Archive for the 'Business' Category

Wednesday, July 23rd, 2008

Looking Back

   It is amazing to look back and remember what the town of Oakhurst use to be like.  Twenty years ago when my family and I moved to the small mountain town in Eastern Madera County it was much different than it was today.  There was, or course, Raleys and next to Raleys was a Stride Rite.  This was the only shopping center in town.  I think there may have been one stop sign at that time and half the amount of cars in town.  Today Oakhurst resembles more of a little city than a small mountain community.  Over the years hotels were built, more stops signs were added which now have turned into stop lights, and the roads have widened.  Although the economic boom is great, it is sad to see how much this once quaint little town of Oakhurst has developed.  For me, the small town feeling is gone but it is exciting to see all the new changes that have taken place.  Oakhurst still remains a great place to live.  It now provides more opportunities for all ages which are something it lacked twenty years ago.  Oakhurst is not the only little mountain town to have changed.  Coarsegold, Bass Lake, and Mariposa have also undergone many changes.  We have to let go of the past and be excited about all the new changes these communities have experienced.    


Wednesday, July 23rd, 2008

The Best Burger in Eastern Madera County

Best Burger in Town

Who has the best burger in town?  What makes a burger remarkable?  Some people say it is its taste, others believe it’s its size and plumpness, or its sauce, its toppings, or the way it’s cooked?  Oakhurst and Coarsegold are no strangers to delicious burgers.  The Forks burger, found at The Forks Resort in Bass Lake, has always been a local favorite.  With its juiciness in every mouth watering bite was sure to be a winner.  However, there is a burger out there that could be leading the competition, the Miller’s burger.  Miller’s landing is home to what is described as an exquisite tasting hamburger.  We are sorry McDonalds, Jack-in-the-box, and Burger King but your burgers don’t stand up to its Bass Lake competition.  Enjoy lunch at the lake and you be the judge.  Like they say on Foxx news-WE REPORT; YOU DECIDE.

Yes, BEEF it’s what is for dinner


Wednesday, July 16th, 2008

Summer Activities

Have you forgotten about our local Oakhurst Library?  Our library, tucked behind the fire station on Civic Circle Dr., is often forgotten about and overlooked.  However, you may want to stop by and visit Madera’s Oakhurst Branch Library and see what summer fun they are offering for everyone.  Every Thursday at 10:30 kids can enjoy preschool story time.  In addition to story time, there have been magicians, music, storytelling, and other organized activities.  The library is offering summer reading programs and craft classes for children grades K-8.  The library is not only for the children; adults can enjoy poetry presentations, lectures, art exhibits, concerts, and the relaxing sounds of their grand piano.  The library is a place for all to enjoy.  Stop in and check it out.

 


Thursday, July 10th, 2008

Get out of the HEAT- Stay COOL!!!

Surviving the Heat Wave

 

With record breaking temperatures, what can we do to keep cool?  We are so lucky to live in the mountain community; there are many places to go and activities to do to avoid the heat.  Cooling centers are opened to the public at the Coarsegold Community Center, Oakhurst Sierra Senior Center, in North Fork and Mariposa.  If you are looking for some fun, indoor activities try visiting Chukchansi Gold Resort and Casino for food, fun, and entertainment, going the Met Cinema to watch a movie, or visiting the local Oakhurst branch library.  If you have children, the Children’s Museum is a great place to take the kids as well as Have a Ball which is an indoor sports arena for kids of all ages.  If you are looking for an outdoor activity to keep you cool, consider driving to Yosemite Valley or Mariposa Groves for a hike, cooling off with a swim at Bass Lake or renting a boat or jet ski to enjoy, or you could visit the pool at Yosemite High School’s Baker Swim Complex.  There are many ways to stay cool in our mountain community.  Use your imagination and let me know what other ideas you can come up with. 


Monday, July 7th, 2008

Housing Rebound?

I thought this article would offer hope to many of us out there.  It can only get better.

  

On the Path to a Housing Rebound

By Shawn Tully, CNNMoney.com

Jul 2nd, 2008   

  

“The pain that homeowners and homebuilders are feeling now is a sign that things are going to get better.

NEW YORK (Fortune) — The news that housing starts have fallen to their lowest level in 17 years sounds like one more reason to be depressed about the shrinking value of your home. In fact, it’s an almost certain sign that the path to a housing recovery is finally in sight.

If prices are going to stabilize, let alone rebound, the United States needs to produce far more first-time home buyers than new houses. That’s the only way to tame the glut of “For Sale” signs dotting front yards from the Inland Empire of California to the Gold Coast of Florida.

