

You get to plug in for free while you wait. If you have to get service done on your Winnebago, this is a great option.

Spot is next to blueberries and probably best for smaller RVs. Harvest Host (Farm) – Glastonbury, CT: Stayed June 2017.The area was quiet, aside from some work being done on the farm during operating hours. Quiet location on a farm near a playground, pond and goats! The farm store was wonderful and had many delicious options. Harvest Host (Farm) – Bethlehem, CT: Stayed June 2017.We’ve added a ★ to the ones that really impressed us. For places we’ve stayed with our Harvest Hosts membership, we put the location and type of host, so other members can search for it.Īnd for extra tips about types of RV Camping, check out our blog post on budget & comfort considerations. It should note public lands, free pull offs and scenic byways.Here are all of our RV camping reviews from our year RVing around North America (from parks to boondocking), organized by state/province. Look for a map with 2-3 pages per state – you want one that REALLY gets in there. You might think it’s dumb to drop $35 on a paper map in the age of GPS and GoogleMaps, but this will save you!

When you want privacy, that’s a good thing. There are so many slivers of public land that don’t make the internet.

This is my go-to site for camping on the road. Tent, overlanding jeeps, and car camping aren’t allowed. Harvest Hosts is only available to self contained vehicles (RVs and campervans). Stays are limited to one night, making Harvest Host locations THE BEST way to overnight while enroute to your destination. This is an inexpensive way to camp at AMAZING sites that aren’t available to the general public. Harvest Hosts is a site that allows you to stay at cool places (vineyards, museums, farms, distilleries) for free after paying a small yearly membership fee.
