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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

Monday, May 30, 2022

Intensity of #Hurricane #Agatha in #Zipolite, #Pochutla

 Foro del Sur

#Conagua anticipates that between 2 pm and 4 pm #Agata will make landfall, between the municipalities of Santa María #Tonameca and San Pedro #Pochutla The Conagua National Water Commission-SMNmx reports that, if its speed of movement and trajectory continue, it is expected that the #Hurricane #Agatha will enter land between 2:00 p.m. and 4:00 p.m., central Mexico time, between municipalities of Santa María Tonameca and San Pedro Pochutla, in #Oaxaca.

#Conagua prevee que entre 2 pm y 4 pm #Agata tocará tierra, entre los municipios de Santa María #Tonameca y San Pedro #Pochutla
La Conagua Comisión Nacional del Agua-SMNmx informa que, de permanecer su velocidad de desplazamiento y trayectoria, se prevé que el #Huracán #Agatha ingrese a tierra entre las 14:00 y 16:00 horas, tiempo del centro de México, entre los municipios de Santa María Tonameca y San Pedro Pochutla, en #Oaxaca.


🔴 This is a serious thing, friends, take care of yourselves! 🔴

Admin
 22h 
🔴 ¡Ésto ya es cosa seria amigos a cuidarse todos! 🔴


🔴 Hurricane #Agatha has made landfall! 🔴 STRENGTH #Huatulco!

Williams Zuñiga Aguirre shared a live video.

🔴 ¡El Huracán #Agatha ha tocado tierra! 🔴
¡FUERZA #Huatulco!

Pacific Hurricane Agatha makes landfall in Mexico, could restrengthen to become Alex in Atlantic 4,743 views May 30, 2022 Hurricane Agatha made landfall in Puerto Angel, Mexico, Monday.


 

Hurricane Agatha Predicted To Be Category 2… Bands of rain and gusty winds lashed Mexico’s southern Pacific coast Monday as the first hurricane of the…

 https://bulletinreporter.com/hurricane-agatha-predicted-to-be-category-2-strength-as-it-nears-mexico-national/





Zipolite

Category 2 Hurricane Agatha makes landfall near Puerto Ángel, Oaxaca Heavy rains and possible deadly flash flooding and mudslides predicted for Oaxaca and Chiapas Published on Monday, May 30, 2022

 https://mexiconewsdaily.com/news/hurricane-agatha-makes-landfall-in-oaxaca/?utm_source=TWE&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=tpcc%20%3D%20dailynewsletter&pnespid=uOF5UyVHabELh_KcvG64H5bW5kOnS5xsNuiln7c3rhtmrCk858qyU9Gk1wy6T98y1Xmvj8FVOg



A highway in Oaxaca connecting Pochutla to Oaxaca city washed out by Hurricane Agatha's effects as it approached the coast Monday afternoon.

Category 2 Hurricane Agatha makes landfall near Puerto Ángel, Oaxaca

Heavy rains and possible deadly flash flooding and mudslides predicted for Oaxaca and Chiapas

The United States National Hurricane Center (NHC) announced at 4 p.m. Monday that Hurricane Agatha had made landfall in Oaxaca about 10 kilometers west of Puerto Ángel with maximum sustained winds of 165 kilometers per hour and higher gusts.

A hurricane warning remains in effect between the port city of Salina Cruz and the Lagunas de Chacahua national park, and a hurricane watch is in effect for Salina Cruz eastward to Barra De Tonalá, the NHC said.

Agatha was a Category 2 hurricane (maximum sustained winds between 154 and 177 kph) when it struck land.

The NHC’s warning area for Agatha takes in the popular tourist destinations of Huatulco and Puerto Escondido and smaller beach towns such as Mazunte and Zipolite.

Grahpic showing the projected track of the storm into Oaxaca Monday. GOVERNMENT OF OAXACA

The NHC said that Agatha’s northeast trajectory is expected to continue through Tuesday.

“Maximum sustained winds are near 105 mph (165 km/h) with higher gusts,” the Miami-based center said, adding that rapid weakening is forecast after landfall and that Agatha is expected to dissipate over southeastern Mexico by late Tuesday.

Agatha’s storm surge is expected to cause extremely dangerous coastal flooding near and to the east of where the hurricane made landfall. The center also warned of large and destructive waves. “Large swells generated by Agatha will affect the coast of southern Mexico during the next day or so. These swells are likely to cause life-threatening surf and rip current conditions,” the NHC said.

Heavy rain is expected in Oaxaca as well as Chiapas, Veracruz, Tabasco and eastern Guerrero. Oaxaca will receive the heaviest falls, with 250 to 400 millimeters (10 to 16 inches) of rain predicted as well as isolated maximum amounts of 510 mm (20 inches).

The NHC said that life-threatening flash flooding and mudslides may occur in both Oaxaca and Chiapas, where rainfall of up to 380 mm (15 inches) is possible.

Agatha is the first named storm in the Eastern Pacific this year. Since it reached the Oaxaca coast as a Category 2 hurricane, that makes it the strongest ever to make landfall in the Eastern Pacific in May.

