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Learning Day: Saskatchewan Wheat Pool Adventurer's Club 🌭

Here’s a short list of some of my favorite comedy resources:

-When a corporation decides to do a comic book.

-Long roll calls of characters by people who ran out of ideas before they started.

-Boring organizations deciding it’s time to get “badical... to the extreme!”

-When somebody wildly overestimates their own value and plummets straight into the dirt.

Every one of those things, on their own, is a recipe for hilarity. Now meet all of them rolled together: The Saskatchewan Wheat Pool Adventurer’s Club!

“This can’t be exactly what it looks like,” you’re thinking. “There’s no way you found a superhero comic about staple crops.”

And you’re right. Tragically, you’re right. I did not find the comic books. Those were all lost to silo fires and farm suicides. I only found the promotional material for the fan club of the comic books. This is a new type of sadness scientists have been working on by nesting layers of sadness atop one another until they form a strong and flexible weave of despair. They call it Sadophene, and it’s so durable they’re using it to hold together Elon Musk’s quivering ego.

The Saskatchewan Wheat Pool Adventurers were like The Avengers for 4H kids who’d been kicked in the head and left their imaginations on the hoof of a milking cow. The goal of the Adventurers wasn’t to get kids into farming, it was to show farm kids how awesome their lives already were. They did it through pogs!

If you’re not familiar, pogs were


Wait, what the fuck were pogs? No, I lived through this. I should know this. I had pogs. They were a game or something, right? Y-you pogged? Did we pog each other? Holy shit why did we buy so many circles of cardboard with pictures on them?

Imagine the child these pogs were made for. The bowl-cutted, overall-clad, ricket-afflicted boy sitting alone in a windblown field in central Canada cupping a soggy King Wheat pog, his most treasured possession. If I was making an arthouse film about hell that’s how I’d show you the Fate of the Unlearned -- the section of limbo where good people who just never heard of Christ go, to suffer in the absence of something they never knew was missing.

Hey speaking of obscure parts of hell, imagine the poor freelance comic book artist who took this job and actually had to pen character arcs for barley. They sure knew their demographic, though. They didn’t call these things activity books:

They were called “Things To Do When You’re Bored Books” because they knew calling these sad time-killers “activities” would be an actionable false advertising claim. In Quebec they were called “La Mort De Ennui” and to this day Montreal existentialists write bitingly ironic ukulele songs about them for their six YouTube subscribers.

Those are your villains: The various molds and insects which can spoil a harvest. These are comic books for children about wheat fighting mold, and I don’t know a single better way to tell a kid that you lied when you said they could be anything they wanted. You could say “I’m sorry Young Callum, you’ll never be an astronaut. You’ll go to the University of Regina for two semesters, and then you’ll move back home and drive your daddy’s pickup truck when he dies,” or you could just give him a Saskatchewan Wheat Pool Adventurer’s Club membership and let his dreams wither naturally on the vine.

Look at these thrilling Things To Do When You’re Bored!

-Discover “the Mighty Sprout” in a powerful science project!

-Check out the “A-MAZE-ING” Wheat Story!

-See inside a seed cleaning plant!

Hand a boy these and he will forget all about hope. He probably won’t even dream in color anymore. If you toss a kid one of these books and he has an absolute blast “seeing inside a seed cleaning plant,” then you need to get out of the house, barricade the door, and burn it down. An alien has cuckoo-ed you and tricked you into raising their offspring. Young Callum is excited about learning these processes because you are the crop, and the harvest is coming.

Let’s explore another of my favorite things: Roll call time!

Wendy Wrangler is a country singer whose tunes ‘wrangle’ her opponents. Yeah, okay. That scans. Good work, anonymous Saskatchewan freelancer. Buy yourself a pint of Everclear and drink it straight, you earned it.

Fantastic Flax can “blend in like a chameleon,” which is... is it because you can mix flax into so many things and it just kind of disappears? I’m being very generous by doing that legwork for this comic book, but okay.

