Les Stroud

Filmmaker

Birthday October 20, 1961

Birth Sign Libra

Birthplace Etobicoke, Ontario, Canada

Age 62 years old

Nationality Canada

#28690 Most Popular

1961

Les Stroud (born 20 October 1961) is a Canadian survival expert, filmmaker and musician best known as the creator, writer, producer, director, cameraman and host of the television series Survivorman.

Stroud was named Chief Scout by Scouts Canada on 22 November 2021.

After a short career behind the scenes in the music industry, Stroud became a full-time wilderness guide, survival instructor and musician based in Huntsville, Ontario.

Stroud has produced survival-themed programming for The Outdoor Life Network, The Discovery Channel, The Science Channel, and YTV.

The survival skills imparted from watching Stroud's television programs have been cited by several people as the reason they lived through harrowing wilderness ordeals.

Stroud was born in the Mimico neighbourhood of Toronto and graduated from Mimico High School.

He went on to complete the Music Industry Arts program at Fanshawe College in London, Ontario.

Stroud worked for several years at the Toronto-based music video channel MuchMusic, and as a songwriter for the band New Regime before a Temagami canoe trip sparked a career change.

During this time he also worked as garbage collector for the City of Toronto.

1990

In 1990 Stroud became a guide for Black Feather Wilderness Adventures leading canoe excursions into the Northern Ontario wilds.

It was also during this time while on a survival course he met his future wife, photographer Sue Jamison.

1994

They married in 1994 and together left for a year-long honeymoon in the remote Wabakimi area of Ontario which was to become the basis of the documentary Snowshoes and Solitude.

Afterwards, the couple moved to Yellowknife in the Northwest Territories where Stroud was employed as an outdoor instructor to special needs individuals of aboriginal descent.

Stroud and Jamison then settled in Huntsville, Ontario where they had two children and started both the outdoor instructional outfit Wilderness Voice and the media company Wilderness Spirit Productions.

Inspired by the popularity of the television show Survivor, Stroud pitched a more authentic version of the show to The Discovery Channel Canada.

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 (50.69861°N, -89.34611°W) 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.

2001

Stroud produced two programs titled One Week in the Wilderness and Winter in the Wilderness for @discovery.ca in 2001.

The success of these specials led to the development of Survivorman, a show that followed a similar format of leaving Stroud on his own, with minimal equipment, in the wilderness to videotape his survival experience.

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.

The popularity of these pilots spawned the show Survivorman.

2004

Stroud produced 23 episodes of the show which began airing in 2004.

Stroud also composed and performed the opening theme music of Survivorman.

2006

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 made multiple television appearances including on The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson, The View, The Ellen DeGeneres Show, and Larry King Live.

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 TV program Surviving Urban Disasters, which aired on the Science Channel and the 20th annual Shark Week on the Discovery Channel.

2010

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.

2018

On 27 April 2018, National Geographic aired Stroud's Alaska's Grizzly Gauntlet on their NGW channel.

In 4 episodes, Stroud explores the survival methods and social structure of the Kodiak brown bear.

2020

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.