One can not praise stoic mental discipline too much during the winter camping season. You have escaped heat and insects. Congratulations! But you must lose on something else, such as neighbors and motorhead yahoos.
Still, a person does have a bit of control over the situation. In general, physical or geographical relocation does not help too much. Rather than looking for a spot where you can get away from noisy neighbors, it might work better to be pro-active and give a welcome to good neighbors. Encourage them to cluster around you. Even more, maybe solar campers need to work as an organized group.
That said, I had a bit of luck at a place where you really shouldn't expect to have much luck. I was geographically separate from the morons but didn't expect it to last for long. Still, it lasted long enough for a pleasant surprise as I stepped out of the trailer one morning:
What was this beast doing a hundred yards from my front door?! What a noble look. I sometimes wonder how animals make a living in a vegetation-free, gawd-forsaken wasteland. Do they eat rocks? Maybe this small group of borregos was on their way to water at the river and lake.
Comments
Did you get to watch him long enough to see him chew on anything?
They are also rather light feeders with #3 of edibles a day being sufficient and can go as long as 15 days without water.