Age no barrier to globetrotting, as 76-year-old Korean-American backpacker shows
Hyo So one of a growing number of retired people who are picking up their rucksacks, travelling to exotic places and making new friends

It started with a quote he had heard on television about regret: that at the end of life, you are haunted not by the things you did, but by the things you didn’t do.
A few months later, Hyo So booked a hostel bed in Cairo and took off alone from his apartment in Los Angeles' Pico Union neighbourhood on his first-ever backpacking trip.
Since then, he has made his way through some 40 countries – crossing the Gobi Desert, chatting with Maasai tribesmen in Kenya, charming fellow backpackers in Kingston by singing Jamaica Farewell. He has been mistaken for a beggar in Central America while holding an empty coffee cup, kept awake in threadbare dorm rooms with more than a dozen other beds and has been inflicted with more than his share of traveller’s diarrhoea.
“Life is experiences – and not just the good, positive ones,” he says. “This is living.”
So knows a thing or two about living – he’s 76 years old.
It has long been a rite of passage to set off into the world and travel on a shoestring – have adventures, meet strangers, experience a close call or two and find yourself before you settle into your adult life.