>
Back to cash: life without money in your pocket is not the utopia Sweden hoped
How people spent their time from 1930 - 2024
Superwood is Here! This Amazing New Material Could Change The World!
If only we'd built those offshore wind turbines, eaten more cricket-burgers...
New AI data centers will use the same electricity as 2 million homes
Is All of This Self-Monitoring Making Us Paranoid?
Cavorite X7 makes history with first fan-in-wing transition flight
Laser-powered fusion experiment more than doubles its power output
Watch: Jetson's One Aircraft Just Competed in the First eVTOL Race
Cab-less truck glider leaps autonomously between road and rail
Can Tesla DOJO Chips Pass Nvidia GPUs?
Iron-fortified lumber could be a greener alternative to steel beams
One man, 856 venom hits, and the path to a universal snakebite cure
Dr. McCullough reveals cancer-fighting drug Big Pharma hopes you never hear about…
At La'akea Community, residents live off-grid, grow their own food, and build their own homes using some materials harvested from the property.
With a thriving food forest and tropical gardens, they've learned to rely on crops that flourish in this climate—taro instead of potatoes, jaboticaba in place of grapes, and greens like Ethiopian kale and edible hibiscus. Sometimes, they even go a full month eating only what they've grown.
Since buying the land in 2005, the community has built most of the structures themselves using sustainable techniques. They harvest rainwater, generate solar power, compost their waste and sewage, and share meals, tools, and daily tasks in a cooperative, family-style setup. To become a member, newcomers first live and work on the land for six months.
After that, joining requires a one-time $35,000 buy-in and monthly dues of just $250—low enough that most members don't need full-time jobs. Some work just one month a year, thanks to how fully the land supports their needs.
We visited La'akea to explore how this intentional community blends simple living, shared ownership, and deep connection to the natural world in one of the most fertile—and wild—places on Earth.