- ✓World-class recommendationGPS and field notes from veteran overlanders Dave vouches for. The source
- ✓ResearchedChecked and detailed by Dave — five decades in the field. Public data — no copyright on coordinates
- 0Verified on the groundNo dated visit here yet. Stays Likely until Dave's stood on it — or the crowd confirms
A hidden spur next to Lonesome Lake, but not within sight of the lake. Very small, suitable for only one vehicle. Has metal fire ring. Surrounded by trees. Clear and well-used. Appeal here is proximity to lake. Very private. Lake visitors will likely not notice you. No cell service. Lake is gorgeous. Mosquitoes might be really bad depending on season. Recommended.
— field note from a world-class overlander Dave vouches for. Verdict: Recommended. Confidence stays Likely until Dave stands on it or the crowd confirms.
A dispersed site on public land, Pierce County. The facts below are structured data from Dave's list; the write-up is being rebuilt from real field notes, so it's held at Likely until it's confirmed on the ground.

Stay limits vary by unit — many USFS/BLM areas cap dispersed camping around 14 days, but not all. Confirm the current rule and road status with the managing office before you commit.
- Road surface & last-mile access
- How many rigs fit
- Cell coverage by carrier
- Seasonal / winter access
- Current fire restrictions
- Water access from the pin
- Shade & wind exposure
- Noise / neighbors
- 1 Grocery6 mi
- 2 Water6 mi
- 3 Fuel10 mi
- 4 Dump18 mi
- 5 Propane31 mi
Straight-line miles from camp — real roads run longer; drive-time is the refinement coming. Nearest few per category, from OpenStreetMap (© OpenStreetMap contributors). Treat all natural water. Open in Google Maps ↗