Matt_Colie wrote:
MC,
You are not alone in not sleeping anywhere but a campground. We used to do that, but we did not have the freedom that a motorhome or solid trailer allows. Truck stops and highway rest areas are noisy, but they are often where you need them, except in Kentucky where they have plowed in more than half - so, we don't stop in Kentucky anymore. Inbound from a long command excursion, we were looking for a mapped rest area in Kentuk, I did not even see the first at all and was watching carefully for the next (an extra 30 mi) and I could see the torn out ramp, but the signs were gone. There were NO Campgrounds in striking range, but there was a Cracker Barrel. That is why we don't stop in Kentucky.
The 2 hour law is pretty much a North Carolina thing. I have heard of it in other eastern states, but I have not been able to confirm it. That just puts North Carolina on the same don't stop (and spend money) here list. An acquaintance was/is a lawyer. He got told that he had been in a rest area too long and he should move on. He collected the officer's badge number and other identification, and - in front of the officer - used his cell phone to leave a message with a colleague that, should he have a problem on the road, this is the man that forced him back out onto the highway. He didn't move and the officer left.
We have recently been in Walmart lots that had pop-up popped.
These days, if I am going to pay for a nights sleep, I check Google Earth to:
A - Find the actual campground and see if it compares to the description at all.
B - Look for grades that truck will be engine braking down.
C - Find the nearest railroad tracks.
So Far, this has been successful.
Matt
Why would you not want to stop in North Carolina just because of the law concerning a rest area? NC is a wonderful state with everything from hundreds of miles of seashore to the mountains in the west. There is also plenty of very nice areas in between the two! I would think you might be shorting yourself by doing this.