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Old 03-04-2007, 10:40 AM
 
1 posts, read 26,430 times
Reputation: 12

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Hiya,
We are going to be moving to Oakhurst (near Yosemite) to live with my Father-in-law and I don't really know the area.
I mean we've been there in the summer when all the cousins get together at Bass Lake - but to live there???

Anyone have any tips, insight, fun things for me to check out?

We have 2 boys (7 & 1) and I'm also wondering about the school situation??
Thanks!
rebekevi
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Old 07-22-2007, 03:17 AM
 
5 posts, read 89,710 times
Reputation: 70
Default Moving to Oakhurst

I moved here about 15 years ago, from the Central Valley (Merced).
This place feels more like "home" than any other place I've ever lived, even though I had lived in the central valley basically all my life.

I moved here because there used to be a something of a miniature "Silicone ValleY" scene. Oakhurst was the original location of the Sierra software company. In the 80's-90's, Sierra Online was the largest producer of PC games on the planet. They eventually relocated to Seattle, but their influence, and especially the salaries they were paying were amazing for the area, and caused quite a bit of growth.

Recently (4 years ago), a local Indian Tribe (Chukchansi) of the Picayune Rancheria built a BEAUTIFUL Casino/Hotel in Coarsegold, about 7 miles away. This changed a lot of things, for the better (mostly). Wages in the area went up, they employee 1400 people (the entire population of the town, (Coarsegold, is only 3500), and now, in what used to be a really sleepy little town, mostly populated with businesses to cater to tourists on their way to Bass Lake or Yosemite (Hotels, restaurants, gas stations), there is now a 24x7x365 operations with 7 restaurants, 192 hotel rooms (they are now adding an 11 story hotel tower with an additional 200 rooms, and a five story parking garage which will accommodate an additonal 800 cars).

This is no "put up a building, and put in slot machines" style casino. This is a resort-styled casino/hotel the likes you would find near the lake in Tahole.

The only drawback, for some, is that housing and land prices have sky-rocketed. I was lucky and bought my modest 1500 SF home in 2000, a year before the property opened for approx 150k. It has a modest amount of land (probably 1/3 of an acre) and my back yard fence is actually the back of Yosemite High School (I can watch the baseball games from my backyard, if I go to the farthest corner), and the elementary school is within walking distance). Although I've converted it to a 2/2 (took two bedrooms and made a master suite), added a 1000 SF three-level deck and put on a new roof/insulation, other improvements, the last appraisal of my home (done for a re-fi) now puts it at $310k. This is a very typical price for homes up here, and mine was originally built in 1972.

I make a little more than the median income listed on this site for Oakhurst, CA, but if I were trying to buy a house up here now, at my income level, I wouldn't be able to afford it.

Living here is expensive. Because it's a tourist-based economy, there's not "product" that comes off our "mountain" (it's called Deadwood, due to a fire in the 60's that decimated what was once an amazing grove of Cedar trees --- its' greened up again with some mature trees, but apparently isn't what it used to be --- reference the "Harlow" fire for more info), everything costs more. For $100 bucks at a grocery store in Oakhurst, you get maybe 5 bags at a chain like Vons or Raleys. Drive 35 miles down Highway 41 to Fresno, and you can get 8-10 bags of groceries for the same price.

Gas usually is also 10 cents ore more per gallon, as compared to Fresno.

Depending on where you live, you may have your own water well (that costs electricity to run), or you may end up in a water-district. I'm the later, so I pay for every gallon of water I use. I'm single (though a lot of friends come through during the summer, on their way to Yosemite, almost every weekend, so I'd estimate my summer water useage to equal that of a family of 3) and in the summer my water bill runs about $40.00 per month. This doesn't include garbage pickup, which runs about $175.00 a year (I actually go the dump about once every two months, for $12.00 per run, which is a little cheaper) (no, I don't collect refuse -- I do a lot of composting and use a trash compactor <grin>). By the way, the drive to the "land fill" is about 15 miles away, but a very relaxing, beautiful drive through the Sierra Foothills...

Back to the water:

It's a scarce commodity up here. Seriously. The area up here is basically all sitting on some amazing granite slabs. Granite is linked to quartz, and quartz is usually accompanied by Uranium.

