Land Is for People Like You
Clouthier Drive : Chiloquin, OR 97624
Klamath County, Oregon
Lot Description
0.42 Acres on the Hill on Clouthier Drive - Oregon Shores Unit 2, Klamath County, Oregon
Build Toward the Top and the Cascades Open Up.
$199/Month. $199 Down. No Banks. No Credit Check. No Nonsense.
You've been told your whole life that owning land is for other people.
For people whose grandparents left them a farm in the Willamette Valley. For people who hit the stock option jackpot at the right company at the right time. For doctors and lawyers and people who grew up in houses where the mailbox had a street number instead of a rural route. For the people in the real estate magazines, standing at fence lines that go on forever, wearing the kind of confidence that comes from having never seriously wondered whether land ownership was something you were actually allowed to do.
Not for you. You watched your friends buy starter homes you couldn't afford. You watched the cost of everything go up while the raises didn't keep pace. You stopped looking at real estate listings somewhere around 2019 because every time you did, the math made you tired in a specific, heavy way - the way that comes not from laziness but from the repeated experience of wanting something you can't reach. Land was aspirational. A thing you'd own someday, after you became a different person with a different income and a different financial history. A thing for later, for someday, for when things were different.
This lot is here to tell you that none of that was ever true.
0.42 acres on Clouthier Drive in Oregon Shores Unit 2, Klamath County, Oregon. $199 down. $199 a month for 75 months. No bank. No credit check. No 30-page application that asks what your parents did for a living, what your debt-to-income ratio is, or whether your credit score qualifies you for someone else's definition of acceptable. The kind of first land buy that was designed not for the person you might become someday, but for the actual person you are right now - with the income you have right now, in the financial position you're in right now, today.
Land ownership is not for other people. It was never for other people. The people who told you it was were wrong, or they were protecting something, or they simply never thought carefully enough about how accessible the right piece of ground in the right county with the right seller could actually be.
This is the right piece of ground. This is the right county. This is where you start.
The Lot Is on a Hillside. That Changes Everything.
Most people who look at lots in Oregon Shores Unit 2 see what the subdivision is - sage and juniper country in the high desert east of the Cascades, quiet and beautiful in its particular way, with the kind of flat open terrain that is everywhere in this part of southern Oregon. Most lots here face the same horizon in every direction. The sky is big and the land is open and the views are of the natural landscape that makes Klamath County what it is.
This lot is different. This lot is on a slope.
And that slope changes the entire calculus of what you can build here and what you'll see when you build it. The terrain on Clouthier Drive rises from the road as you move uphill toward the back of the parcel - which means the build path goes up, and when it goes up far enough, the Cascades open up.
Not the hint of a mountain range in the far distance. Not a partial view partially blocked by a neighboring roofline. The Cascades. Mount McLoughlin to the southwest catching the afternoon light in winter with its snowfields lit up in the last hour before sunset. The broad sweep of the volcanic range that forms the western horizon of the Klamath Basin. Wide open western sky above it all, bigger than you remember sky being until you've stood on a hillside in the high desert and experienced it for the first time.
This is the view that people pay seven figures for in Bend or Sisters. This is the view that makes people who move to Klamath County from the Willamette Valley or California look west from their porch and understand immediately why they don't regret the move. You'll be looking at it through the window of a home you built on a lot you own, on a hillside in Klamath County, on a $199 monthly payment that started with $199 down.
That is not a small thing. That is the kind of thing that changes the shape of your life.
Picture a Saturday Five Years From Now
You wake up in a place you actually own. The deed is in your name. The land has been yours - really, legally, undeniably yours - since the month the note paid off, and you can feel the difference between sleeping in a place you rent and sleeping in a place that belongs to you in a way that you can't fully explain to someone who hasn't experienced it but that you will never mistake for anything else once you have.
Maybe it's a manufactured home you set on a permanent foundation - manufactured homes are permitted on this specific lot, which means your build cost can be a fraction of stick-frame construction and your path to a completed homesite is shorter and more affordable than most people assume when they start looking at land. Maybe you scraped together the savings for a small custom build over the years the note was paying down, arriving at payoff with both the deed and the building plans ready to go. Either way, you wake up looking west.
You make coffee. You take it outside. The morning light is already doing the thing that morning light does in the high desert - clean and clear and coming in at an angle that makes the landscape look like something that was designed rather than something that simply happened. The Cascades are on the horizon. Mount McLoughlin catches the first full sun. The air is dry and cool and carries the particular smell of sage and pine that you've associated with this specific Saturday morning for five years of weekend drives and ownership-period anticipation.
