Whelan’s farm is situated on land that is by no means virgin soil, but he’s looking to return it to a healthy, balanced ecosystem once again.
“Well, I never really liked chemicals,” he said, noting that his approach utilizes a holistic approach to farming rather than conventional, industrial practices.
“In nature, you don’t see a mono crop… Nature needs different plants in different places – even in a small field – to balance everything,” he continued. “And I tried to, in a way, replicate that.”
Whelan views the soil as “the primary terrestrial ecosphere,” which produces all the foodstuffs and nutrients for plants, animals, and humans to flourish on the planet. This critically important layer is only around six inches deep and is arguably the basis for life on Earth.
He treats this critical ecosystem as nature intended and he achieves this by carefully selecting and rotating the plants he introduces to the space, aerates the soil, and does all he can to encourage life – including the worms, helpful bacteria, and other sources of nutrients – to flourish.
“What that does is encourages all the life that’s in the soil to do my job,” he noted. “I stand back and watch the worms and the nematodes… and all that stuff develop an ecosystem that actually is what supplies my plants with the proper nutrients. That’s my goal.”
Flat Out Food is a Regina-based docuseries that aims to showcase the field to plate journey of the foods we eat. The series focuses on innovative large-scale enterprises and small-scale, independent operations in the province and includes the farmers who grow the food and the chefs who expertly prepare it.
The show's large-scale operations include Three Farmers, featured in the "Chickpea" episode alongside Whelan, and Compass Minerals, the owner and operator of a salt mine near Unity, Sask. Cultural sites including the Remai Modern Museum in Saskatoon and the Wanuskewin Indigenous cultural heritage site have also been featured.
On the episode “Chickpea,” Swift Current-based chefs Shaun Hanna, Derek Sandercock, and Chriel Pangilinan at Nightjar used Whelan’s farm-fresh chickpeas to craft a dish that made the most of the key ingredient.
“(If) you want to talk about artists, (Hanna is) an artist when it comes to chickpeas,” Whelan said as he reminisced about the meal he described as “unbelievable.”
The docuseries just aired its season finale concluding season four on April 3.
Following the COVID-19 epidemic – the founding era of Flat Out Food which was first aired in 2020 – the docuseries hopes to change the atmosphere of it’s originating circumstances and provide a show viewers recognize as a comforting and unifying idea.
Click here to see more...