Somewhere before my bus broke down in Australia, I was called a flashpacker.
Despite traveling for 18 months, it was the first time I'd heard the term.
A flashpacker is defined as someone, unusually in their mid 20s to early 30s, who travels like a backpacker but has more disposal income as well as electronics such as a camera or laptop.
Flashpackers also expect better hostels and services.
Neither fully backpacker nor tourist, flashpackers are new to the traveling vocabulary.
Flashpackers sleep in hostels, use a backpack, and want cheap transportation but blow their wad on meals, beer, tours, and parties.
They usually aren't walking into a hostel randomly or wearing the same shirt for a week.
Many hostels are up scaling to accommodate the increasing wants and desires of flashpackers and you'll find these hostels in all corners of the earth.
Flashpackers still have no fixed journey and all the time to roam around but don't pinch every penny.
They are backpackers with means.
Backpacking is not about a look, it's a lifestyle.
Just because a person doesn't have a certain style, doesn't mean they lack the character of a backpacker.
It doesn't make them less of a backpacker.
It goes against the backpacker mentality to look down on someone because they travel differently.
Aren't we supposed to be embracing different ways of life? It all comes down to what makes a backpacker a backpacker.
That's spirit.
The desire to explore new places and experience new people.
Backpacking is about opening your mind to new things and looking differently at the world.
It's not about the stuff you carry.
As your spirit is the same, what stuff you carry shouldn't matter.
We're all flashpackers, whether you like it or not.
We may not be driving up to the hostel in a limo but we all expect a little "flash" nowadays.
According to a Hostelworld study in 2006, 21 percent of people travel with a laptop, 54 percent with an MP3 player, 83 percent with a mobile phone and a whopping 86 percent travel with a digital camera.
Think about your last holiday- how many travelers did you see with cameras? iPods? Laptops? I can't remember seeing one person without a camera, and at least 3/4 of the people I saw had iPods.
The truth is we all travel with costly electronics now.
We check our email and Skype our friends.
We all have a camera and most of us have an iPod.
We are flashpackers and it's not a bad thing.
All these electronics allows us to stay better connected with our friends, our family, and helps us better document our travels.
The key is to once in awhile to put down the camera, turn off the computer, and enjoy the culture you came to see.
The backpacker who set off with 1 shirt, a small pack, and two baht to his name is getting hard to find.
Many of us have a little more money and want a little more but we still carry the backpacker spirit.
We still seek new cultures, exotic locales, and long term travel.
We still look for cheap hostels and transport.
We camp on that jungle trek.
The divergence is that now we also want a place to plug in our camera, check our e-mail, and take a hot shower.
We just want to be pampered...
once in awhile.
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