After his marriage to Jamison in 1994, the two of them spent one year in the Canadian wilderness to attempt a
Paleolithic existence. They travelled to Goldsborough Lake () deep in the Wabakimi, first building a
tipi then an attached
A-frame while using no metal, plastic, or otherwise manufactured tools. For the first half of the year, they took a store of traditional foods such as
wild rice,
squash,
beaver and
moose meat,
bear fat, and
maple sugar. In late September, Stroud's friends Doug Getgood and Fred Rowe brought in food for the next six months and chopped firewood for the couple. Stroud and Jamison built and equipped a winter cabin using an
axe, a modern
bow saw, and a trapper's tin wood stove left by Getgood and Rowe, along with a metal pot they found. Family and medical emergencies brought them out of the bush on three occasions. Once when Stroud's father was dying from cancer, another when they both went to be treated for
giardiasis, and again when Jamison had a miscarriage. Stroud filmed their primitive living experience and released the 50 minute documentary,
Snowshoes and Solitude, which was named Best Documentary at the Muskoka Film Festival and Best Film at the Waterwalker Film Festival. In 2001, Stroud produced two one-hour specials for the science news show
@discovery.ca. These segments follow the same format as
Survivorman with Stroud filming his own survival in the wilderness. They were originally broadcast as daily segments over the course of one week but were repackaged as two one-hour specials titled
Stranded. In 2006, Stroud produced a 90-minute special documenting his family's journey to building an
off-the-grid home. The show,
Off the Grid with Les Stroud, chronicled the process of buying property and refitting an old farm house with
solar and
wind power, a
raincatcher and
well, as well as the adjustments the Stroud family had to make to adapt to this style of living. Stroud has also hosted an episode of the Discovery channel show ''
I Shouldn't Be Alive titled Lost In The Snow
, which aired during its first season and the television program Surviving Urban Disasters'', which aired on the Science Channel and the 20th annual
Shark Week on the Discovery Channel. In 2010, Stroud hosted and produced the Gemini nominated hit kids TV series
Survive This and
Survive This 2 (
YTV,
Cartoon Network) that takes teens into the wilderness to teach them how to survive by giving them some instruction and challenging them with survival scenarios. Stroud's follow-up show to
Survivorman was titled
Beyond Survival with Les Stroud and debuted in 2010. On 27 April 2018,
National Geographic aired Stroud's ''
Alaska's Grizzly Gauntlet on their NGW channel. In four episodes, Stroud explores the survival methods and social structure of the Kodiak brown bear. Since 2020, Stroud has collaborated with chef Paul Rogalski on their PBS series Wild Harvest'', where Stroud
forages for wild ingredients and challenges Rogalski to use them in the preparation of different dishes in each episode. == Music ==