Backpacker Travel
![]() |
THE SMART BACKPACKER – Student Backpack Travelling Tips to Southeast Asia
The Southeast Asia is a backpacker's paradise. Backpacking was invented for Asia particularly because it simply rectifies the essence of backpacking culture ofa low-cost, independent, international travel. Southeast Asia could be the ideal place to spend a holiday from university for more reasons than one, and if you bother to ask, money-wise, yes. Except for the Banana Pancake Trail, the traveller will find in almost any place off-the-beaten paths and hundreds of options to personalize and customize the travel experience. And if you've picked Southeast Asia as your gap-packer destination right now, you are in the right state of mind, because if it's raw and authentic backpacking you want, this is where you need to be. You may not need your Lonely Planet Guide, you'll see.
1. VISA-vis: visa reminders
Very important! Southeast Asia is definitely one of the most backpacker-friendly destinations for the inexperienced traveller mainly because of cost, proximity of the countries, and, hey, entry is not such a complex thing either. For U.S. citizens, countries in SEA can and will be traversed without the necessity for visas for a certain period of time like Malaysia -90 days, Singapore-30 days, Thailand – 30 days, and Philippines – 21 days. For Laos, Cambodia, and Indonesia, visas-on-arrival are issued in the airport without hassle for fees no more than US$50 depending, of course, on your planned length of stay.
Most backpackers commence their SEA journey in BANGKOK, which, along with MANILA, are strategic places where the traveller can apply for visas to anywhere in the Southeast Asia. Some prefer a business visa that does make travel easier because of its stretched validity and multiple entry access, which is good for a year's worth of stay in SEA. But leave this for the seasoned backpacker. For a two month stint, a tourist visa will work super fine.
Visa regulations are recurrently updated depending on foreign and political situations, so watch out for extra requirements like exchanging at least US$300 to MMK in Burma. But don't be intimidated. Check the State Department website for up-to-date information on visa and travel, or, when all else fails, seek advice from a credible travel agency such as Liberty Travel.
2. SURE TRAVEL: Insurance policy coverage
The SEA region remains entirely unpredictable when it comes to health and property theft incidences. Hence, as a student, you may want to organize and purchase a comprehensive travel insurance and screen what circumstances are covered and not covered by the policy, like medical evacuation. Save for Thailand and Manila, a big bulk of hospitals in the SEA is not equipped for anything beyond First Aid remedies. It may get quite ugly, say, when an accident happens while tubing in Vang Vieng, and even uglier when your medical coverage, you find, cannot accommodate evacuation to Bangkok or does not extend to accidents from "extreme sports".
These are decisions that matter, decisions that can save your life. So talk with your insurance provider, know the limits, keep receipts of your valuables, and make copies of your insurance policy to leave at home. When the inevitable does happen, don't forget to file and acquire a copy of the police reports, and always make accessible your insurance provider's 24-hour emergency number accordingly before paying for whatever medical services.
3. FARE WELL: Airfare deals
When that's set, plan for your air transport. You'd want to get the best deal without compromising comfort. Not to be too patronizing, but a 12-hour flight to a faraway land and the entertainment system breaks down on you is outright injustice. Go for an airline with a "decent" track record. But before finalizing your booking, check your agent or airline representative for special offers when booking before purchasing your ticket
Some airlines have an "ALL ASIA PASS" like CX or "ASEAN PASS" like Thai Airways and Malaysian Airlines. Cathay's All Asia Pass is a roundtrip promo available for U.S. residents flying from L.A., San Francisco, or New York to Hong Kong then to at least 2 basic cities of your choice. Prices are subject to change, but the figures for 2010 travel begin at US$ 1599, inclusive of the roundtrip USA fare. Even better, is Thai Air's ASEAN PASS which I heard go by a coupon per flight which have incredible cut-rate prices which go as low as US$99 for each coupon (minimum of 3 and maximum of 6 coupons). MAS' ASEAN PASS is good for 4 flights to Southeast Asian major cities for a charming price of US$322.
For these, you will need them issued at the same time as your international flight ticket, so planning is of the essence. Check www.cathayusa.com or www.thaiar.com for details and updates.
4. BOOK your NOOK: Lodging reservations
You know, after hours on end of air and road travel, to be able to check in and shower in your selected hotel accommodation is perfect bliss. But for other parts of the trip, booking hotels or hostels is less than necessary. Tourism is a huge economy generator, lest you didn't know. That Southeast Asia is improving on backpack travel infrastructures is only to the traveller's advantage just because s/he will almost never run out of hotels. Also, it is a great advocacy to help independent or family-owned hotels to make sure you're helping sustainable tourism in the country and directly benefit local economic development.