Builders constructed far more homes from 2002 until 2006 - the peak bubble years - than could possibly be absorbed by the normal growth in households.

Slideshow: Summertime poolside living

As a result, the market is now swamped with one million new and existing homes for sale that aren’t occupied, and hence need to sell quickly. That’s a multiple of the figure in most downturns, and it testifies to the duration and girth of the bubble.

“For the recovery to begin, builders need to eliminate the standing inventory of finished, unoccupied new homes,” says Mike Castleman, founder of Metrostudy, which assembles sales data on four million subdivisions across the U.S.

The massive overhang of unsold inventory has remained stubbornly high. Sure, builders cut back, but sales dropped just as quickly.

Now that excess supply is finally beginning to shrink. In April, the number of new homes for sale stood at 456,000 according to the U.S. Commerce Department, still a big number, but 93,000 below the mountainous figure a year ago.

The return of the first-time buyer

The key player in any recovery scenario is the first time buyer. The housing market operates with a pronounced laddering or ripple effect. When entry-level buyers flood the market, they not only stimulate production of new homes, they purchase existing homes. Those purchases, in turn, allow the sellers to move up to bigger houses.

But when the first-timers are absent, the entire buying chain gets frozen.

Today, newbies are coming back. Why? For the first time in years, entry-level homes are affordable. Builders have slashed prices, and what they’re building tends to be far smaller than the McMansions of the boom, selling for far lower prices. KB Home’s average selling price dropped to $248,0000 in its February quarter, versus $267,000 a year earlier. In 2006, KB’s basic model in Victorville, Cal., a former boomtown east of Los Angeles, took up as much as 3,800 square feet and sold for $328,000. Today, its stripped down offering goes for $220,000, at less than half the size.

So the first time in a decade renters can carry the mortgage payments and taxes on a new house for what they’re paying a landlord. Call it the New Affordability.

Here’s how the numbers play out: Single-family housing starts are now running at fewer than 500,000 a year. The normal demand for housing, based on immigration and household formation, is around one million units.

We won’t get back to that figure for a while because so many people rushed to buy homes during the boom.

But with first timers returning, sales should rise to almost 700,000 units by the end of next year, according to Bernard Markstein, senior economist for the National Association of Home Builders. That means sales will soon exceed new production by as much as 250,000 units a year.

That margin forms the foundation of the housing revival that comes in four steps.

Step 1:

First, the return of first-time buyers will shrink the overhang of new houses for sale.

Step 2:

Second, because so few new homes are being built, first-timers will start buying existing homes from owners who want to move up but have been trapped by the dearth of buyers. Their improved fortunes, though, come with a big caveat: The prices of new homes are now lower than comparably-sized existing homes. It’s as if used cars are selling for more than new ones. That can’t last. So move-up buyers are going to have to accept less than they had hoped to get for their current homes.They’ll get a big break as they trade up, however. Unless they bought at the height of the boom, they’ll still sell at a profit. They can then use that equity to buy bigger homes at bargain prices. During the bubble, homebuilders started pushing up home sizes to 3,500 square feet or more. It’s those behemoths that are selling for the steepest discounts today.

Step 3:

Next, housing starts should start rising, probably next year. The increase, however, will be slow and gradual. For the next two years at least, homebuilders will compete ferociously with existing home sellers for customers.

Step 4:

Eventually, the glut of existing homes will disappear as well. The excess of new-home buyers over new homes being built makes that inevitable. But the oversupply is so enormous that the healing process could take as much as three more years. Only then will prices in former bubble markets start rising again.

What could go wrong?

One event has the potential to slow or even derail the recovery: A sharp rise in interest rates. Right now, the first-timers are gorging on 6% loans guaranteed by the FHA. But rates may not stay there.

If they rise to 8% or higher because inflation rebounds, it would take a far bigger drop in prices to make new and existing homes affordable.

The New Affordability is now in place. But if rates rise, we’ll have to establish a New New Affordability - at even lower prices.”


Wednesday, June 18th, 2008

Wild Wonderful King Vintage Musuem

One of the interesting things about Oakhurst, California is the fun and unique places that you can visit and enjoy.  There is a certain flavor here that is not mimicked in most other areas in the country.

For more than 20 years. Allan King and his late wife Barbara had collected vintage clothing.  They spent years having fundraisers so that they could display their finds in a museum setting that everyone could enjoy.  Their motto is “Fostering an awareness of the history and appreciation of vintage fashion.”

In 2002 they joined forces with the Wild Wonderful Women organization and their museum dream became a reality for all to enjoy.  Their feature exhibit was a bridal collection.  Fast forward to October of 2006.  The Museum moved next to the Children’s Museum of the Sierra.  There continues to be a fun museum for all to enjoy.  Exhibits change with the season, so be sure to visit often.

