Advocate III
I try not to. I would say 90% of the time I don't, but if I do I do my best not to touch my phone.
Advocate III
Member III
30085
Enthusiast I
27205
Advocate I
Influencer II
Pathfinder II
Explorer I
For me its not about being "cool" - its all about getting away from the daily grind and rediscovering mindfulness.I get everyone feels being off-grid is cool.
It is still very common to be without cell service West of the Rockies when outside of towns/cities or major roadways as we have vast areas with little to no population. The attached 4G/LTE coverage map demonstrates this; the green-ish areas without coverage are the "remote" areas that the overlanders, those that I know anyway, flock to. The ROI on placing infrastructure in vast "unpopulated" areas is just not there so "growth" has been slow.Yet reality is, most everywhere is getting covered.
Advocate II
24021
Off-Road Ranger I
0745
Yes, exactly; leaving the rat race and all its entrapments far behind, only connecting with what is important. I do have a hobby room in the basement that lacks any adult supervision but it isn't all that important.For me its not about being "cool" - its all about getting away from the daily grind and rediscovering mindfulness.
Enthusiast I
Enthusiast I
7351
Advocate III
Advocate I
Traveler II
Trail Mechanic I
22608
Enthusiast I
Where I like to go (CA/NV/AZ/UT) camping/hiking mostly no cell service. I carry a Garmin Inreach Mini to update family of my status and for any emergency. I have Sirius/XM in my truck to keep me company while traveling and stay current with news. If you have cell service it means you are too close to civilization.Chime in and lets get a rough head count on how many travel/camp outside of cell service.