River-canyon homes above the Deschutes · Cabins in the ponderosa pines · In-town bungalows · Ranchettes on juniper acreage(555) 318-0742 · [email protected]
Central Oregon High Desert Real Estate

Find your place
where the pines meet the open sky.

A home on the canyon rim above the Deschutes, a cabin back in the ponderosas where the air smells like warm bark in July, a craftsman bungalow you can walk to town and the trailhead from, or a few juniper-and-sage acres with the Cascades on the skyline, shown to you by people who grew up on these rivers, know which streets catch the alpenglow on a winter evening, and can tell you where the snow lingers and where it melts off first come spring.

On the RiverCabin in the PinesAcreage with a ViewWalk to TownUnder $500k
9
High desert towns and river communities we know trail by trail, street by street, and ridge by ridge
Both
The homes in town close to the shops and the trails and the wide acreage out where the juniper runs to the foothills
Local
We were raised out here, on the same rivers, ski hills, and lava-rock trails as the families we help find a place to land
470+
Families we have helped settle into a home in town or a place on the land out in the high desert they now call home
On the market

Homes built for cool mornings, long trails, and the smell of warm pine.

A few of the places this stretch of the high desert is known for, with fresh listings every week.

Walk to Town
Ponderosa Street

The Craftsman Bungalow

$619,000
3 Bed2 BathWalk to River Trail
In the Pines
Cinder Butte Road

The Cabin Back in the Ponderosas

$447,000
3 Bed2 BathWood Stove
On the Land
Sage Flat Lane

The Ranchette on Juniper Acreage

$735,000
4 Bed3 Bath10 Acres
Why people put down roots out here

More than a house. A life lived close to the river, the trailheads, and the long view of the Cascades.

01

The seasons run big out here

A bright bluebird winter with snow on the peaks and dry trails in town, a green spring when the river runs full and the bitterbrush blooms, a warm gold summer of float trips, long evenings, and pine shade, and a crisp fall when the aspens and larch turn up the canyons. We help you find the place that fits the life you actually want, a home in town or a spread out on the land.

02

You learn the towns side by side

Which neighborhoods sit close to the river trail and the shops, which roads stay plowed and which need a real winter rig, where the good school lines fall, how far out the power and water reach, and which acreage has a well that holds and which leans on a haul. We walk you through the real feel of each town and back road before you ever choose.

03

Straight about land, water, and wildfire

What a well, a septic, and a shared road really ask of you out past the pavement, how the irrigation districts and water rights work on acreage, what defensible space and a fire-wise roof mean for a home in the pines, and which repairs can wait a season. We give you the honest high desert math up front, not after you have the keys.

The towns

Where you'll want to put down roots.

Each town out here has its own feel. Here are the ones people fall for.

Ponderosa Bend

The river town with a real downtown, a trail along the water, craftsman bungalows on shaded streets, and a brewery and a coffee roaster a walk from the porch

Cascade Crossing

Up closer to the peaks, cabins in the pines and slopeside homes, a general store and a trailhead at the edge of town, and snow that sticks around through spring

Sage Flat

Out where the juniper runs to the foothills, ranchettes and acreage on quiet lanes, room for horses, a shop, and a porch facing the long Cascade skyline
New to the high desert

Moving out to the high desert is its own kind of move.

A lot of our buyers are trading a crowded block and a long commute for a town where the kids can ride bikes to the river trail, a craftsman bungalow a walk from the shops, or a few acres out where they can finally keep horses, a shop, and a long view of the peaks, so we slow down and walk you through how a high desert property really lives across a full year, a dry July week and a snowed-in January alike.

How a home in town and a place out on the land hold up, what a well, a septic, and a shared road ask of you if you buy acreage, how irrigation districts, water rights, and the snow load really work, and what defensible space and a fire-wise roof mean for a home in the pines. Real answers before you commit, not after your first hard winter.

Start With a Local Guide
Come walk the river trail with us

The next chapter starts in the high desert.

Tell us what you picture, a bungalow a walk from town, a cabin back in the pines, or a few acres with a Cascade view, and we will send you the places worth a look.

Plan a Visit
Library · Desert First Realty (Central Oregon High Desert)