Editor’s Note: This is Part 1 of my three-part series, “Word of Mouth: Living in Hidden Valley Lake.” Whether you’re a curious local or planning a move from the Bay Area, this series covers everything from the “leap” to the daily costs and the ultimate question: Is it worth it?
Part 1: The Leap (You are here)
Part 2: The Logistics—Daily Life Inside the Gate (Link coming soon)
Part 3: The Pivot—Choosing to Stay (Link coming soon)
The year was 2020. You remember the vibe—empty shelves, endless Zoom boxes, and that strange, slow-motion feeling like the world had hit pause. But for us, inside our small rental in Marin, everything felt like it was speeding up.
Interest rates were dropping at a dizzying pace, and every conversation Kevin and I had circled back to the same urgent question: If we don’t buy now, will we ever be able to?
Neither of us comes from money. There was no safety net, no “magical” inheritance waiting in the wings. Every dollar in our bank account was a hard-fought win. In Marin, we were living that classic Bay Area paradox: feeling lucky to be there, yet a little broke every time the rent check cleared. We were tired of paying for the view without ever owning the dirt beneath it.
Suddenly, there was a crack in the door. We knew if we didn’t move fast, it would slam shut.
We started looking at the map. We loved the North Bay, but we didn’t love the “house poor” future it offered. We wanted a yard. We wanted safety. We wanted a place where we could finally exhale.
Kevin grew up in South Lake County, and he kept coming back to one place: Hidden Valley Lake. I’ll be honest—it wasn’t on my radar. But when we realized we could trade our 900-square-foot Marin life for a gated community with a lake, a golf course, and a real sense of space, the “if” became a “when.” We weren’t just looking for a cheaper zip code; we were looking for a life that actually fit us.
The Crash Course: 50 Houses in a Blur
Suddenly, the search was on. We toured over 50 homes in a matter of weeks. In one day alone, we saw twenty. By the end of it, hallways and tile choices and driveway slopes started melting into each other. But that exhaustion was my real estate education. It was a crash course in the “logic” of Hidden Valley Lake.
The Anatomy of the Gates: A Resident’s Map
If you’re looking at the map for the first time, here is how the sections actually feel on the ground:
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The Lower Nine (Gate 9): Tucked off Hartmann Road. Relaxed, open-air energy near Putah Creek.
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The Active Heart (Gates 10, 8, & 7): This is the core. Gate 8 is the resident-only “fast lane” off Highway 29. Gates 10 and 7 are the main arteries past the golf course.
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The Northern Heights (Gate 6): Larger lots, elevated views, looking out over Wild Diamond Vineyard.
Beyond the Main Gates: The Neighbors
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The Ranchos: Just beyond the HVLA boundaries. No HOA dues, but no amenity access. Great for a bit more independence.
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Rim Rock Estates: A separate gated community with its own independent HOA. Private, elevated, and secluded.
Our First Foothold: The Learning Curve Bungalow
We eventually landed on a charming little bungalow off Mountain Meadow South, right behind the 18th tee box. It was our first stake in the ground, but it was also where we got our “mountain legs.”
Living there taught us things no Marin rental ever could. We learned the hard way about weatherproofing water pipes after waking up to frozen lines one morning—a mistake you only make once! We also had to navigate the “interesting” decisions of previous owners. For some reason, the propane tank was anchored right outside the primary bedroom window. It didn’t just block a beautiful view; it took up valuable yard space.
Kevin and I spent a full weekend digging a new trench by hand, sweating through the hard-packed Lake County soil so the propane company could move the tank and run a new gas line. It was exhausting work, but that immediate change in our view and our yard was worth every second of sweat. It was the first time we felt like we were truly shaping our own home.
Then there was the fire mitigation. When we moved in, a lush ravine filled with foliage and trees acted as a natural screen from the road. But as part of the community’s fire safety efforts, those trees were cleared. Suddenly, our private sanctuary was exposed. It was a stark reminder that living here means being part of a larger ecosystem where safety often comes before aesthetics.
The Alignment on Spyglass
Those 16 months in the bungalow were a gift; they gave us the footing we needed to realize we weren’t just passing through. But as we settled into the rhythm of the valley, we realized we were looking for a different kind of alignment. We found ourselves admiring a specific part of the community—one that felt more centrally located, with a bit more of that “heart of the neighborhood” energy.
Then, the “impossible” happened: a house on Spyglass Road hit the market.
It was a home we had admired from the car windows for months—a custom-built feel on one of the most iconic, central streets in the valley. We weren’t financially ready. We weren’t logistically prepared to move again after only 16 months. But we knew that opportunities on a street like Spyglass—right on the golf cart path where you can watch the community in motion—rarely happen twice.
We looked at each other and realized that if we wanted the life we had moved here for, this was the moment. It was now or never, all over again.