While you're at it, you can also research and book tours that contribute to preservation of culture and endangered wildlife in the area, such as the elephant camps in Chiang Mai. Animal rights activists fight for elephants which are made to wear painful wood in their backs to carry tourists for hours in the jungle. These cuts through the pachyderms and is a truly distressing truth. By a small act of choosing tours, like elephant camps that offer elephant-back safari, you are ensuring that cultures and wildlife will subsist until your next time here.
5. PICK your PACK: The right pack
Backpacks are essential, need I say? Having taken care of the more important things, it's high time to freak about your pack, and I say that in a good way. There are many good choices for packs these days but the operative word is comfort, as it has been throughout the article. Right size, zip-around, compartments, chimney, and straps – these are what you want in your pack. Zip-around versus top loading is self-explanatory (no more digging everything out). Internal and external compartments offer great organization. Chimneys will create ventilation between man and pack, so definitely no flat backs, please. Straps for securing the pack in place as lug this around. Finally, the right size also means making sure the pack and its would-be contents stays within the carry-on limit.
(Pick a sturdy and reliable set of shoes for trekking as well!)
6. HAPPY PACKING
Never shall I more happily stress this… pack light, pack well. This is the code of the backpacker. No matter how big your bag, there will always be a way to fill it with crap. (Yeah, take that laptop out.)So, understand your destination – SEA. The basics would cover a first aid kit, travel size toiletries, a sweater or a sarong, trekking shoes, passport (photocopies and photos for visa apps), USD currency and yourself.
Laptops and other expensive e-gadgets are quite risky due to theft and damage concerns, rather bulky too. Keep your techie luggage to cameras and mobile phones. Anyway, the region teems with internet shops, while hotels are mostly Wi-Fi ready. Make sure your backpack is half empty when you come here to save space for your shopping. Keep that first aid kit. With the poor medical facilities in some rural areas, this might just save your life.
Save for…
The amazing thing is that all your modern comfort needs are here, authentic and cheaper. Toiletries are manufactured in Thailand and Philippines like J&J and Colgate. The sarong, whichyou can also choose to buy here, is handy as a makeshift blanket for the cold nights or as a shoulder/leg cover-up for those solemn temple visits. Thongs or flip flops which come cheap in SEA (less than US$1) are also necessary for that city trek and for bathroom use when things aren't looking that nice and clean. Don't forget that dear Southeast Asia is a shopper's discount haven for counterfeit, original, and all brands. In fact, you can also buy a cheap tri- or quad-band mobile here with a local SIM for $50 less to stay connected.
***
The real deal in backpacking is freedom and the ability to choose. The ultimate advice to date is to be highly adaptable and flexible to situations. Seriously, Southeast Asia is the place for "Tenner-A-Day" student travellers. Daily budget: $10-$20, not including shopping.
Weigh your options when a risky but fun opportunity comes along, and simply SIMPLY (I mean really) avoid messing with drug policies, not just in Southeast Asia. Tourist or local, drug violations render unmerciful sanctions for being caught dabbling whilst in Southeast Asia. In some countries, it could be a choice between jail time, deportation, life sentence, or the best of all, death penalty.
Delays and cancellations can be an amazing thing too, so keep cool and go with it. Should you get lost, what can I say? That's the whole point! This will be an exciting trip!
Backpacking Addictz is a website set up by backpackers for the use of backpackers. On this site you will find a lot of very valuable information surrounding different destinations around the world and tips and advice on budget travel and backpacking. You will also find an enthusiastic and insightful backpacking blog which is regularly updated with new posts and article.
Backpacking Addictz Travel eGuides are a fantastic, cheap and easy way to get hold of a vast amount of backpacking information prior to setting off on your backpacking adventure.