Now, following this template, what kind of powers would you say the Oat guy has?

Awesome Oats can see into the future? Like
 oats, do? Is this why it’s impossible to get the drop on a bowl of oatmeal? Is it because the only reason people eat oatmeal is they have the foresight to realize they’ll struggle on the toilet later if they don’t? It is not explained!

Bearded Barley is from Asia! All of Asia. Still white, though. He can talk to animals! Like barley can! And his horses pull his chariot at the speed of light what the fuck? Where did that come from?

Maybe I’m not giving this writer enough credit and they’re sourcing these powers from Asian (non-specified) folklore about the ancient Barley gods, or maybe he only knew two things about crops and hoped everybody else knew less so they’d just roll with the horse stuff.

Canola Crusher is from South America! Like canola! That’s why all of his dialogue sees him slipping into and then clumsily explaining basic Spanish! (Spanish is what South Americans call Mexican. -Editor)

Penny Pulse uses the secrets of herbs and spices to heal, just like the Middle East taught her. The middle east of Ireland, by the looks of her. Yes, she harnesses all the exotic healing spices of Dublin, like “salt” and “fried.” To be fair, 1990s Saskatchewan wasn’t exactly brimming with diverse life models. It’s entirely possible they thought ‘redhead’ counted as a race.

Let’s jump over to the villains:

Grasshopper overeats, which is totally in line with the theme, but right at the very end they tack on “thinks he’s better than everybody.” You know, like those arrogant fucking grasshoppers.

Rustin infects plants with her corrosive touch, which makes sense -- she’s supposed to be leaf rust -- but then she’s also a super genius? You think leaf rust is smart? You think farmers hate leaf rust because it’s a liberal? This is a weird dig to slip into a children’s educational comic no matter how little respect you have for dirt folk.

Blotch is the natural enemy of Bearded Barley, which he communicates by threatening to “get my sticky disks into your beard.” I can only assume “disks” was a typo there. His bio goes on to explain he’s “a great athlete, but a jerk. He stays up too late at night!” I’m not sure what it adds to the character, that we now know Blotch likes to facefuck bears and also has a sleep disorder, but there was only enough space for like four sentences and these were deemed two of the most vital.

Ergot is a master hypnotist which -- once again being super generous here -- I guess could be an allusion to the hallucinogenic properties of ergot? Also she lies, cheats and steals just like that no good degenerate fungus. Oh, holy shit, wait: she replaces baby wheat kernels with her own evil children!

Your weird plantchild who loves the seed cleaning process - you’re being ergotted! Tell Young Callum to fetch his favorite toy (the shovel) from the basement and start pouring the gas. I know it’s hard to start over, but Lord knows it’s not your first fungusboy, and if you don’t plow and rotate the ashes it sure won’t be your last.

We’re so desperate for new comic book properties you’d assume the Saskatchewan Wheat Pool Adventurers would be slated for a September release on Disney+ already. But no, somehow they went under despite all of their massive early success:

23,000 members of the Saskatchewan Wheat Pool Adventurers Club! That’s officially an army. A whole army of grainwashed children willing to die for your wheat consortium. And led by a madman so zealous he began to dress as King Wheat! What could have derailed this unstoppable phenomenon?

Nothing but a modest fee.

A grain conglomerate asked children for their attention -- at a time when video games and television and just much better comic books existed -- and by some miracle they got it. And then they also thought kids would pay for the privilege? $10 is an extremely modest fee, it’s true, but what family would get that bill and happily pay it just so junior would never again be without his seed cleaning plant tours? Only a family already ruled, absolutely devoured by Ergot Cuckoos could be tricked in this manner.

And if you were counting on the Ergot Brood’s loyalty in exchange for including Queen Ergot’s seed packets in every Things To Do When You’re Bored Book, then the joke’s on you: She cheats and lies! Like all rye-based fungus!

...

