The Magic Mushrooms of San José del Pacífico: MUNCHIES Guide to Oaxaca (Part 3)
Subscribe to Munchies here:
Welcome to San José del Pacífico, a little village high in the southern mountains of Oaxaca, Mexico. San José is called of the Pacific because even though it is 70 miles from the coast and more than 7,500 feet above sea level, visitors can see the sparkling Pacific Ocean from nearly anywhere in town on a clear day. In the third episode of MUNCHIES Guide to Oaxaca, host Daniel Hernández meets Don Leonardo, a native resident of San José, who guides Daniel on a very special trip with the local specialty: hallucinogenic mushrooms. Don Leonardo told Daniel that even his grandkids take them.
Watch Part 2 here:
Check out for more!
Follow Munchies here:
Facebook:
Twitter:
Tumblr:
Instagram:
Oaxaca, Mexico
Explore trip.
3. My City, My Life / My Oaxaca, My Town
See what life is like in a small town 10 minutes by car from downtown Oaxaca and the Zocalo.
Southern Mexico Colonial Tour
Tips on driving through Southern Mexico from Puerto Vallarta to Guadalajara, Zihuatanejo, Zipolite, Oaxaca, Puebla, Cholula, Cuernavaca and a great Home Exchange in Mexico City.
View this video in it's entirety on Vimeo at:
Project Mexico Summer 2012 Trailer
Project Mexico, St. Innocent Orphanage
Oaxaca Service Trip:Part 1
The Oaxaca Mission Trip documents
Villanova University's spring break service trip to Oaxaca, Mexico. Over the course of the week, we traveled to a variety of locations, including an orphanage, hospital, nursing home and the homes of various special needs families. By the end of the trip, Alex Longo and I compiled over 50 hours of footage.
It was a struggle to understand the actual purpose behind the trip as well as the tangible benefits to the Oaxacan people. I wondered whether the trip was merely a self congratulatory exercise used to ease the liberal guilt of overly
privileged college students. It's been 2 years since I completed the first (full) version of the documentary and I still find
myself searching for answers.
The History of Mexican Art
Spanish 2010 Entrada 2
Winter and Christmas - A matter of perspective when your in hot Mexico - YouTube
The first time I heard Christmas music in Mexico at a resort was so strange. It's sunny and hot and yet Christmas is coming, the resorts put up Christmas Trees, decorate but it still seems strange. That said I love it down there during the winter and Christmas in Mexico is totally fine by me...
Music by Jason Shaw audionautix.com Name: winterwonderland
Music by Jason Shaw audionautix.com Name: hollyjollychristmas
Oaxaca downtown, people watching. Nov 2017
AMAZING AND BEAUTIFUL PLACES IN MEXICO !!
officially called the United Mexican States, is a country located in the southern part of North America . Is the fourteenth largest country in the world, with an area of nearly 2 million km ². It is the eleventh most populous country, with a population in mid-2013 of around 118 million people, 13 6 7 most of which are native Spanish. According to the World Tourism Organization, Mexico is the main tourist destination in Latin America and the thirteenth most visited in the world.This is due largely to the 32 cultural and natural sites that are considered by UNESCO as a World Heritage Site, and in this sense the first on the continent and sixth worldwide
Giant paper balloons fly in Mexican festival
(31 Jul 2016) RESTRICTION SUMMARY: AP CLIENTS ONLY
AP TELEVISION - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Etla - 31 July 2016
1. Various of teams inflating giant paper balloon and releasing them as part of the Guelaguetza festivities
2. Various of team inflating balloon ++MUTE++
3. Balloon on ground
4. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) No name given, participant:
It's a tradition, a hobby that we have (making balloons out of papier mache). As artists, that's what we do, and the balloons vary in size. The greatest joy of balloon makers is for the balloons to fly.
5. Various of team inflating balloon
6. Various of team setting up and inflating balloon
STORYLINE
Dozens of giant, brightly colored paper balloons soared above Etla in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca on Sunday as part of the Guelaguetza traditional folk festivities.
Participants and artists from across Latin America showed off their creations, sending them into the sky to the delight of thousands of spectators.
The Guelaguetza is decades-old tradition that draws thousands of visitors every year to see folk dancers from across the state of Oaxaca, as well as parades, marching bands and crafts.
=========================================================
Clients are reminded:
(i) to check the terms of their licence agreements for use of content outside news programming and that further advice and assistance can be obtained from the AP Archive on: Tel +44 (0) 20 7482 7482 Email: info@aparchive.com
(ii) they should check with the applicable collecting society in their Territory regarding the clearance of any sound recording or performance included within the AP Television News service
(iii) they have editorial responsibility for the use of all and any content included within the AP Television News service and for libel, privacy, compliance and third party rights applicable to their Territory.