You are standing on land that is yours.
You are 38, or 44, or 52, and you are the person you didn't think you were allowed to be - a landowner, a deed holder, someone who made a decision at a moment when the price was right and the monthly payment was manageable and the lot was sitting here on a hillside in Klamath County waiting for the buyer who would see it clearly. The people in the cowboy hats on the front of the real estate magazines never quite explain this part: the moment you become who you didn't think you were allowed to be is not the moment you arrive at some distant financial milestone. It is the moment you stop waiting and make the first payment.
The lot is where that moment begins.
The Property - What You're Actually Getting
0.42 acres on Clouthier Drive. Oregon Shores Unit 2 First Addition, Block 28, Lot 8. A hillside parcel in an established rural community in Klamath County, Oregon, with build-up potential and a western Cascade view from the upper portion of the lot that most other parcels in this subdivision simply cannot offer.
The lot has a gentle but noticeable slope rising from the road toward the back of the property. The high end of the lot faces north-northeast while the road runs along the south-southwest edge - meaning that as you move uphill from the road, you gain elevation and the western and southern view corridors open up progressively. A thoughtful building siting - pushing the foundation higher rather than taking the path of least resistance - is the difference between a standard rural homesite and a homesite with a view that earns its place in every conversation about why you moved here.
The terrain is largely open with a few scattered trees giving the property character and natural definition without requiring clearing before you build. You can walk this lot and see the building options clearly - where the foundation goes, where the driveway runs, where the view corridor opens up - without needing to imagine what it looks like under different conditions. What you see is what you're building on.
Power is at the lot. Community water is available through Oregon Shores' private water system. The main runs to your lot line; you'll pay the hookup fee from the main to your home when you build. Once connected, you're on a community water system maintained by the Oregon Shores Recreational Club HOA - straightforward, practical, and one of the significant infrastructure advantages that this lot has over off-grid parcels in the region. You are not figuring out how to get water to a remote parcel. The water is there. Your contractor knows how to connect to it.
The road is paved and maintained year-round. No gravel. No four-wheel-drive seasonal access concerns. No mud-season complications. A paved, maintained road to the lot line is an infrastructure feature that adds practical value to a rural land purchase in ways that buyers who haven't owned rural land sometimes underestimate until they've dealt with the alternative.
The Oregon Shores Recreational Club HOA is $200 per year. Not per month. Per year. At $200 annually, the Osrc HOA covers road maintenance, water system operation, and your membership in the club - including access to the community amenities that make this lot part of a real community rather than just a piece of isolated rural land. The $200 annual HOA is already included in your monthly note payment - you're not tracking a separate bill.
The Oregon Shores HOA minimum build requirement is 1,200 square feet. This is the same standard that applies across Oregon Shores - it protects the community character and the resale value of every lot in the subdivision by ensuring that what gets built here meets a quality standard. For the buyer planning a manufactured home: a quality manufactured home meeting the 1,200 square foot minimum and Oregon Shores' architectural standards is permitted on this specific lot. Your path to a completed homesite does not require stick-frame construction costs.
Klamath County property taxes: approximately $70 per year. Seventy dollars. The carrying cost of this lot - $70 in annual property taxes plus $200 in annual HOA - is $270 per year once the note is paid off. That is the entire annual cost of owning 0.42 acres of hillside land in a rural community in one of the most scenically extraordinary counties in the American West. Two hundred seventy dollars. Per year.
Elevation: approximately 4,300 feet, with this lot sitting on a slope above much of the surrounding subdivision. The elevation contributes to the view potential and gives the property a climate character - cooler summers, crisper winters, cleaner air - that distinguishes it from lower-elevation parcels in the Klamath Basin.
Internet: Starlink works here. As satellite coverage continues expanding in rural Oregon, Starlink has become the standard connectivity solution for this part of Klamath County. Cellular and fixed-wireless coverage in this specific corner of Oregon Shores is worth verifying for your carrier before you sign, but Starlink as a primary internet connection serves the practical needs of a full-time or part-time residence at this location effectively.
The Community Around You - Oregon Shores Unit 2
Oregon Shores Unit 2 is not a remote, isolated piece of land with no community context. It is an established rural subdivision with a functioning homeowners association, a private community water system, a maintained road network, and a membership organization - the Oregon Shores Recreational Club - that gives property owners access to shared amenities that meaningfully improve the quality of ownership here.