In addition, it is just the third hurricane in recorded history to make landfall in Mexico in May after Barbara crashed into Chiapas in 2013 and Agatha struck Michoacán in 1971. Both those hurricanes were Category 1.

The Associated Press reported Monday that threatening grey skies and blowing sand had cleared beaches in destinations such as Puerto Escondido and Huatulco. Over 200 shelters are offering refuge from the hurricane and more than 9,000 emergency personnel are poised to respond to Agatha’s arrival. Schools were closed in Oaxaca and parts of Guerrero on Monday.

Members of the Mexican Air Force tracking satellite imagery of Hurricane Agatha.

Before the hurricane even made landfall, Oaxaca’s state Civil Protection had reported a landslide due to Agatha’s effects as it approached the coast. Heavy rains caused washed out a highway connecting Pochutla to Oaxaca city near the municipality of Miahuatlán, making travel between Pochutla and Miahuatlan impossible, Civil Protection said.

“Don’t take the risk,” the Oaxaca Civil Protection’s Twitter account advised around 3 pm.

Dan Pydynowski, a senior meteorologist at AccuWeather, warned of the risk of property damage and trees and power lines coming down. “Flooding rainfall is expected to be one of the biggest impacts across southern Mexico and parts of Central America,” he added.

“The heaviest rain will fall across the Mexican states of Oaxaca and Chiapas, causing flash flooding, mudslides and road closures.”

The last hurricane to strike the Oaxaca coast was Carlotta, which made landfall near Puerto Escondido at Category 2 intensity in June 2012. Seven people were killed and at least 29,000 homes and 2,500 businesses were damaged, mostly in Oaxaca.

There is a risk that Agatha could regain strength after entering the Gulf of Mexico in the coming days. It could thus become the first named storm of both the Pacific and Atlantic hurricane seasons.

With reports from AccuWeather, Milenio, AP and USA Today

Why Last-minute Flights Are So Expensve

SCOTT'S CHEAP FLIGHTS
Sponsored byCompareCards.
 
Issue 99: Why Last-Minute Flights Are So Expensive.
 
 
We’ve all been there—a flight you keep meaning to book and keep putting off. All of a sudden it’s two weeks away and you still don’t have tickets. You keep hoping for a last-minute miracle, and the universe keeps responding with higher and higher fares.

What gives?
💸 Last-minute flights = expensive flights
It’s logical to assume that last-minute fares should go down in price. After all, an empty seat generates nothing for an airline, so why wouldn’t they want to keep cutting the price as takeoff nears? Even $50 > $0, right?

That was the conventional wisdom for decades. But beginning in the early 1970s, airlines began realizing that people booking last-minute flights generally weren’t vacationers. Instead, it was businesspeople who didn’t schedule meetings months in advance the way leisure travelers schedule vacations. And while us leisure travelers care a lot about airfare—any dollar we spend on a flight is a dollar we can’t spend on something else—business travelers just don’t care. Why should they? It’s their company paying.

So if last-minute bookings are made by businesspeople who don’t care what it costs, the optimal strategy from the airlines' perspective isn’t to slash fares; it’s to jack up fares and gouge business travelers. That makes them the most money, even if it means leaving some seats empty.

The takeaway for us leisure travelers: don’t count on cheap last-minute or standby flights popping up. Instead, expect that last-minute fares will skyrocket.
🙅 Not all last-minute flights are equal
We're a broken record about booking during Goldilocks Windows because that’s when cheap flights are most likely to pop up. (For domestic flights it’s 1-3 months in advance, 2-8 months for international, and add a couple months for peak season dates.) Don’t book too late because fares go up.

But not all last-minute flights are the same. A flight booked one month in advance is almost certainly going to be cheaper than a flight booked one week in advance. And a flight booked one week in advance is almost always cheaper than a flight booked one day in advance.

So if there’s a flight you need and you still haven’t booked a month out, your best bet is almost certainly to purchase ASAP. Holding out hope for a late price drop is a sure way to wind up overpaying.
🛫 Budget airlines are most likely to have reasonable last-minute fares
Even if you basically never fly on budget airlines like Spirit, the one time to consider making an exception is if you need a last-minute flight.

Think back to why last-minute fares tend to be so pricey: it’s because airlines want to gouge business travelers. But business travelers rarely fly on Spirit. Ditto with Frontier, Allegiant, and other ultra-low-cost carriers.

As a result, last-minute flights tend to be much more affordable on budget airlines that primarily cater to leisure travelers.
🇪🇺 The big pandemic-era exception
Despite a surging interest in travel as countries drop restrictions, the number of people traveling internationally is still down from pre-pandemic levels, and that rate at which airlines are adding more seats and flights is still outpacing demand.

This means that—for now—it’s still possible to find good deals relatively last minute for international trips, especially to Europe. So if you haven’t yet booked an international trip for this summer you could still find a great fare (so long as you’re flexible on exactly where and when you go).

Here are some examples of deals we found just this month for summer travel:
 

Hurricane Agatha update