You can license this story through AP Archive:
Find out more about AP Archive:
A Traditional Salvia Ceremony in Oaxaca: HAMILTON'S PHARMACOPEIA (Clip)
Hamilton Morris seeks out a shaman to perform the traditional ceremony honoring the psychedelic plant Salvia divinorum.
WATCH NEXT: We Watched a Scientist Synthesize PCMO in a Lab:
Subscribe Now:
Follow VICELAND:
VICELAND.com |
VICE Video |
Full Uncensored Episodes on iTunes:
Facebook |
Twitter |
Instagram |
Newsletter |
Mexico's tourism depends on US travellers | Products made in MEXICO | Mexican products
Business & Indicators.
Finances – Investment – Stocks
Don’t miss “Breaking News” with Elliot Bullman
Only on México News Network
Follow us on social networks using #MxNN
FB:
Twitter:
Google +:
Find out more relevant information on art, culture, society, economy, finances, science and tech...
Mexican street corn | Elote | Mexican Street food
Mexican street corn | Elote | Mexican Corn - In this video recipe I will be show all just how easy and it is to make the mexican treat, Mexican Street Corn. I will be making a playlist for Street Foods.
Mexican Street Corn:
Ingredients
Corn on the cob
Wood Skewers
Melted Butter - about 3 tbsp
Mayo - about 2 heaping tbsp
Chili powder
Cotija Cheese - 2 cups
SUBSCRIBE FOR MORE ►►
If your like this video and would like to see more don't forget to like, share, and subscribe and hit the bell for a notification of the latest video.
My Amazon Store
**** Video Gear and Links ****
My Gear
Camera 1:
Camera 2:
Camera 3:
Favorite Prime Lens:
Favorite Zoom Lens:
Favorite Cell Mic:
Production Tech
Desk Mic:
Lighting Kit:
Neewer 4x 160 LED Lighting Kit:
Manfroto Mini Tripod w/universal Cell mount:
Echo Dot (2nd Generation): Black -
Social Media
Twitter:
Instagram:
Google+:
Facebook:
Snapchat:
Websites
BBQ Sauces and Rubs: grillmasterseriesbbq.com
Email: SmokinandGrillinwitAB@gmail.com
#SmokinandGrillinwitAB #CookinwitAB #SmokinGrillinFam
DISCLAIMER: This video and description contains affiliate links, which means that if you click on one of the product links, I’ll receive a small commission. This helps support the channel and allows us to continue to make videos like this. Thank you for the support!
Street scenes in Oaxaca as police surround city
++DAY SHOTS++
1. Federal Police in riot gear running in formation across street
2. Wide of people watching helicopter flying over Oaxaca City
3. Federal Police extinguishing fire on barricade
4. Federal police and armoured trucks at barricade
5. Line of federal police AUDIO: protesters chanting
6. Protester with hands behind head, being arrested
7. Various of protesters building barricade
++NIGHT SHOTS++
8. Man wrapped in blanket adding cardboard to fire (early Sunday morning)
9. SOUNDBITE: (Spanish) Protester with face covered, (no name given):
Ulises Ruiz is lashing us, that's what is happening here in Oaxaca. Since yesterday the situation is now worse (due to arrival of Federal Police in Oaxaca). Instead of being a solution, things are getting worse.
10. Wide of protester with face covered beside fire
STORYLINE:
Federal police with assault rifles and riot-shields began advancing into Oaxaca on Sunday, extinguishing a barricade of burning tyres and tree trunks in this normally picturesque tourist destination wracked by five months of protests and violence.
Officers in bulky black helmets lined a highway, close to a sign reading Welcome to Oaxaca and used fire extinguishers to douse flames at a roadblock abandoned by retreating demonstrators.
Flanked by armoured vehicles, a water-cannon and bulldozers and with helicopters hovering overhead, they faced a crowd of protesters who yelled insults and readied piles of stones to hurl.
What began in late May as a teacher's strike in this colonial southern Mexican city spiralled into chaos as anti-government protesters, students and Indian groups seized the central plaza and barricaded streets throughout the city, demanding that Oaxaca state Governor Ulises Ruiz be ousted from office.
Police and state forces, often in plainclothes, have shot at protesters, setting off clashes in which at least eight people have died.
President Vicente Fox, who leaves office December the first, resisted repeated calls to send federal forces to Oaxaca until Saturday, a day after gunfire killed a US activist-journalist and two residents.
This move prompted protesters to abandon some barricades but they then fortified others, promising a street-by-street defence against the Federal Preventative Police.
