Dec-09-2013 02:02 PM
Dec-09-2013 09:07 PM
jefe 4x4 wrote:
Buzz (Eric) is baaack!
If you fear not finding a spot, make a reservation in the morning before you pull into an area.
As far as stealth camping, some on here (like Sleepy) have elevated it to a fine art. We have done a lot of stealth camping and you learn to chose well. Otherwise, you may get in trouble. In big cities, we camp right on the street with the shades pulled down. Of course, it's only two consenting adults with no children or pets. I can't even tell you what the perimeters are. You look and decide whether to stop or move on if everything doesn't seem right. One thing is to pull in late and leave early. Stop in a county park to make dinner(if eating in) and move to your domicile location for the night with a quick move to the box. Plain site is good. Marinas are good. County campgrounds are generally good. I think the big thing is to recognize a good site and take advantage of the opportunity. I have found a new map support in Pocket Earth, basically interactive maps of the world/countries/states you can download endlessly for $2.99. Yes, two dollars, ninety-nine cents, US. Once you pay the fee, you can go back and keep downloading the areas you are currently focusing on. They have put Nat. Geo's expensive mapping program out of business. This has been a boon to us on our I-pad. I have been able to find boondocking side roads using this service. It is just great.
Saddle bag lk., which we camped at at the end of Sept. this year may not be open in early June, depending on the snowpack this winter. A fun website about Tioga Pass open/close;
http://www.monobasinresearch.org/data/tiogapass.htm
There are private and public campgrounds on the west side of Yosemite.
Here are my takes on your other destinations:
- Denver, CO
many places to camp around the fringe.
- North Rim Grand Canyon
it's almost uninhabited; plenty of dry camping down a few dirt roads. It's just very hard to get to. It's out of the way of almost everything.
- Hoover Dam
Nothing in proximity, and in June I would simply drive thru and find somewhere at a higher elevation.
- Las Vegas (Casino Campground?)
Circus circus has an in-town campground, but again, June?
- Death Valley
figgeddaboutit in June unless you are a survivalist.
- Sequoia National Forest
is a long way from anywhere with a long drive into Sequoia N.P. (if that's your goal) If just the Forest, plenty of dry camping/boondocking.
- Yosemite
Unless you do like Buzz did and camp in December (when there are no reservations) you definitely want reservations inside the park.
- San Francisco
You are SOL.
- Lake Tahoe
plenty of campgrounds of all kinds. Again, June can be an iffy month if above 8K ft.
- Sparks, NV (stay with Family)
jefe
Dec-09-2013 07:54 PM
Dec-09-2013 07:51 PM
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Dec-09-2013 04:02 PM
stickdog wrote:
My only suggestion is stop early, don't push that extra 75-100 miles. We stop early at near empty campgrounds then watch them fill up.
Dec-09-2013 03:52 PM
CB
Channel 17Redneck Express