The Osrc 17-Acre Lakefront Park. The Oregon Shores Recreational Club owns and operates a 17-acre park on Modoc Point Road, approximately 1.5 miles from the club office, on the shore of Agency Lake. The park has RV and tent camping facilities with electric and water hookups, a gazebo suitable for family gatherings and reunions, restrooms, and - most significantly for the outdoor-oriented buyer - direct access to Agency Lake. As an Osrc member in good standing, you have access to this park from May 1 through October 31 each year. You don't need a state park reservation to put your boat on Agency Lake. You drive five minutes from your lot, back the trailer down the community launch, and you're on the water. Friends in town for the weekend? The community campground is yours to use - no four-month-out reservation system, no lottery, no sold-out summer weekend complications. You're a member. The park is yours to use.
Agency Lake - Three Miles West. Nine thousand acres of high-desert lake water, the upper arm of Upper Klamath Lake, three miles from your lot. Agency Lake supports the kind of fishery that makes serious fly fishers plan trips around it - redband rainbow trout from the Williamson and Wood Rivers running up into the lake system, reaching weights that routinely exceed five pounds. Bald eagles working the shoreline at dawn. River otters. Mule deer at the water's edge in the early morning. Antelope on the open meadows in the late afternoon. The Williamson River, three miles from this lot, is one of the most respected trout streams in North America - the kind of river that serious anglers travel across the country to fish. Once you own this lot and hold the deed, you plan Tuesdays around it, not vacations.
Chiloquin and Klamath Falls. The nearest small town - Chiloquin - is just a few miles from the Oregon Shores community, with a gas station, a store, and the basic practical commerce of a small rural community. Klamath Falls, the regional center, is approximately 25 miles west - a 30-to-35-minute drive - with the full infrastructure of a functioning city: Walmart, Home Depot, a full-service regional grocery, Sky Lakes Medical Center, a regional airport with flights to Portland and San Francisco, Oregon Tech university, restaurants, a farmers market, and a downtown that has been actively reinvesting in itself. Close enough for a weekly resupply run without it dominating your day. Far enough that the quiet of the subdivision is real and consistent.
The Broader Region - Klamath County, Oregon
The decision to buy land in Klamath County is a decision about a place - a region, a climate, a cost structure, a quality of life - that rewards careful attention. The lot on Clouthier Drive exists inside this region, and the region shapes everything about what ownership here actually means over the years and decades you hold it.
300+ Days of Sunshine Annually. Klamath County sits in the rain shadow east of the Cascades and receives more than 300 days of sunshine per year - more annual sunshine than Miami, Florida, and more than Phoenix, Arizona. The high desert climate means clear skies, dry summers, and crisp winters without the marine grey that defines the Pacific Coast and the Willamette Valley for months at a time. For the buyer who has been living under Seattle or Portland overcast and wondering if the weather itself is part of what's making life feel heavier than it should, the light in Klamath County is the first thing people describe when they explain why they moved here. It is real. It is consistent. And it changes the quality of daily life in ways that are difficult to fully appreciate until you experience a full year of it.
Money Magazine's 1 Place to Retire in the West. Klamath Falls was ranked the number one place to retire in the Western United States by Money Magazine - recognized for the convergence of affordability, outdoor recreation, quality of life, healthcare access, and natural amenities that rarely appear together at this price point. For the buyer who is making a long-term decision about where to put roots - not just a short-term investment decision - this kind of third-party validation reflects a genuine assessment of the factors that determine whether a place is livable over the long term.
Crater Lake National Park - 30 Miles North. The deepest lake in the United States. The bluest water most people will see in their entire lives. 200,000 acres of protected wilderness surrounding a volcanic caldera that draws visitors from across the world and sits within an easy drive of this lot. Approximately 75 minutes from Clouthier Drive to the crater rim - close enough to drive up for a Saturday morning hike, close enough to take visiting family on a day trip, close enough that it stops being a destination you plan around and becomes a place you simply go when the weather is right and the mood strikes. For the buyer who is making a decision about where to build a life, proximity to Crater Lake is one of the genuine geographic advantages of this specific county that no amount of money can replicate anywhere else.