This article was brought to you by a hot tip from the Hot Dog Tipline, and by our fine sponsor and Hot Dog Supreme: Nick Ralston, also known as the heroic RADICAL RICE whose superpower, of course, is CYBORG FINGERS.

Comments

Anyway it was great catching up with Canada's greatest contribution to superhero culture!

petertron

I dislike that Rustin is so sexually aggressive. Blotch, too, now that I think about it.

petertron

Seems ricist

AU

You know what... I’d watch the shit out of the movie. Sorry, MAJOR MOTION PICTURE. Just get Stephen King to write and at least one educational rap about threshing machines, and I’m in. Pogs were a kind of currency induced to get East German children used to the real thing without letting them near it for a few years. And I collected the entire set of Judge Dredd ones, so I guess I’m now an oligarch. See ya!

Christopher Horne

Dude...do you ever read good comics? Just to counterbalance all the awful ones? I’m worried about your fragile sanity.

Chris “Ace” Hendrix

"Where did all the Pogs go? I don't mean the fad, I mean physically, where did they all go?!?" - James Rolfe

Jeffrey Canam [GrahfMetal]

GRAINWASHED.

Brendan McGinley

Nobody respects the megacorporations that own 90% of our nations' farms more than me, but they could not have picked a worse team name. Adventuring is the exact, literal-literal opposite of farming. It means to leave a place and roll with whatever comes your way. Farming only works if you stay in one spot and very carefully create the conditions you need to have happen. This is spiteful.

Brendan McGinley

It's weird, I'm from Saskatchewan, was a stupid child through the 90s, and never heard of this. None of my friends and family have heard of this. The guy who grew up in a town of around 800 people, and then became my best friend never heard of this. This feels like some sort of extreme level of gaslighting. Apparently it existed, and the Saskatchewan Wheat Pool was still around when I was being chased by Canadian Geese around Wascana Lake. It was marketed to urbanites, which I guess I counted as, being from Regina. Whenever I think about it too much, I hear a faint keening in my ears, and a desire to cover myself in soil. I can't be the only one, and I'll have to visit the old family farm where they've grown hay for as long as I can remember. Apparently they still have a wooden grain elevator there. Maybe it'll explain the drone of grasshoppers that haunts my dreams now.

Chaunage

Every time I see a terrible superhero half-concept like this, I always have the exact same reaction, which is an unquenchable desire to write/produce/direct a dead-serious gritty reboot. Saskatchewan Wheat Pool communications director Duane Mohn, if you're reading this, and I assume you are, get in touch with me.

Steven Clark

I can answer one of your questions: Okra, AKA "gumbo" is a staple of African and Creole cuisine (yes, the stew known as gumbo refers to the okra, which is also called gumbo in certain dialects). So that would explain why the Okra character is black. Now, that doesn't explain why the Asian and the Middle Eastern characters are white, but it is at least a vague stab in the direction of diversity.

Vooster

This article dredged up a vague recollection of a comic book we were issued in elementary school, ca 1983, called Mulligan Stew. I barely remember it--some sort of random conglomeration of Teamwork, Citizenship, and Just Say No (my generation's version of D.A.R.E.)--and now those faded half-memory fragments will forever be combined with the Saskatchewan Semi-Adventure Non-Activity Books. It's actually an improvement. Thanks, Brockway!

Bonnybedlam

Placing him as from Latin America is especially confusing because "Canola" specifically means "Canadian", it is a strain of Rapeseed oil that was rebranded as "Canola" for obvious reasons.

Matthew Harris

Blotch has insomnia and face fucks bears...this seems like it would be a serviceable bio intro for "Cocktails", too?

Matthew Harris

Planning another sojourn to visit the Mole People and this is Just the kind of thing I want to get their input on. They mostly communicate through snuffles and grunts but you work out the details. Anyway, I'll put this in the repository for the trip.

LyraV

Missed a real opportunity for ‘Canola Crusher’ to be ‘Randy Rapeseed’...at least that would have explained the stickiness...