About the Author
Josh Boorman
Editor-in-chief
&
Herika Lui Manaligod
Co-contributor
Backpacking Addictz
admin@backpackingaddictz.com
Twitter: @backpackaddictz
|
|
Backpacker $12 Magazine of wilderness travel offering practical "you can do it--here's how" advice to enjoy every trip. Filled with the best places, gear and information for all kinds of hiking and camping trips with fold-out maps and stunning color photography. |
|
|
The Backpacker $11.99 ‘Leaving the blinding sand for the cool shade of the trees, I walked carefully through the undergrowth to where Dave, using two twigs as chopsticks, was picking up a freshly severed human finger…’John’s trip to India starts badly when his girlfriend returns home and he finds himself looking at the sharp end of a knife in a train station cubicle. But his life is saved by an enigmatic traveller called Rick, who persuades John to question his mundane plans for the future, risking it all for much, much more.Fast forward to the Thai island of Koh Pha-Ngan; John, Rick and their new friend Dave pose as millionaire aristocrats in a hedonistic Eden of beautiful girls, free drugs and wild beach parties. Running out of money and pursued by the Thai Mafia, they embark on adrenalin-fuelled journeys to Singapore, Indonesia, Australia and Hong Kong, facing danger at every turn.Filled with wild adventures in exotic locations, this is not travel writing for the faint-hearted: this is an amazing true story of the hunt for excess at any cost. |
|
|
The Backpacker (Paperback) $23.51 For fans of Alex Garland`s The Beach, a true story of out-of-control travel "Leaving the blinding sand for the cool shade of the trees, I walked carefully through the undergrowth to where Dave, using two twigs as chopsticks, was picking up a freshly severed human finger . . . " John`s trip to India starts badly when his girlfriend, with whom he is traveling, returns home. Left to his own devices, he soon finds himself looking at the sharp end of a knife in a train station cubicle. But his life is saved—and turned upside down—by Rick, an enigmatic fellow traveler who persuades John to question his mundane plans for the future, risking it all for much, much more. Fast forward to the Thai island of Koh Pha-Ngan, where John, Rick, and their new friend Dave pose as millionaire aristocrats in a hedonistic Eden of beautiful women, free drugs, and wild beach parties. However, when they find themselves hotly pursued by the Thai Mafia, they embark on adrenaline-fueled journeys to Singapore, Indonesia, Australia, and Hong Kong, facing danger at every turn. This is not travel writing for the faint of heart: this is an unbelievable true story of the hunt for excess, at any cost. |
|
|
The Global Nomad: Backpacker Travel in Theory and Practice $126.7 No Synopsis Available |
|
|
The Backpacker's Handbook (Book) by Chris Townsend $19.95 Award-winning guide to backpacking equipment and techniques: planning your hike, desert hiking, ultralight backpacking, and adventure travel to hike in exotic foreign countries. Covers all climates, from snow and mountain to desert.416 pages. |
|
|
The Backpacker`s Bible (Paperback) $25.61 From planning the journey to packing the bags, from organizing money to keeping in touch with home—truly the bible for hassle-free backpacking The result of extensive research and firsthand experience, this guide is crammed full of advice for the first-time traveler. It offers helpful tips on finding work abroad, obtaining travel insurance, being a responsible ecotraveler, and much more. It provides crucial information on personal safety and potential health risks, with newly revised and updated chapters to cover the increased international safety measures and the growth of internet-related travel assistance and social networking. The best guidebooks are recommended, together with a comprehensive selection of insightful travel reads. There`s even an alphabetical guide to diplomatic contacts for each country, complete with details of typical regional climates. |
|
|
REG BACKPACKER RAINCOVER $16.99 REG BACKPACKER RAINCOVER |
|
|
Backpacker Pack $65 Download the Backpacker Pack font for Mac or Windows in OpenType, TrueType or PostScript format. |
|
|
Used Martin Backpacker $139.99 In Store Used USED MARTIN BACKPACKER |
|
|
The Backpacker's Bible; Your Essential Guide to Round-the-World Travel $16.58 No Synopsis Available |
|
|
The Backpacker's Bible; Your Essential Guide to Round the World Travel $18.67 No Synopsis Available |
|
|
Backpacking 2.0: Verwendung und Bedeutung von Weblogs fr Backpacker $14.47 Die Intransparenz von Web 2.0 stellt die Tourismusindustrie vor neue Herausforderungen. Basierend auf relevanter Literatur ber Backpacker und deren Informationsverhalten wurden Weblogs - als ein Bestandteil von Web 2.0 - auf deren Bedeutung fr Backpacker analysiert. Lange wurde der Markt jugendlicher Urlauber und Studenten von der Tourismuswirtschaft vernachlssigt. Erst in den letzten Jahren erkannte man, welches Potenzial dieses Segment birgt. Der European Travel Commission zu Folge, ist rund ein Fnftel der internationalen Touristen diesem Gstetyp zuzuordnen. Der Backpacking-Tourismus als Submarkt, ist von budgetbewussten und flexiblen Personen geprgt, die vorwiegend alleine oder in Kleingruppen reisen, weitgehend gebildet sind und meist der westlichen Mittelschicht entstammen. Sie bentigen aufgrund der verhltnismig langen Reisedauer oftmals Ad-hoc-Informationen, die sie sich zumeist ber den klassischen Reisefhrer und ber Mund-zu-Mund Propaganda beschaffen. Der