Thank you. I appreciate your help. Is doing SN in a remote location more common? I agree with you about the haunting gloom for neighbors or hotel people. I still think a random person could find your body even if you do it in an obscure location outside.
This whole fear and qualm of "being found" is moot, and arises, in part, from a deficient understanding of the legal/medical-ethics mechanics and neglecting to preparing a valid DNR Oder and Advanced Directive prior to CTB. You must recognize that you have constitutional right to refuse medical care. EMS teams are well aware of DNR orders and undergo mandatory training on this subject specifically. Emergency responders who neglect a valid DNR order and proceed with life-sustaining treatment face potential liability and action against their certifications as a consequence. Upon arrival, the first thing they check is your wrists/pockets/wallet for any medical info cards or a DNR wristband. See PS below.
Secondly, what are the chances of being found at 2AM ten miles into an off-trail obscure part of an uninhabited neck of the woods? Go on Google Earth, find a large wooded field with no trails, find its center point and (if paranoid) carry with you a makeshift camouflaged tarp or sleeping bag. Nobody goes off-trail deep into to the woods where there's no trails and nothing to see or do in the dead of night. Except for possibly delinquents to roam around with a joint.
But even then, in that 0.001% chance some delinquents roaming the woods up to no good find your body - they'd fucking run for my life! How could they muster up the courage to call 911, implicating themselves as potential persons of interest over a dead body whilst in possession of a CDS!
Alas, say then in the 0.00001% chance they do, and somehow find it somehow necessary to get involved after finding your body just shy of light's out and they call 911 ...
It'll take a solid half hour to for an ambulance to configure where it's should even park, granted they don't even know the edge of side of the forest is closest to you. Not even an infantry tank would be able get to you direct through the thick of the swamp and trees, let alone a helicopter. So by the time the ambulance parks, they have to send a rescue squad team on foot-trail with dogs and thermal cameras to find you hence.
So how much time would that take for a squad to get to your from the first 911 call? Hours at best.
And if they have a magic phantom squad to get to you from call to body in zero to one: BUMMER! With a DNR wristband and order by your side, they will be nothing they can do, but pronounce the official death and summon the coronor's medical examiner. The law is the law. No EMT would risk their certification violating a DNR order.
This is my plan for January. Waiting for a massive snowstorm state of emergency so I can sneak out a day or two in advance, camp out and shut my lights out.
PS
----
Every State has an official Do Not Recussitate form. Once signed by you and your PCP, it becomes and official legal "Order" barring emergency responders from performing any kind of life-support so as long as you present signs of cardiac or respiratory arrest. Note respiratory arrest is not respiratory failure. Respiratory arrest is not failure, but simply sufficiently depressed respiration which would lead to failure. Respiratory arrest may present as chocking on your vomit, gasping for air, labored breathing or whatever respiration de minimus. That is alone a sufficient condition that will bar emergency responders from touching you and permit natural death.
As an element of your DNR instruction directive, you may declare you do not want life-sustaining treatment, or the like withheld or withdrawn, in any of the following situations: (1) you are permanently unconscious, (2) you are in a terminal condition, (3) the life-sustaining treatment would likely only prolong an imminent death, (4) the life-sustaining treatment would likely be ineffective or (5) you have a serious irreversible condition and the life-sustaining treatment would likely be more harmful than beneficial.