In this short time, they have made a big impact. They have supported Sound of the Sirens as part of the Leek Arts Festival and have played the main stages at both Middlewich Folk and Boat Festival, Chester Live and Rustic Festival. They were fortunate enough to be invited to play the Wigwam Stage at this years Carfest North and the Viola Beach Introducing Stage at Rivfest17, where they were watched by a capacity crowd. They have had an original track included on the Fatea sessions quarterly download, they have recorded three tracks for the Narrowboat sessions and have had tracks played on BBC introducing for Radio Merseyside. They were part of the Music for Youth National Festival in 2016 and were later invited to the Music for Youth School Proms in 2017 where they raised the roof in front of 3,000 students.
This years highlight has to be the moment that they were presented with a handmade (especially for them) tenor banjo by Billy Bragg, on behalf of the River Reeves Foundation and in the words of Janice Long, who introduced them at Liverpools Folk on the Dock festival "the future of British music is safe as long as we have bands like Off the Grid!" who are know Atlas Bay after name change. And they played Focus Wales as a support to Gaz Coombes and played Rivfest 2018 main stage at Parr Hall in Warrington.