Backpacker assoziiert seine Reiselust mit Begriffen wie Freiheit, Selbststndigkeit und Abenteuer. Diese Freiheit erfordert jedoch auch ein hohes Ma an Flexibilitt. Je nach Situation und Reiseumstand knnen sich die Reiseplne spontan verndern. Folglich werden Ad-hoc-Informationen ber Unterknfte, Transportmittel oder Aktivitten in der jeweiligen Destination bentigt. Zum durchschlagenden Erfolg des Web 2.0 haben in den vergangenen Jahren vor allem Weblogs beigetragen. Es handelt sich dabei um einfach zu erstellende, aktualisierte Websites, die aus umgekehrt chronologisch angeordneten Beitrgen bestehen. In der Fachliteratur werden sie durch Attribute wie "aktuell", "authentisch" und "unabhngig" beschrieben, Weblogs scheinen sich ihrem Charakter nach als Medienformat fr Backpacker zu eignen, denn sie untersttzten eine einfache orts- und zeitunabhngige Gestaltung von Webinhalten. Um die konkrete Bedeutung von Blogs fr Backpacker zu erforschen, wurde eine Online-Befragung in mehreren Hostels durchgefhrt. Die Erkenntnisse daraus zeigen, dass die traditionellen Quellen tatschlich mehr Verwendung bei den Backpackern finden, als das "neue Medium" Weblog. Am Ende des Buches werden Handlungsempfehlungen an die Leistungstrger der Destinationen abgegeben, wie sie Weblogs effektiv als komplementres Marketingmedium einsetzen knnen. |
|
|
Backpacker Tourism $59.95 Offers an examination of the behaviour, attitudes and motivations of backpacker tourists as well as the growth of the infrastructure behind backpacker tourism phenomenon throughout the world. This volume provides theoretically informed case studies of individual destinations of backpackers. |
|
|
Used Martin Backpacker Guitar $124.99 In Store Used USED MARTIN BACKPACKER GUITAR |
|
|
Martin Steel String Backpacker Left $199.99 Martin Steel String Backpacker Left |
|
|
Martin Nylon String Backpacker Left $199.99 Martin Nylon String Backpacker Left |
|
|
The Backpacker's Field Manual, Revised and Updated $11.99 The Backpacker's Field Manual, Revised and Updated |
|
|
Used Martin Backpacker W/Bag $119.99 In Store Used USED MARTIN BACKPACKER W/BAG |
|
|
Used Martin Backpacker Acous Guitar $119.99 In Store Used USED MARTIN BACKPACKER ACOUS GUITAR |
|
|
Sacs of Life BP225 Backpacker 2 2 Bag system $39.83 Converts from a roomy clutch to a full size backpack. This is great for travel and citygoers alike. With an extra City Bag it is the most useful reusable bag you will own. Dimensions: 12 x 3.5 x 6. |
|
|
THE BACKPACKER'S HANDBOOK $19.95 "The most up-to-date and comprehensive guide to equipment and technique available anywhere."— Backpack (UK) This enormously practical guide includes everything from essential techniques such as map and compass work to the skills needed for more remote wilderness journeys—such as how to ford rivers safely and how to choose a route through untracked terrain. As a gear advisor, this book is unequaled. You'll find the last word on: How to choose packs and footwear—and make sure they fit What clothing to take on the trail Tents, tarps, stoves, water purifiers, and other gear GPS, cell phones, and other electronic devices And much more Now in its third edition, The Backpacker's Handbook also covers desert hiking, ultralight backpacking, and adventure trekking in distant corners of the globe. Indeed, there is little about backpacking Chris Townsend does not cover. This trusted reference will prepare you for the challenges and excitement of backpacking the wilderness. "A clear and comprehensive primer on backpacking gear. Townsend's knowledge is immense."— Sierra "Belongs in every bookcase dealing with outdoor topics. . . . Chockablock full of useful, practical, commonsense info. . . . If you tramp the outdoors, get this book."— Maine Sportsman "For those thinking of taking a backpack journey, The Backpacker's Handbook is required reading."— Daily Local News (West Chester, PA) |
|
|
Backpacking (Travel) $84.44 Backpacking is a term that has historically been used to denote a form of lowcost, independent international travel. Terms such as independent travel and/or budget travel are often used interchangeably with backpacking. The factors that traditionally differentiate backpacking from other forms of tourism include but are not limited to the following: use of public transport as a means of travel, preference of youth hostels to traditional hotels, length of the trip vs. conventional vacations, use of a backpack, an interest in meeting the locals as well as seeing the sights. The definition of a backpacker has evolved as travelers from different cultures and regions participate and will continue to do so, preventing an airtight definition. Recent research has found that, .. .backpackers constituted a heterogeneous group with respect to the diversity of rationales and meanings attached to their travel experiences. They also displayed a common commitment to a noninstitutionalised form of travel, which was central to their selfidentification as backpackers. Author: Miller, Frederic P./ Vandome, Agnes F./ McBrewster, John Binding Type: Paperback Number of Pages: 108 Publication Date: 2010/04/21 Language: English Dimensions: 5.98 x 9.01 x 0.25 inches |
|
|
Silhouette of a Backpacker Standing on a Mountain Ridge $39.99 Kate Thompson Silhouette of a Backpacker Standing on a Mountain Ridge - Photographic Print |
|
|
Backpacker Crossing over a Bridge a Bridge $39.99 Kate Thompson Backpacker Crossing over a Bridge a Bridge - Photographic Print |



US $689.49













































