If you listen real hard to rumor mongers they’ll tell you there is no free camping, wild camping, or boondocking, whatever you want to call it, east of the Mississippi.
They are wrong and no surprise there I suppose as what some people equate to “difficult” for others comes out as “impossible.” But if ye seek ye shall find as the good book has been insisting for thousands of years. It’s good advice as free camping is simple when you know where to look. On Google Maps the dark patches of green are often a hint indicating public land of some sort.
Another app I use is Free Roam which doesn’t show many boondocking spots individually like iOverlander, but it does show rest areas which we sleep at very often when traveling, and it also has green and brown overlays for National Forest and Bureau of Land Management land respectively.
And you can imagine when we finally figure out the spot Rusty gives it his seal of approval.
Our back up camera had started acting up shortly after we got going due south, so Layne called Kip the Promaster guru back in Barberton and we ended up returning three hours for a quick lesson in radio removal from the dashboard. It’s actually quite simple prodding a spike into four holes to release the retaining clips.
I’ve ordered a lightly used replacement on eBay for a hundred bucks and it’s scheduled to arrive at Gary’s place in Tennessee next week just to cheer him up because he likes being kind and helpful. I’m hoping a replacement will solve the problem and get us through South America with a functioning back up camera and radio. If we were staying in the US I’d just put up with the glitch till the whole thing implodes. The cost of stupidly ambitious travel!
Meanwhile we arrived a day late at “our” spot in the national forest and thus will only get to spend one night here but we are making the most of it.
Hot tea, sunshine, cool temperatures and my eReader. I’m as easy to please in my own way as is Rusty. Layne has been cooking up some road food and in the background we have some traffic noise from state highway 39. We’re parked on the North Fork of the Cherry River so that’s also the local name for the highway. It’s a pretty stream too at this time of year.
I guess at other times of year it can get boisterous.
There are only three spots here but up the road iOverlander shows a forest road with several boondocking spots. We are out of season so we didn’t expect to find this place full but if it hadn’t worked out for any reason we’d have driven a couple of miles further for more choices. Back up plans are important when living and sleeping on the road! The town of Richwood:
And what roads these are in West Virginia…I-79 towards Charleston:
State Highway 39 is getting paved bit by bit so the highway tar snakes which are ribbed and extremely annoying are slowly getting covered over:
West Virginia was created by the Civil War when the western piece of the state composed of hills and valleys wanted to separate from the land owning more populated side. Happily for their leaders this plan coincided with the President’s need to keep the confederacy away from his capital so the deed was completed in two years, by June 1863.
I think about that sleight of political hand when I drive through this beautiful but impoverished state. I am reassured when I look at the state of the contemporary nation and remember that some pretty weird shenanigans have gone down in history and the union has survived.
The constitution requires the residents of any state to vote to split their entity and I guess in the middle of the civil war when most of the state didn’t recognize Federal authority it must have been easy to get a majority vote from those that did!
I see grumbly residents of remote Northern California pushing for the creation of “Jefferson State” but I can’t imagine the population of say Los Angeles voting to let them go. Ownership of territory is a weird thing and people get real fussy real fast about it.
All that aside West Virginia is stunning. After a few miles of winding mountain roads through perfect lush greenery she remarked on the astonishing diversity of the countryside we’ve seen. Can’t fault her on that observation!
It isn’t our first visit to the Mountain State but each time we see more we like. And Rusty does too.
Trucks roll by close to our camp site but somehow they don’t bother us. The peace of the mountains forgives all sins.
Just as well really as there’s a church hiding behind each and every tree.
It’s not the south properly but it is the country. Men went to war to make this state free 160 years ago so I guess it’s up to us to show our appreciation by not forgetting and enjoying what they left behind.
We’ve done our best.
Too bad we have to rush off to do some moochdocking in Asheville with the family. I can’t wait to come back.
2 comments:
...you are making good time as the miles are racking up.
Beautiful state!! And you got some great pics to prove it.
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