How To Travel The World On The Cheap (with Graham Hughes)
Graham Hughes, the world’s most travelled filmmaker, offers his expert advice on how to travel the world on a shoestring budget.
htttp://www.theodysseyexpedition.com
When asked how can I afford to travel so much, I feel like retorting with: how can you afford your rent? To keep a dog? To have children? To smoke? I have no rent to pay, no dog to feed, no kids to look after or cigarette companies to support, so 100% of the money I have can go on travel. Keeping to a budget of $15 a day is fairly easy if you’re CouchSurfing (free), eating street food ($2 a meal) and travelling on the chicken bus ($10 per 100 miles). That’s just $5500 a year — less than a typical British cigarette smoker will spend on fags over the same period and much, much less than the rent on a squalid little flat in London or the cost of bringing up children.
“The toughest part of travel is deciding to go.”
Travel isn’t a question of being loaded, it’s a question of priorities. Obviously if you want comfort and security, stay at home, work hard and maybe go on a cruise when you’re 67 years old. If you’re lucky enough to live that long. But if you want to see the world, rush headlong into the thrill and vigour of the unknown, wake up every day in a new place with new challenges and new friends, then the world is your dancefloor — all you have to do is make the decision to GET OUT THERE and strut your funky stuff.
To follow my Guinness World Record Breaking attempt to visit EVERY COUNTRY in the world without flying (184 countries so far) visit htttp://www.theodysseyexpedition.com
Filmed on location in Sorong, West Papua and various places on Planet Earth.
How To Travel The World On The Cheap (with Graham Hughes)
Graham Hughes, the world’s most travelled filmmaker, offers his expert advice on how to travel the world on a shoestring budget.
htttp://www.theodysseyexpedition.com
When asked how can I afford to travel so much, I feel like retorting with: how can you afford your rent? To keep a dog? To have children? To smoke? I have no rent to pay, no dog to feed, no kids to look after or cigarette companies to support, so 100% of the money I have can go on travel. Keeping to a budget of $15 a day is fairly easy if you’re CouchSurfing (free), eating street food ($2 a meal) and travelling on the chicken bus ($10 per 100 miles). That’s just $5500 a year — less than a typical British cigarette smoker will spend on fags over the same period and much, much less than the rent on a squalid little flat in London or the cost of bringing up children.
“The toughest part of travel is deciding to go.”
Travel isn’t a question of being loaded, it’s a question of priorities. Obviously if you want comfort and security, stay at home, work hard and maybe go on a cruise when you’re 67 years old. If you’re lucky enough to live that long. But if you want to see the world, rush headlong into the thrill and vigour of the unknown, wake up every day in a new place with new challenges and new friends, then the world is your dancefloor — all you have to do is make the decision to GET OUT THERE and strut your funky stuff.
To follow my Guinness World Record Breaking attempt to visit EVERY COUNTRY in the world without flying (184 countries so far) visit htttp://www.theodysseyexpedition.com
Filmed on location in Sorong, West Papua and various places on Planet Earth.
Category
Travel and Vacations
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