The issue was that we couldn’t afford to just come back and hope one of us would get a good job.

Welcome to Shangri-flawed
With help wanted signs sprouting like roadside weeds, it’s not surprising that Okanagan employers are struggling to cope. But just when you’d expect job seekers to be sitting in the driver’s seat, many wannabe workers are getting a bumpy ride. High housing costs and stagnant wages are obvious culprits, but the following three case studies, along with our salary comparisons, reveal there’s more to this picture.
Illustration by Will Enns
Read more of the original stories celebrated in our 30th-anniversary issue.
100 Mile Diet is no piece of cake
A simple, grassroots idea is rippling around the world. As it spreads, it is meeting head-on such issues as food security, fossil fuel use, international trade pressures, insufficient government support and urban-rural land conflict.
Two names: one great grape
Syrah–Shiraz… whatever you call it, this French/Aussie varietal can mix ’n’ match or stand tall on its own
I love my work
In an ideal world, we would all be working in professions or businesses we love — making enough money to support ourselves … and more.
It’s sooo easy being green
Evi Mayer and her family evacuated their newly built Chute Lake Road home during the shocking 2003 Okanagan Mountain Park Fire. They were lucky on their return: unlike the five homes below them, completely devastated by the flames, theirs sustained only minor damage.
Iron cuisine! Okanagan Iron Chef
The Okanagan’s first big battle of chefs took centre stage for an evening of furious slicing and dicing at the Kelowna Community Theatre.
Publisher bribes theatre troupe to perform musical and say flattering things…
HOLY HELVETICA! What was "hick" magazine publisher Paul Byrne thinking when he handed his unproven, freshly-inked Ink! The Musical over to a semi-professional big city theatre company? And then expected them to put it on stage, much less even take it seriously? Well,...






0 Comments