![]() ![]() Overall we visited about 100 homes and interviewed about 200 off-grid Canadians, as well as many American and British expats living in Canada. And we too practiced living in off-grid homes and cabins for short stretches of time. Sometimes we followed them around as they fished, harvested, collected wood and built or fixed their homes. Occasionally we lived with them for a short period of time. Just in time for the big vote.įor the next two years, photographer/videographer Jonathan Taggart and I travelled close to 105,000 kilometres together across Canada to find people who live off-the-grid and visit them in their homes. The Tyee launches a new free newsletter with fresh reporting and curated must reads. Which issues do you think we should be exploring more deeply here on The Tyee? Take our quick and easy poll. What Are the Conversations We Should Be Having? Please enable JavaScript before you proceed.Īnnouncements, Events & more from Tyee and select partners Tell Us Please. Your browser either doesn't support JavaScript or you have it turned off. You pick the amount, the frequency, and you can cancel at any time. If you care about having good journalism in the world, please consider joining Tyee Builders today. The Tyee is a non-profit newsroom, and every dollar that is contributed goes towards producing more journalism. Nearly ten thousand Tyee readers pitched in to our editorial budget last year, which means we have the resources to pay our team of staff reporters and editors to focus on the most important stories that matter to you.Ī paywall-free, quality news organization that shows up each day with good journalism is a rarity these days, and we don't take our readers' support for granted. How are we able to ignore every shiny new object that comes our way? We have the direct support of our audience, who pay us to keep laser-focused on just doing the best journalism for and about our region that we can do. ![]() Our top priorities are to simply to show up every day with original, fact-based, public interest journalism, publish it on an easy-to-read site that doesn't charge anything to access, and build a sustainable news organization. The internet and how we share information online is once again going through a major upheaval, with huge news organizations shutting down and laying off journalists, and the rise of AI and a new type of disinformation threat.Īt The Tyee, we resist chasing trends or rapid growth at all costs. If you'd like to join thousands of readers who help make independent journalism possible, consider joining Tyee Builders. Instead of focusing on what kind of articles will attract the most advertising dollars, we can spend time devoted to researching and writing stories that our readers find most valuable and make the most positive impact in our region. ![]() This core of supporters - making up about 1 to 2 per cent of our daily readership - enables us to pay our writers, keep our articles free and open to all, and not bombard our readers with annoying ads while you try to read. Tyee Builders are readers who contribute a bit of money - at a level and frequency of their choice - to support our editorial budget. We're able to focus our attention on publishing impactful journalism in the public interest, and publish it for free for all to read, because we have the support of Tyee Builders. Our team of independent journalists takes pride in doing in-depth reporting and taking time to get it right. Thanks for reading The Tyee today - we hope this article added to your day in some way. ![]()
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