Texas facility, now fully owned by Pemex, will also be paid off in full within 2–3 years, President López Obrador promised. FULL STORY

Construction continues at archaeological site despite stop-work order

An international council on monuments has warned that if the illegal building going on at an outlying section of Teotihuacán isn't stopped, UNESCO could strip the ancient site of its World Heritage status. FULL STORY

President says replacing governor won’t mean change in bank’s economic policy

President López Obrador promised that the replacement of Alejandro Díaz de León when his term ends won't alter policy significantly at Mexico's central bank. FULL STORY

250 bodies to be exhumed in search for missing in Coahuila

A mass disinterment of people presumed to be missing has begun in Torreón at 161 common graves. FULL STORY
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OPINION

Business seeks to revive Mexico’s Bajío region as a manufacturing hub

From its silver mines of the 1500s to its modern high-tech factories, this central region of the country has long been a success story, Jude Webber writes. FULL STORY

MEXICO LIFE

When the medical diagnosis is given in Spanish, that’s when the fun begins

In for a checkup demanded by insurance, writer Joseph Sorrentino visited a helpful Mexican doctor who may have told him he was very sick — or not. FULL STORY

∙ Students in Mexico City protest proposed return to in-person classes

∙ Candidates for mayor under attack in Guerrero and Tamaulipas

∙ Protest in La Paz after US citizen fires flare gun at fisherman

∙ Head-on collision kills 9 in San Luis Potosí

LIVE: Supermoon shines brightly over Greece

 


Feature, International, News, Pets, PlanetYuca Turtle walks again thanks to a Lego wheelchair in Baltimore (VIDEO)

 https://www.theyucatantimes.com/2021/05/turtle-walks-again-thanks-to-a-lego-wheelchair-in-baltimore-video/

Injured Turtle at Maryland Zoo Gets Custom Wheelchair Made of Legos





16 green states, 15 yellow, 1 orange on the new coronavirus stoplight map There are 18,000 active cases. In January there were over 100,000 FREE ACCESS Published on Saturday, May 22, 2021


The new stoplight map that takes effect Monday. The new stoplight map that takes effect Monday.

16 green states, 15 yellow, 1 orange on the new coronavirus stoplight map

There are 18,000 active cases. In January there were over 100,000

FREE ACCESS

Almost a year ago, the federal government presented its first coronavirus stoplight map to guide the reopening of the country after a two-month-long national social distancing initiative and the suspension of all nonessential economic activities.

Then, just one of Mexico’s 32 states – Zacatecas – was painted high risk orange.

On the latest map presented by the Health Ministry on Friday, once again, just one state is painted orange.

But in contrast with the map published on May 29, 2020, on which all of the other 31 states were maximum risk red, the new map, which will be in force from May 24 to June 6, is completely devoid of that undesirable color.

Exactly half of the 32 states will be low risk green for the next two weeks, 15 will be medium risk yellow and Quintana Roo – the Caribbean coast state that is home to resort cities such as Cancún and Playa del Carmen – will be on its own as the sole orange light state in the country.

The new map is reflective of a much-improved coronavirus situation a year after Mexico went through the peak of the first wave of the pandemic and four months after it emerged from its second – and worst – wave, which began late last year and extended into the first month of 2021.

Case numbers, deaths and hospitalizations of Covid patients have all declined during successive months this year and Mexico’s vaccination program continues to gather pace with more than 25.6 million shots now given to health workers, seniors, teachers, pregnant women and people aged 50-59.

Some medical experts believe that high levels of coronavirus immunity in Mexico through infection and a high percentage of inoculated adults in the United States, where about 280 million shots have been administered, have helped drive down new infections here.

The 16 green light states during the upcoming fortnight, an increase of two compared to the map currently in effect, will be Chiapas, Coahuila, Veracruz, Jalisco, Guanajuato, Sonora, Sinaloa, Durango, San Luis Potosí, Oaxaca, Tlaxcala, Aguascalientes  Querétaro, Hidalgo, Guerrero and Morelos.

The first 11 states are already green while the last five will switch from yellow.

The 15 yellow light states will be Baja California, Zacatecas, Colima, Michoacán, Puebla, Tamaulipas, México state, Yucatán, Baja California Sur, Mexico City,  Nuevo León, Nayarit, Campeche, Tabasco and Chihuahua.

The first 10 states are already yellow, Nuevo León, Nayarit and Campeche will switch from green and Tabasco and Chihuahua will change from orange.

Each stoplight color, determined by the Health Ministry using 10 different indicators including case numbers and hospital occupancy levels, is accompanied by recommended restrictions to slow the spread of the virus but it is ultimately up to state governments to decide on their own restrictions.