Exhibits to be seen are from the flapper era, Victorian era and vintage military uniforms to name a few.  The children’s display features clothing, dolls, shoes, and some very old books.

The address is 49269 Golden Oak Drive #100 in Oakhurst.  There is a $2 entrance donation that is needed.  Call (559) 658-6999 for more information.


Tuesday, April 1st, 2008

Spring Mixer and Business Expo, April 3

The Oakhurst Area Chamber of Commerce will hold its Spring Mixer and Business Expo from 5-7 pm, this Thursday (April 3). This is a great opportunity to meet and greet local business owners and chat with your neighbors. If you feel like you should network more, but cannot find the time, this is the event for you. This is your chance to make connections with a host of your neighbors, all at once. It will be time worth spent.

Although it is a good time to network, you don’t have to be a business owner to attend. It is always good to know who you might do business with, whose shop you might want to frequent or who has products that might improve your life.

Businesses will have booths for you to visit as well as freebies to introduce you to their goods and services. There will also be raffles too and you have to be there to win. Drawings start at 6:45pm.

For more information, contact the Oakhurst Area Chamber of Commerce at 683-7766. You can also send an e-mail to chamber@oakhurstchamber.com.


Thursday, March 20th, 2008

Nature’s Leaf Jewelry

The ways in which people recycle things these days is amazing. Some items, like paper, are re-purposed into something much like what they once were, while other items take on a whole new life in recycled form

At Nature’s Leaf Jewelry, beautiful and decorative products are made from nature’s own decorations—leaves, acorns, seashells and pinecones. The pieces remain as ornamental as they are in nature, but they take on new functions as jewelry, bookmarks, napkin rings, barrettes, wine glass charms and magnets.

After looking for pieces that will make the most exquisite works of art, keepsakes are made using electroplating. You can choose pieces crafted with 18-karat gold, Rhodium Silver and multicolored copper. These pieces will not tarnish and they are also hypoallergenic.

These original creations are available in the store or you can have them shipped to you in about 10 days. If you are looking for a unique gift for yourself or someone else, consider going au naturel.

Nature’s Leaf Jewelry
1066 Saratoga Avenue
Suite 200
San Jose, CA 95129
888-838-7544
408-244-5326


Wednesday, March 5th, 2008

Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger has estimated a shortfall of about $14.5 billion for this coming fiscal year.  To help reduce the deficit he has  propose slicing State departments’ budgets by 10 percent, closing of state parks, and releasing prison inmates early. California is not the only state feeling the fiscal punch. In Rhode Island the governor warned that his state faces the largest budget deficit in many years.Nationwide, more than half the 50 states face budget gaps as they try to put together the budgets for the coming fiscal year.  It has been reported that one main reason for revenue shortfalls is the slumping real estate market, sub prime mortgage crisis along with the continuing rise in oil prices. California is among those hardest hit by the real estate slump.  Another factor hurting California is the number of people moving out of state.  According to some reports California lost more than 263,000 residents.Real estate people can do their part to help recover California’s doom by promoting a positive outlook in owning and investing in California’s real estate.  Agents should be involved in their community affairs and a loud voice in local government. California still has a lot to offer.


Tuesday, February 26th, 2008

Where to spend a million dollars

Can I ever buy a million dollar home? Years ago I would have never even entertained the thought of owning a million dollar home. But, in today’s market I may be closer than I ever thought. That’s because nationwide, homeowners are slashing asking prices, often by significant margins, making million-dollar properties much more palatable then ever before.Its been reported that in Los Angeles a million dollars will buy a four-bedroom, tract type home with a few upgrades. In New York it might get you a one to two bedroom apartment. On the West Coast, like the Bay Area a million dollars doesn’t seem wildly excessive: The median home price in San Francisco is over $800,000.00. These prices are the result of concentrated wealth in the local economy, high regulatory and business costs for builders that are passed along to buyers, and a very small, confined geographic space that allows for little new development.If you are willing to move out of those confined geographic areas and into suburbs, your million dollars can get you into a modest 1,500-square-foot house with three bedrooms and a good-sized yard. If you’re willing to move out further into the foothills your money can get you a 3,000 plus square foot home on several acres with views, shops and other amenities.In Central California, check out Coarsegold, Oakhurst, Mariposa and Sonora. You will be surprised what your million dollars can buy, and you’ll get change.Again, its location, location, location. While home sales nationwide are at a historic low, those at or above the $1 million mark can be yours for less.