During the summer months, when thousands of tourists are taking showers, brushing their teeth, and flushing the toilets in the numerous hotels here, and the many, many restaurants (I count about 45 eateries off the top of my head; an amazing number considering the population of Oakhurst hovers just under 14 thousand) we literally get a notice from the Water District that the water is technically "Undrinkable" under Federal standards, because the Uranium content per million parts is unacceptable. Having done some research, I choose to go ahead and drink the water, but many people buy water (5 gallon water bottles delivered; home water bottle dispensers are not uncommon), but there are also a number of "fill your own for 35Cents" dispensers around town, and there is more than one business is town that are based on installing reverse-osmosis water treatment systems (again, I say this is unusual because of the small population base).

Another thing to consider: We have one of the last privatley owned phone companies in California. This means you can't get Sprint/Comcast/AT&T or other major providers. Basic phone is about $38.00 a month. DSL is between $30- $60, depending on the speed you want. There is a cable service (Northern cable) but it's not that reliable. Most folks in this area choose to use either Dish or DirectTV. I happen to have my telephone and DSL through the local SierraTel offering; my basic monthly bill for both runs about $120.00 / month. However, probably because of the Casino's influence, cell phone reception up here is now excellent. I have personally considered getting rid of my "land line" and going celluar only --- except the local telephone company does not offer DSL only service --- you must subscribe to a land line. I've heard the Cable Company now offers Cable Modem service without needing to subscribe to their television offering, but I haven't actually investigated that.

HOWEVER, having talked about how expensive it actually is to live here, I offer this:

Our schools are rated some of the best in the state, let alone the nation.
It's an AMAZINGLY friendly place to live. People genuinely smile at your, say hello, and mean it when they ask "how are you today?". I have literally spent two hours going to the grocery store to buy milk and bread, because I kept running into friends and such, and we would stop to talk (a local joke is go to VONS to do your shopping if you're in a hurry, and, go to Raley's to find out what your neighbors are up to, heheh).

There is also quite a diverse cultural base up here. Although predominantly Caucasian, there is a bit of an Native American population, Hispanics, Japaneses, Chinese, and others. A lot of this is due to the variety of restaurants (at least 4 Chinese and 3 Japanese, German, European, among others, including chains such as McDonald's, Carl's Junior, KFC, several Mexican restaurants (DO NOT MISS El CIDS if you visit!!) , a few BBQ specialty houses, steak houses, seafood restaurants, etc. off the top of my head). Of course I don't equate restaurants being the only reason there is a minority base up here, but the food industry up here (again, tourist based economy) brings many here.

I'll also point out that there is a 5 star European resort/restaurant up here, (the Elderberry House). It draws a number of famous celebrities. Barbara Streisand, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Christopher Lowell, just to name a few. About five years ago, the Elderberry house was a feature article in the United Airlines magazine, as a destination. They do cooking and wine tasting events, and though lunch is somewhat "reasonable", you can expect to spend about $125.00 per person there for dinner. Just another hidden jewel in our community.

To summarize (and I hope you aren't sorry you asked, after re-reading this diatribe), Oakhurst and the surrounding areas (check out Ahwahnee, Nippanawahsee, Coarsegold, and even Yosemite Lakes Park), this is a terrific place to raise kids, or to live, period. Lots of retirees move up here, and there's a dedicated 50+ "manufactured homes" park in Coarsegold (think of a very high-end trailer park in the beautiful foothills).

Bass Lake, another resort/tourist based community is also as close as 9 miles, but it's very high-end homes (Crystal Gale owns a million plus dollar home on the lake, and those houses are packed next to each other so close you could liken them to slices of wonder bread in a plastic bag).

Okay, I think I've said enough.

1. Beautiful place to live.
2. Snow, but usually only a day or two per winter, and it's lovely to watch fall, but by the next morning, it's almost always melted away enough it's not an issue to drive in or get where you're going.
3. Summers can see temperatures over the century mark, but we're almost always at least 20-15 degrees less than the valley.
4. Can be expensive to live here, but there is a major city about 35 -40 minutes drive (WalMart, major malls, Sears, etc).
5. Every service you need (Grocery, car repair, bookstores, clothing, etc.) exists up here, but you will pay premium prices.
6. Our Emergency Services "hospital" is planning to go 24/7 later this year (there are helicopter/medivac services when necessary).
7. There's no police force, but we are supported by a sherrifs department, with a local substation. On the other hand, there's not much call or need for it. Most of the crime reported in the paper are related to someone doing "donuts" in the golf course (of which there are three).

