Brick homes on the Gold Rush Main Streets · Cottages in the oak foothills · River canyon acreage · Ranchettes on a few oak acres(555) 491-0497 · [email protected]
Sierra Foothills and Gold Country Real Estate

Find your place
in the oak hills and Gold Rush towns.

A brick home a block off a 1850s Main Street, a cottage tucked into the oak foothills where the light goes gold in the late afternoon, river canyon acreage with a swimming hole down the trail, or a ranchette on a few oak-studded acres, shown to you by people who run these back roads, raft these rivers, and know which slopes hold shade through a hot Sierra August and which canyons run cold and clear all summer.

In a Gold Rush TownOak Foothill CottageRiver Canyon AcreageRanchetteUnder $500k
14
Foothill towns, river canyons, and oak valleys we know road by road
Both
The brick Main Streets of the old mining towns and the quiet oak hills back where the gravel roads run
Local
We grew up in these foothills, raft these same rivers, and watch the hills turn gold on the same slopes the families we help fall for
510+
Families we have helped settle into the foothills, in town and out on oak acreage
On the market

Homes built for cool rivers, deep oak shade, and room to breathe.

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

On Main Street
Old Mill Street

The Brick Home in Town

$439,000
3 Bed2 BathWalk to Main
Oak Foothills
Manzanita Ridge Road

The Cottage in the Oaks

$385,000
3 Bed2 Bath6 Acres
River Canyon
Canyon River Lane

The Home Above the River

$598,000
4 Bed3 BathCanyon Frontage
Why people put down roots out here

More than a house. A life lived close to the rivers, the oaks, and the towns that keep their history.

01

The seasons set the pace out here

A green spring when the hills are lush and the rivers run high with snowmelt, a long golden summer of swimming holes and rafting and shade under the valley oaks, a clear autumn drive through the foothill vineyards, and a quiet winter with snow up on the high peaks and a fire going down in the canyon. We help you find the place that fits the life you actually want, in town or out on a few oak acres of your own.

02

You learn the county side by side

Which old mining towns keep a real Main Street with a brick storefront, a cafe, and a hardware store, where the rivers run cold and clear and where a reservoir draws down by late summer, and which foothill cottages and ranch houses have honest bones behind the board-and-batten and the river rock. We walk you through the real feel of each town and road before you choose.

03

Straight about water, wells, and fire

What a well, a septic system, and a shared gravel easement really mean out in the oak country, how defensible space and fire-wise building work in the foothills and what insurers ask for now, where a canyon lot stays cool and where a south slope bakes in August, and which repairs can wait a season. We give you the honest foothill math up front, not after you have the keys.

The towns

Where you'll want to put down roots.

Each town in this part of the foothills has its own feel. Here are the ones people fall for.

Sutter Bend

The classic Gold Rush town, a brick Main Street with a saloon turned cafe, a Saturday market under the oaks, and homes a walk from the shops and the old church

Manzanita Flat

Up in the oak hills where the gravel roads run, cottages and small ranches tucked along the ridges, room for a garden, a few goats, and a porch facing the sunset

Canyon Ford

Down on the river, swimming holes and gravel bars within walking distance, acreage with canyon frontage, and a town that gathers at the old iron bridge
New to the foothills

Moving up to Gold Country is its own kind of move.

A lot of our buyers are trading a crowded valley suburb and a long commute for a town where the kids can ride bikes to Main Street, a cottage with a porch under the oaks, or a few acres where they can finally keep a garden, run the river on a summer afternoon, and watch the hills go gold at dusk, so we slow down and walk you through how a foothill property really lives across a full year, raft season and a cold gray January alike.

How a home above a canyon and a hillside lot hold up, what a well, a septic system, and a shared gravel road ask of you out here, what defensible space and foothill fire insurance really cost now, and where a slope stays cool and where it bakes in the summer sun. Real answers before you commit, not after your first dry season.

Start With a Local Guide
Come run the back roads with us

The next chapter starts in the foothills.

Tell us what you picture, a brick home on Main Street, a cottage up in the oaks, or acreage above the river, and we will send you the places worth a look.

Plan a Visit
Library · Gold Rush Hour Realty (Sierra Foothills and Gold Country)