The Williamson River and the Klamath Fly Fishery. Three miles from this lot, the Williamson River flows into Agency Lake and Upper Klamath Lake. The Williamson is not a regional fishing resource - it is a world-class trout stream with a national and international reputation among serious fly fishers. The redband rainbow trout that populate the Williamson and the upper Klamath system are genetically distinct, native to this watershed, and reach sizes that most trout streams cannot support. For the buyer whose outdoor life includes fishing, owning land three miles from the Williamson River is not an amenity. It is a primary reason for being here.
The Sky Lakes Wilderness. South and west of Crater Lake, the Sky Lakes Wilderness is a roadless high-elevation area of alpine lakes, old-growth ponderosa and fir forest, and mountain terrain that provides backcountry hiking and backpacking opportunities that serious outdoorspeople seek specifically because the area has not been made easy to access. For the buyer whose outdoor life extends beyond day hikes and fishing, the Sky Lakes Wilderness is within reach of this lot and accessible from trailheads a comfortable drive to the west.
Oregon Has No Sales Tax. Every appliance, every building material, every manufactured home, every vehicle purchase - made in Oregon without state sales tax. For the first-time land buyer who is simultaneously planning a build, furnishing a home, and equipping a rural property on a careful budget, the absence of sales tax in Oregon is a meaningful cost reduction on every significant purchase. It compounds over years and decades of ownership.
Low Property Taxes - Structurally and Consistently. The approximately $70 annual property tax on this lot reflects a Klamath County tax structure that makes long-term land ownership genuinely affordable in a way that California, Washington, and even western Oregon's tax structures do not. Seventy dollars per year. For a hillside lot in a rural community with community water, paved road access, and a Cascade view from the upper portion. The carrying cost after payoff - $270 per year - is the financial reality of owning this land over the long term, and it belongs in every calculation you make about whether this purchase makes sense for your life.
The Rural Character of This Corner of Oregon Is Not Accidental. Klamath County is a county of 6,136 square miles with a population of approximately 65,000 people. The density produces the open, unhurried, self-reliant community character that is disappearing rapidly from most of the western United States as remote work migration and real estate investment have transformed previously affordable rural communities into priced-out destinations. Klamath County has not yet been through that transformation at the scale that has affected Bend, Sisters, Ashland, or the Oregon Coast communities. The window of affordability that still exists here - the $199-A-Month first land buy, the hillside lot with a Cascade view for the price of a car payment - is real right now. The direction of travel for rural land prices in desirable western counties is not toward more affordable. It is toward less.
The First-Time Buyer Case - Stated Plainly
The buyer for this lot is not someone who has been through this before. They haven't bought rural land. They haven't navigated a Promissory Note, a land contract, or an owner-financed purchase. They have been told, explicitly or implicitly, for most of their adult life that land ownership was not something their financial profile qualified them for.
The case for buying this lot is not complicated. It has three parts.
First: the price is real and the payment is manageable. $199 down. $199 a month. For a working household that has $199 in monthly discretionary cash - which is a large percentage of working households in America, regardless of income level - this purchase is possible right now, without a windfall, without a credit score improvement program, without waiting for anything to change. The monthly payment is what many people spend on a streaming service bundle, a gym membership they use twice a month, and two takeout meals. The difference is that at the end of 75 months, this payment results in a Warranty Deed rather than nothing.
Second: the lot is genuinely good. This is the point that matters most for the first-time buyer who is worried about making a mistake. This is not an entry-level lot because it has a problem. It is entry-level because the price point is accessible. The lot is on a hillside with a real western view, in an established community with water and paved road access, three miles from Agency Lake and one of the most respected trout rivers in North America, 30 miles from Crater Lake, in a county with 300 days of sunshine and $70 annual property taxes. The lot does not have a catch. The lot is good, and the price is low, and the reason is that the seller - Dakota Skyhook - prices on data and accessibility rather than maximizing the margin on a first-time buyer who doesn't know what they don't know.
Third: the act of starting is the entire point. The difference between having thought about owning land for years and actually owning land is not the size of the down payment. It is not the credit score. It is the decision to stop letting the category of land ownership belong to other people and start letting it belong to you. The $199 that starts this purchase is not a financial event. It is a decision about identity - about who you are and what you are allowed to have. That decision, made once, changes the shape of everything that follows.
The Osrc Membership and What It Means
When you make the final payment on this note and receive the Warranty Deed, you become a titled owner of a lot in Oregon Shores Unit 2 and a full member of the Oregon Shores Recreational Club. That membership is not a formality. It is a meaningful addition to the value of what you own.
