About the Ranch

About the Ranch

About the Ranch

Ranch Open Friday - Sunday, 10 - 5

 

In 1866, Enoch Kidder Parrish arrived in Oak Glen and traded four mules and a wagon for 160 acres of land. By 1867 he had planted the first full-scale orchard in Oak Glen, just over an acre of mainly Rome Beauty trees. By 1900 he had just over 22 acres and Oak Glen was rapidly becoming a thriving commercial apple growing area. Apples from this historic orchard are on sale in the main barn each fall along with cider, apple butter, jams, jellies and syrups.

Parrish raised his family in a home he built on the property that, in later years, was used briefly as the Oak Glen schoolhouse. The oldest all-timber home in San Bernardino County, it still stands today and serves as the home for Parrish House Antiques.

Other shops have been built around the ranch over the years. In addition to the giant apple barn, Parrish Ranch is currently home to an artist’s studio at Wildland Images Oak Glen Art Gallery, a toy store at Granny's Attic, and fine home decor at Et Cetera.

The ranch’s restaurant, Klüddes Cast Iron, is housed in the former carriage barn built in 1867, the second oldest stick-framed structure in the county. The original beams are still visible above the diners, and outside, a giant sequoia tree grows that was planted in 1905.

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In addition to the shops, restaurant, and house, Parrish Ranch is home to a variety of wildlife. There are also pygmy goats, their guardian alpacas, a miniature donkey named Miss Covergirl and her best friend, Cinderella the miniature horse. In addition to the livestock there are emu, a variety of chickens, turkeys, and peafowl.