The Interior Department issued an ominous statement demanding that protesters give up their occupation of the city immediately, but officials said on Sunday they still hoped negotiations could avoid further bloodshed and hinted that police would hold off a major advance until Monday.
Protesters accused Ruiz of rigging his 2004 election and using thugs to kill or crush political opponents.
They say his resignation is not negotiable and they won't return home without it.
Ulises Ruiz is lashing us, that's what is happening here in Oaxaca. Since yesterday the situation is now worse (due to arrival of Federal Police in Oaxaca). Instead of being a solution, things are getting worse, one protester told AP Television.
The government news agency Notimex reported that a vehicle transporting federal police to Oaxaca crashed on Sunday, killing one officer and injuring 12 others.
Federal officials said they could not confirm that report.
The protesters estimated that around 4,000 federal police had taken up positions around the edges of the city by Sunday.
There were no official reports, however, on how many officers were sent to Oaxaca, which is the capital of the state of the same name.
Demonstrators have occupied the city's leafy central plaza since the start of the teacher's strike, setting up a sprawling tent city and covering historic buildings with graffiti.
It was unclear if the new police presence would undermine that agreement.
You can license this story through AP Archive:
Find out more about AP Archive:
Alan Rockefeller - Mushrooms of Mexico, February 19, 2014
This month Alan Rockefeller was our speaker Presenting the Mushrooms of Mexico 2013, showing the best of 50 gigs of photos taken during this summer's travels. There will be photos of edible, poisonous and hallucinogenic mushrooms, mushroom hunters and fungus fairs from southern Mexico. If you've followed Alan's accounts on the FFSC Google group, you'll surely want to attend this talk.
Alan is a mycologist studying the mushrooms of California and Mexico.H e has been focusing on the taxonomy and photography of Mexican mushrooms for the past seven years. Alan recently returned from five months of collecting in Mexico with extensive field work in the states of Jalisco, Colima, Michoacan, District Federal, Morelos, Puebla, Veracruz and Oaxaca. When he is not photographing mushrooms he is busy sequencing fungal DNA, photographing the microscopic features of mushrooms, hacking computers, modifying electronics and working in the IT Security field
Recorded on behalf of the Santa Cruz Fungus Federation by Justin Pierce
Forest Of Film - The Mexican
In the Summer of 2007, a large group of youths went off camping in the forest of Thetford, Norfolk. In an 8 day course, they each edited, acted out and directed 8 videos, with some side projects.
Here's the tale of a young Mexican on a search for his lost bicycle!
Psychedelic Sundays: Teonanácatl The Secret History
Teonanácatl: Flesh of the Gods. Despite the historical evidence of psychoactive mushrooms being used in Mexico, the idea was discouraged by William Safford – a leading botanist with the U.S. Department of Agriculture -who insisted that teonanácatl referred to peyote. He claimed that the Indians were trying to mislead the Catholic Church so they could consume their sacramental peyote in secret. Safford also cast doubt on the botanical knowledge of the Aztecs as well as the early Spanish chroniclers.
Schultes was skeptical of Safford’s theory. There was little resemblance between the peyote cactus and the fungi; furthermore, the Harvard ethnobotanist knew that peyote was a plant of the northern deserts rather than the tropical regions of southern Mexico. In an adroit bit of ethnobotanical detective work, Schultes located a letter addressed to the herbarium Director J.N. Rose from an Austrian-born national in Mexico named Blas Pablo Reko. Writing from Guadalajara, Reko stated that Safford was mistaken and that teonanácatl was a magic mushroom celebrated and consumed by the Mazatec Indians in the state of Oaxaca. In 1936, Schultes headed to Oaxaca to investigate.
Schultes met up with Blas Pablo Reko in Huautla, the capital of Mazatec country, and searched for a local shopkeeper who was said to have firsthand knowledge of the mushroom cults. They explored around Huautla and the nearby city of San Antonio Eloxochitlán with little success. There were rumors of mushroom cults, but Schultes and Reko were unable to find definitive proof.
One day, as Schultes was drying plants in town, a middle-aged Mazatec man named Dorantes brought him a dozen fresh mushrooms, referring to them as los niños santos (the “sacred children”). Dorantes handed Schultes an assortment of mushrooms, and within the handful Schultes identified a species of Panaeolus (later named Panaeolus campanulatus var. sphinctrinus) and Psilocybe cubensis. This was the first identifiable botanical collection of teonanácatl.
A later analysis by Schultes’ colleague Albert Hofmann of Sandoz Labs – who later became famous as the creator of LSD - eventually extracted compounds from these mushrooms that would lead to the creation of the first beta blocker cardiac drugs.
????#Video360 ???? ¡Devastación en Oaxaca!☹ Así va la reconstrucción en Juchitán ????????????