The Osrc park on Modoc Point Road - 17 acres on the shore of Agency Lake, open May through October - gives you RV and tent camping access, a boat launch, a gazebo for private events, and a direct connection to Agency Lake without the reservation and access friction of public parks. For the buyer who moves here to fish the Williamson, kayak Agency Lake, and spend summer weekends on the water, the Osrc park is a primary amenity that the $200 annual HOA is paying for year after year.
The water system maintained by the Osrc - the private community water infrastructure that serves Oregon Shores Unit 2 - is the practical infrastructure that separates this lot from off-grid alternatives in the region. You are not figuring out water on your own. The community has already figured it out, and your HOA membership connects you to the system.
The road maintenance funded by the HOA keeps Clouthier Drive accessible year-round - paved, maintained, and free of the seasonal access complications that affect unimproved rural roads throughout the region.
$200 a year covers all of it. That figure - already included in your monthly note payment - is one of the more remarkable HOA structures in the Klamath County land market. It is not $200 per month. It is $200 per year. And it funds a water system, road maintenance, and a 17-acre lakefront park.
The Honest Ownership Timeline
We tell you this on the front page because we would rather lose a sale than lose your trust - and because a buyer who understands how owner-financed land works is a better partner than a buyer who is surprised by something they weren't told.
During the payment period: The property is held in our name as the financing seller. This is how owner-financed land transactions work - the deed does not transfer until the note is paid in full. During the payment period, you do not have access to camp on the lot, park an RV, stage materials, begin construction, or use the land in any active way. You can drive Clouthier Drive. You can walk up the hill from the road edge and stand where the build pad would go and look at the Cascade view. You can learn the property and the community. But the lot itself is not accessible for use until the Warranty Deed transfers at payoff.
We know this is a significant limitation for a buyer who is excited about the land. We tell you about it explicitly because it is real and because you deserve to make your decision with full information.
The Osrc's recreational amenities - the park, the boat launch, the campground - belong to titled owners. Title transfers at payoff. During the payment period, you are building toward those benefits, not yet accessing them.
What you do have during the payment period: A Promissory Note that clearly states your purchase price, your payment schedule, and your unambiguous path to the Warranty Deed at payoff. A fixed monthly payment that does not move when interest rates move. The right to pay the note off at any time, on any accelerated schedule you choose, with no prepayment penalty. A direct line to us - email or text, anytime - and a straightforward answer to every question you have, before you sign or after.
At payoff: We execute and record a Warranty Deed in your name. The title is guaranteed clear of liens, back taxes, and competing claims. The lot is yours. You can be on the phone with a manufactured home dealer and a foundation contractor within the week.
For many of our buyers, the payment period is the planning period. They spend 75 months getting their build plans in order, saving for construction costs, researching manufactured home options, pricing contractors, and making the decisions that will let them move quickly once the deed is in hand. By the time they own the land free and clear, they know exactly what they're going to do with it and they're ready to do it immediately.
The Numbers - Every Dollar Accounted For
$199 down to get started, plus a one-time $250 document fee at signing. Total initial outlay: $449.
$199 per month for 75 months at 0% interest. That single monthly payment covers everything - principal reduction on the note, the prorated share of Klamath County property taxes ($5/Month), and the Oregon Shores Recreational Club HOA ($16.67/Month). One payment. One number. Nothing additional to track.
Total paid over the life of the note: $199 down plus 75 payments of $199 equals $15,124 - plus the $250 document fee, for a total all-in commitment of $15,374. At the end of 75 months, you own 0.42 acres of hillside land in Oregon Shores Unit 2 free and clear, with a Warranty Deed in your name, a Cascade view from the upper portion of your lot, community water at the lot line, and an annual carrying cost of $270.
Less than seven dollars a day for the life of the note. That is the math. Less than a daily coffee habit. Less than most people spend on things they cannot point to six months later. And at the end of 75 months, this is yours.
No bank. No credit approval process. No appraisal. No underwriting timeline. No rate that adjusts. No Pmi. You fill out the paperwork, we review it, we execute the Promissory Note, you make the first payment, and the lot is locked in your name from that day forward.
No credit check. Your history with us is what matters. We've closed 30 transactions in Klamath County with buyers across the full income and credit spectrum, and our experience is consistent: the buyers who are serious about the land pay on time, not because their credit score says they will, but because the land means something to them and they protect what means something.
