I think the smaller your house is, the easier it is not to attract attention. Most people don't drive around with slide-in campers on their trucks, but LOTS of people have caps on their daily drivers. So if you're serious about stealth, you can live in a pickup/cap, but it's going to be damned uncomfortable.
akrvbob said:
I think he meant a pass-through from the cab to the camper through a sliding window. It can be done but it is very uncomfortable.
It's not that uncomfortable. I did this daily in a pickup/camper, and I'm a 200 lb guy. The trick was mounting a grab bar (actually just a piece of 2x2) above the opening, inside the camper. To get to the camper, I squatted on the bench seat facing forward, then leaned back through the opening (i.e., belly-up), grabbed the bar, and pulled myself up to where I was sitting on the "ledge", then swung my legs through. Easy. Even easier going from the camper to the cab.
When you go to get into the camper for the night, you can look around to see if anybody's watching first. When you climb back into the cab in the morning, it doesn't matter if they see you, because you're leaving anyway (unless you're planning on staying multiple nights in the same place).
That was about 25 years ago, my first full-time experience. The truck wasn't all that stealthy, because even though it wasn't a regular slide-in camper (it was a box I built from plywood and mounted on the truck frame), it did have windows and an entry door in back, so it was obviously usable as a house. Still, I had NO trouble in the Seattle area. I was working temp jobs (part of my plan for freedom), and one place I worked for about two months, I parked in their lot every other night, and other places around town on the alternate nights. I was operating on the "easier to get forgiveness than permission" principle, and it worked in that case, because eventually my boss noticed me walking to that camper-truck after work, and asked me about it. He didn't have a problem with it, but if he did, I would have just moved it. And if he had REALLY objected, then I just wouldn't have been working for him any more. But if I had been working at a full-time job, I probably wouldn't have overnighted at work at all.
I must say, the convenience was an incredible luxury - a 100-foot commute! Even on the "away" nights, I was seldom more than five minutes away. That was about an hour/day time savings.
This time I'll be going a lot more stealthy (I'm moving "out" in three weeks) - no windows, nothing that outwardly looks RV-ish, just an ordinary box truck - but it really is like others keep saying: if you're living in anything big enough to live in with any degree of comfort, you can't really hide that from somebody who knows what to look for. But you CAN drastically reduce the number of people who even take a second look.
Jim