If you're not overwhelmed by this post, and need more info...
Just asked. ;-)

I love it up here.
|OakhurstDan|
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Old 05-29-2008, 02:41 PM
 
1 posts, read 25,616 times
Reputation: 13
I have a home for rent in Y.L.P. if you are looking
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Old 09-19-2008, 11:11 PM
 
1 posts, read 25,064 times
Reputation: 13
Default Billiards Hall

Oakhurst Dan:

What a wonderful profile you have provided on Oakhurst. I am new to the area as well. Thank you for your information, very thorough and informative and thank you for taking the time.

I wondered what you or anyone else out there in Oakhurst would think about a family billiards center. Any interest?

Carrie
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Old 01-18-2009, 10:45 PM
 
2 posts, read 25,533 times
Reputation: 22
Default Home for rent near schools

You would love Oakhurst near Bass Lake and Yosemite. Have a perfect home for family to rent. Perfect location for schools.
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Old 03-13-2009, 09:08 PM
 
Location: Tustin Foothills, Ca
4 posts, read 34,079 times
Reputation: 10
Hi! Have you moved to Oakhurst yet? I'm thinking about moving there also and was wondering what you think about it so far.
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Old 07-03-2009, 11:07 AM
 
18 posts, read 70,805 times
Reputation: 21
Oakhurst Dan's review is fairly complete but some things have changed since it was posted. Oakhurst has joined the recession along with the rest of California. Home prices are sliding, stores are goingf out of business, even larger one's like KFC, Gottschalks and a Hitech shoe store. Several restaraunts have also closed. Politics and real estate are common topics of conversation whereas previously it was the weather and the beauty of the place. On the other hand, it seems to be a banner year for tourism with loaded busses and thousands of cars headed for Yosemite park, Bass Lake and beyond. A long cool spring has come to an end and the triple digit temperatures are here but later than usual and even the occasional cloudy day, which is rare. In years past I've counted 230 days in a row without a cloud over Oakhurst. The poster who enquired about a billiard center? Might go well in the Bowling alley that has lots of under-used square footage. Still a fine place to live for a family, just not the Shangra-La it used to be as we're undergoiing a bit of a realty check.
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Old 07-10-2009, 08:55 PM
 
1 posts, read 23,436 times
Reputation: 11
Smile We need a nice rental home

We are a middle-aged, almost senior, professional couple who need a nice air-conditioned house to rent. My husband and I are relocating to the Oakhurst/ Bass Lake/ North Fork/Yosemite Lakes area. We own two homes of our own. No children. Please let us know if you are a property manager with homes for rent or have your own home for rent.

Professional Couple
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Old 11-11-2010, 10:35 PM
 
1 posts, read 20,523 times
Reputation: 10
LOOKING TO MOVE TO OAKHURST. BEEN IN CAL FOR 23 YEARS, MOSTLY SD AND SF AREA. WANT TO GET AWAY FROM THE BIG CITIES AND MOVE TO AN AREA WHERE YOU CAN BREATH AND HAVE A LITTLE LAND TO GROW A VEGETABLE GARDEN AND LET THE DOGS RUN A BIT.

However I have a small ELEMENTARY School aged daughter as well and need the BEST school for her that we can get. Anyone have any suggestions of which Elementary School(s) might be best and what they are ranked vs the state averages or schools in Fresno?

What are RE Taxes like in Oakhurst? How flexible is the city planners on home designs and how many homes you can have on one good sized property, etc.? Anything one should know about moving to Oakhurst? Any thoughts or suggestions as to the BETTER areas of town or is this not a concern? What areas are growing - in what direction is the town growing? Any help would be appreciated. Thank You. Hope to bump into you one day on the streets or at the local Oakhurst grocers one day. - Chris.
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Old 01-01-2013, 04:11 PM
 
1 posts, read 17,593 times
Reputation: 13
I don't recommend moving to Oakhurst if you're more liberal minded. This is "tea party" country for sure. Unless you're a republican Christian you're not going to have a lot in common with people up here. We lost our only department store and now the movie theater is most likely closing. Few jobs and hardly any that pay more than $8 hr. Crime is up and there is an underground meth colony burglarizing their community Many families are on government assistance. The scenery is nice. Home prices are way cheap right now. Not too bad a place if you're looking for an inexpensive second home near Yosemite. Not a good idea if you're trying to earn a living or raise a family.
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