No prepayment penalty. Pay the note off early on any schedule that works for you. Early payoff is encouraged. Early payoff means the Warranty Deed transfers sooner, the Osrc park access begins sooner, and the building process can start sooner. There is no cost or fee associated with paying ahead of schedule.
Who We Are
Dakota Skyhook is a small, family-owned land company based in Fargo, North Dakota. We have closed approximately 30 transactions in Klamath County, Oregon - Running Y Resort lots, Oregon Shores parcels, Kffe units, and rural subdivision properties across the county. We are not a high-volume land operation running automated ads against first-time buyer zip codes. We are not going to tell you this lot is going to be gone in 48 hours if we don't know whether it will be.
We bought this lot because the location is real, the view is real, the community infrastructure is real, and the buyer for it exists - someone who has been looking at land and telling themselves it wasn't for them, and who needs a seller willing to structure a purchase that matches their actual financial reality rather than the financial reality someone else decided they should have.
We price on data. We disclose everything that matters on the first page, not the last. We answer every question honestly, including the questions whose honest answers might lead a buyer to a different decision. We have a reputation in this market that we protect by doing right by every buyer in every transaction.
If you have questions about the lot, the view, the build options, the HOA, the manufactured home permitting, the Osrc park access, or the financing terms, ask them. All of them. We'll answer every one.
If this lot isn't the right fit for your situation, we'll tell you that. If it is, the process is fast, the paperwork is clear, and the deed is yours on the timeline the Promissory Note specifies.
What to Do Next
If you want to see the lot before you decide, drive out. Clouthier Drive in Oregon Shores Unit 2 is accessible from Klamath Falls via Modoc Point Road. Find the lot, park the car, walk up the slope to the upper portion of the parcel where the build pad would go. Stand there and look west. Look at the Cascades. Look at the sky. Look at what your front porch view would be. Then drive back through Chiloquin and go home and make your decision with a real sensory memory of what you'd be buying rather than a description of it.
If you want to talk through the lot, the build options, the manufactured home permitting, or the financing terms, call or text. We'll answer every question, give you the full picture of the purchase, and let you make the decision at your own pace.
If you're ready to move forward, the paperwork is fast. We'll have the Promissory Note to you quickly, walk you through every document, answer every remaining question, and lock in the lot in your name before the end of the week.
$199 down. $199 a month. 75 months. Title in your name at payoff.
Call or text for more information.
No banks. No credit check. No nonsense.
The Last Thing
You've been told your whole life that land was for other people. You've carried that belief long enough that it started to feel like a fact rather than an opinion someone else formed and handed to you.
It was never a fact. It was a story - and like most stories about what you're not allowed to have, it had more to do with the storyteller than with you.
The lot on Clouthier Drive is on a hillside. The Cascades are to the west. Agency Lake is three miles away. Crater Lake is 30 miles north. The trout river that serious anglers fly across the country to fish is three miles from your property line. The annual property tax is $70. The annual HOA is $200. The monthly payment is $199. The down payment is $199.
At the end of 75 months, the Warranty Deed is in your name. The lot is yours. The view is yours. The access to Agency Lake and the Osrc park is yours. The Saturday morning coffee on the hillside looking at the Cascades is yours.
The only thing between you and that Saturday morning is $199 and the decision to stop letting land belong to other people.
This is the entry-level price point in our entire Klamath County inventory. It is entry-level not because the lot is bad - the lot is on a hill with a real Cascade view - but because someone who spent their whole adult life being told that land was for other people deserves a first-time buy that doesn't require gambling half their savings on a category they've never participated in before.
Ninety-nine words could describe what happens next, but only one matters: start.
$199 down. $199 a month for 75 months. Warranty Deed in your name at payoff. Annual carrying cost after payoff: $270.
Call or text (701) banks. No credit check. No nonsense.
Lot Maps & Attachments
Directions to Lot
GPS Coordinates: 42.532980, -121.916769
The directions are identical to 236934 - about a 45-minute drive (~40 miles) north from Klamath Falls:
Driving Directions:
Head north on US-97 N from Klamath Falls
Continue north through Modoc Point
Turn left (west) onto Chiloquin Rd toward Chiloquin
Turn left onto Agency Lake Rd heading southwest along Agency Lake
Enter Oregon Shores Unit 2 and follow to Clouthier Dr - Block 28, Lot 8 will be just steps from 236934 (they're essentially adjacent lots, separated by only ~130 feet)