Tom McIntire

I think you are just shilling for your hero identity. Orasky to Okra is a short jump. We know who you are and Blotch is coming for you.

Fatamatician

In the topmost right book, where Fantastic Flax is fighting the Choker, there is a special guest appearance by Okra. I have so many questions: Is this a riff on "Oprah"? If so, why? Did Oprah have a big following among Saskatchewanian farmers and their seed children? If not, also why? Why is the only person with skin darker than Crayola "Flesh" named Okra? What constitutes a special appearance in a Things To Do When You're Bored book? Is this like a full Okra story? Or is it just cameo right at the end? Why is she the only special appearance? Again, is Oprah that big of a draw? If so, why not just have her be a regular character? I have to stop thinking about this before I hurt myself.

Jeff Orasky

I grew up in Indiana, where winter in February set the tone in regard to Scenes of Despair.

Kevin Hanlon

This looks just like the insane kind of cheap property some relatively small studio would try to revive these days to get a piece of the already thining superhero craze pie, so I have to assume the only reason it hasn't happened is that there are even cheaper properties available. Think about that for a moment. Also, I need to mention... I really though "Blotch" was named "Biotch" for a second, and I got momentarily excited at the prospect of the character designer showing he was really not happy with the work he was forced to do.

Pablo Rodriguez

Wheat Pool > Dead Pool. No one can deny this.

Dean Costello

They weren't?

1900HOTDOG

I think technically it's bullshit, and will always be bullshit, but I get the sentiment.

1900HOTDOG

Learn of your proud people's history!

1900HOTDOG

Maple's the best, most Canadian flavor. Saving yourself a nice little treat for the end times!

1900HOTDOG

I've decided I never heard of this because Brockway used 1-900-HOTDOG funds to travel back in time and intercept it before it could enter my life. While some might consider this a gift, I believe I have been robbed of true, perfect wrongness and also pogs. Someday, Brockway, we will fight and I will reclaim the forbidden wheat pool knowledge from your brain and soul.

Ingrid Atkinson

Man, what an insane mess. Wow. It’s just too bad that Malibu Comics went out of business. If they picked up this nonsense (and they would in a freaking heartbeat), then we all could have thrilled at the crossover between the Ferret and Bearded Barley, the whitest Asian since the Swedish Charlie Chan! Oh, the missed opportunities! Hysterical article, Brockway, you freaking awesome legend! Money well spent. Proud to be a Patreon supporter!

Thomas m Gallipoli

The Saskatchewan Wheat Pool discovered in the 1990s what Silicon Valley venture capitalists still haven't clued into: when you ask people to pay for what they're used to getting for free, you lose 90% of your audience.

Dave Dalrymple

Thanks to this article, all future episodes of dark despair will be set in the wind swept desolation of Saskatchewan farmland.

Kevin Hanlon

As I scrolled through the lineup of Farmin' Friends and Foes, my gaze was constantly drawn to the lower right side of the comic/advertisement/apology where a hypnotic message filled me with an apprehension heretofore experienced only via Popsicle Pete's "NONE OF YOU ARE SAFE!" mission statement: FARMING. FOR ALL OF US.

Kevin Hanlon

This is the kind of mind-blowing content I'm here for. It's my regular reminder that life is truly meaningless nonsense.

Patrick Owens

As someone who was ten-years-old in Saskatchewan in 1994 ... how /dare/ Brockway learn about this before me? Why did my pog collection not include these shitty agricultural pre-wikihow art disappointments? Is this because my mother was a forester, the natural enemy of the farmer?

Ingrid Atkinson

well avoiding a toilet struggle isn't the ONLY reason I eat oatmeal although that certainly is a nice bonus it's mostly because we got a whole basement pantry-full of instant we bought when we got worried about the Y2K of 2012 and there's only maple flavored left

sissyneck

What in the Hell of Yammering Fish is a Warble, and can anything survive their slamdance?

Haraka


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