The Health Ministry also reported on Friday that Mexico’s accumulated case tally had increased by 2,604 to just over 2.39 million. The official Covid-19 death toll rose by 176 to 221,256, the fourth highest total in the world after the United States, Brazil and India.

The Health Ministry estimates that there are currently just over 18,000 active cases in Mexico, a significant decrease compared to January when the figure exceeded 100,000.

Mexico News Daily 

El Alquimista Yoga Spa - Zipolite, Mexico Trip Stories El Alquimista hotel is located on Zipolite beach, Oaxaca. The hotel has a spa, daily yoga classes, and an adult-only swimming pool (over 15 years-old) ...

 


El Alquimista Yoga Spa - Zipolite, Mexico
El Alquimista hotel is located on Zipolite beach, Oaxaca. The hotel has a spa, daily yoga classes, and an adult-only swimming pool (over 15 years-old) ...


Oaxaca: Jauría de perros ataca a turista en Zipolite – El Piñero, Periodismo y Debate. El Piñero, Periodismo y Debate. El hecho sucedió cerca de la media noche del jueves 20 de mayo, el turista se encontraba en inmediaciones de la Playa Zipolite, cuando los perros ...

 


Oaxaca: Jauría de perros ataca a turista en Zipolite – El Piñero, Periodismo y Debate.
El hecho sucedió cerca de la media noche del jueves 20 de mayo, el turista se encontraba en inmediaciones de la Playa Zipolite, cuando los perros ...

Villa Aikia, Zipolite, 70947, mx - Google Maps Google Villa Aikia, Zipolite, 70947, mx. Connect to internet to see place info.

 


Villa Aikia, Zipolite, 70947, mx - Google Maps
Villa Aikia, Zipolite, 70947, mx. Connect to internet to see place info.


https://www.google.com/maps/place/Villa+Aikia/@15.663171,-96.5251791,3a,75y,90t/data=!3m8!1e2!3m6!1sAF1QipM3TXOSasy-lQYNd90lHdLmGabq9HZjofK4lHCN!2e10!3e12!6shttps:%2F%2Flh5.googleusercontent.com%2Fp%2FAF1QipM3TXOSasy-lQYNd90lHdLmGabq9HZjofK4lHCN%3Dw130-h86-k-no!7i1882!8i1242!4m8!3m7!1s0x85b929c8748d2dd3:0xefa5c3aee0f8f236!5m2!4m1!1i2!8m2!3d15.6631583!4d-96.5253855

Live Cam Gaza


 

Tuesday, May 25, 2021

MONTE ALBAN OAXACA: WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW

 https://www.eternal-expat.com/2017/08/30/monte-alban-oaxaca-mexico/

MONTE ALBAN OAXACA: WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW

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Monte Alban is just south of Oaxaca City and is a must-do on a trip to the city.

It’s only a few miles from downtown and you can either take a tour or go it alone by taxi or bus.

However you get here, just make sure to give yourself plenty of time to explore these incredible ruins.

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Visiting Monte Alban Mexico

WHAT IS MONTE ALBAN?

Monte Alban is a UNESCO World Heritage, pre-Columbian archaeological site.

It was inhabited as early as 500 BC and over a 1500 year period had the Olmec, Zapotec, and Mixtec civilizations using the site for different purposes.

The site has terraces, dams, canals, artificial mounds, a ball court, and structures which many refer to as pyramids.

The ruins are said to be the most important ruins in the whole state of Oaxaca and it’s easy to see why when you visit. The area is vast and there are so many different buildings.

Monte Alban Mexico

WHEN IS THE BEST TIME TO VISIT?

I visited Monte Alban during the last week of July and it was so lush and green.

Oaxaca has a wet season that runs from about mid-May until the start of October, but when it’s not raining, it is incredibly hot. It didn’t rain when I was there, but it rained shortly after I left.

If you do want to come during the “green season” you’ll have fewer crowds and lots of color. Just be sure to arrive early so that you miss the rain.

From October to February it will dryer, but by the end of winter, the grass won’t be very green and it can get super-duper hot. That being said, there’s never a bad time to visit these incredible ruins.

Visiting Monte Alban Mexico

WHAT TO BRING AND WEAR TO MONTE ALBAN

A camera is a must, even if you just use your phone.

This site is extraordinary and is worthy of many a snap. Most sites in Mexico claim to charge for the use of cameras that are larger than a cell phone.

I’ve never once been charged for using my DSLR and I’ve never had a problem using it. That being said, if you are bringing a DSLR or something larger, you may be asked to pay between 35 and 40 pesos to use it.

I brought my Nikon D3300 and 30mm lens. I wish I’d had a wider lens, so if you have one, definitely bring it for your photography here. When I wanted a wider shot, I ended up using my iPhone.

I also recommend packing a hat. Even with the cloud cover, it was still incredibly hot.

Bring plenty of water to sustain you for the day, although you can pay over the odds to buy one once you arrive. Sunscreen is also a must. There is very little shade at Monte Alban, so if you want to avoid sunstroke and sunburn, don’t leave your hat and SPF behind.

Monte Alban is pretty flat other than the steps that you can climb up. I wore shorts, a really light linen t-shirt, and my beloved Rainbow flip flops. I was perfectly comfortable and I think I would have been uncomfortably hot and sweaty if I’d worn socks and sneakers.

what to wear to monte alban oaxaca

HOW MUCH DOES IT COST TO VISIT MONTE ALBAN?

The entry ticket to Monte Alban is 70 Pesos.

That’s just under $4 USD at the current exchange rate. If you are going to visit Monte Alban with a tour and it doesn’t cover your entry fee, try to have exact change.

If you want to go on a tour, tours cost between $10 and $30 depending on what you want to have included (lunch, drinks, entry fees, etc).

I went with Bamba Experience and their Monte Alban Tour costs $14. It didn’t include the price of lunch or any entry fees. It did include a bilingual guide and transportation for the entire day.

Monte Alban Oaxaca Mexico

HOW TO GET TO MONTE ALBAN

The easiest way to get to Monte Alban is to take a tour. Tour companies will pick you up at your hotel or Airbnb and drop you back off in the center of the city at the end of the day.

If you wanted to go it alone there are three options.

You can hire a taxi for the day to drive you there, wait for you, and drive you back. They can charge anywhere from 200-500 pesos ($10-$25). This might be a good option if there are a few of you and you split the price.

The second option is to take a shuttle. The one shuttle company, Lescas Co Travel Agency, run a shuttle every half hour. You can book with them at their office which is in the zocalo, right across the plaza from the cathedral. A return ticket for the shuttle bus will cost 70 Pesos ($3.50).

The final option is to take the 6 Pesos (25¢) bus. It drops you off at a bus stop that is a one-hour walk from the ruins.

It’s entirely uphill and speaking as someone who took a van up the hill, I wouldn’t recommend this unless you are incredibly fit. Especially because it is probably going to be very hot outside.

If you choose to go it alone, you can still hire a guide outside of the entrance for a negotiable fee.

Monte Alban Oaxaca

Monte Alban Oaxaca

SOUVENIRS AT MONTE ALBAN

Like any good tourist site, there are tons of people selling souvenirs outside the entrance.

You’ll find hats for very cheap here in case you didn’t bring your own. There’s jewelry, shoes, t-shirts, and little replica statues.

Our tour guide told us that most of the things you find outside of the entrance are imports from China.

If you want to support a local artisan, wait to buy your souvenir from one of the guys walking around inside the park.

There are several older men walking around tryng to sell sculptures and carvings that they’ve made themselves. They live locally and this is their only source of income.

Monte Alban Oaxaca Mexico

WHAT ELSE YOU SEE IF YOU TAKE A TOUR

Every tour company that runs a tour to Monte Alban also stops at several other places. From what I could see during my week in Oaxaca, every tour basically stops at the same places.

We started the day at Monte Alban, then headed to a wood carving village where locals are making Alebrijes, colorful carved creatures, mostly mythical ones, which are actually from the Oaxaca region (although you’ll see them at markets all over the country).

Most tours then stop for a buffet lunch somewhere which costs roughly $15 (300 pesos) and has tons of different Oaxacan-style dishes like mole, memelas, and absurdly delicious Oaxacan chorizo.

You then visit Cuilapan de Guerrero, a 16th-century Dominican monastery. The building is really beautiful and wandering around it is quite peaceful.

The last stop of the day is to San Bartolo Coyotepec to which is home to the popular regional black clay pottery.

I must admit, this was one of my favorite stops. We got to watch how the pottery gets made and then of course, have a browse through the gift shop. I may have bought a pair of earrings.

Check out more posts about visiting Oaxaca here!

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What to do in Oaxaca - Monte Alban is a day trip from downtown Oaxaca

ABOUT LAURA BRONNER

Laura is a perpetual country hopper. She's the girl whose feet are always itching for the next adventure, but wondering if she'll ever find a place that feels like home. In the last seven years, she's lived in Switzerland, New Zealand, Australia, South Korea, England and now Mexico City. Her work has been featured on Lonely Planet, Matador Network, and Thought Catalog.