How About Snail Farming? Guest spot by Helen Howard – the edible snail farmer
Posted by Fiona Nevile in Discoveries | 29 commentsA few weeks ago I got an email from Helen Howard, the Kent snail farmer. I was intrigued – what did the process actually involve? Why had she started snail farming? Do they need a special diet? Where does she keep them? My brain whirled.
We don’t have a large snail population here at the cottage. We are lucky that we have many frogs and a large community of birds living in the garden. When they do appear snails are a menace. The thought of nurturing and breeding them albeit to eventually eat was a wonderful reversal of the traditional gardening snail horror movies!
Years ago I’d heard that snails are very amorous and make love for hours at a time. I didn’t actually ask her about that. But I reckoned that reading about snail farming would probably be of interest to loads of people and asked her if she’d be interested in writing a guest blog.
Helen generously obliged and this is her guest post.
“There had to be a better way of earning a living. That was uppermost in my mind when I was made redundant from a job that paid the mortgage but did little for my sanity. As I child I had an aquarium of water snails on my window sill – no fish just snails and I found them fascinating. From time to time they laid their eggs in a blob of jelly on the glass that slowly turned into miniscule perfectly formed transparent snails and crawled away.
I’ve got quite a big garden but it’s not a smallholding by any stretch of the imagination. As farm animals edible snails have a lot going for them and one advantage is they don’t take up much space. Finding out how to rear snails was no easy task and with so few snail farms in Britain it was quite a lonely furrow to plough. So it’s been really great to encourage other people to take them on – now I have a growing band of other snail smallholders to talk to.
In Britain it’s usual to keep snails indoors all year round because the summer season is so short but it is quite labour intensive with the constant round of feeding and cleaning out. Yes, I know, that is the smallholders lot! But I had a choice. After four years without a break, I decided to let them have a different sort of life out of doors. So, with the help of my local Produced in Kent organisers, I looked round for a patch of land and I was really lucky.
Brogdale Farm at Faversham houses the national fruit collection and Grow is the garden centre where you can buy trees from the collection. In their grounds Grow have community allotments and last year I was able to have the use of an allotment sized patch of ground for the summer. It’s not exactly free-range farming because of the need to keep all those potential predators at bay – I refer to my patch as Alcatraz.
All summer I was able to keep those thousands of hungry mouths satisfied with fresh fruit from the packhouse and waste vegetables from a big local greengrocer. It was so much easier than indoor farming, I could let the public visit and I enjoyed being out of doors all the time. When I take my snails into schools and brownie groups for Meet the Snails days, the teachers are often surprised to find themselves entranced by the slow hypnotic way they explore your fingers. But feeding them on rainy days was quite another story, with hungry snails galloping about under my feet desperately looking for something to eat.
So here we are again, the end of May already and it’s time for Slow Summer Snail Farm to re-open its doors. If you happen to be passing on May 28th 2011 do drop in and try our hot snails Spanish style at Kent’s first Snail Festival and look out for me at Smallholder shows. (www.snailfarm.org.uk)”
Look forward to meeting you
Helen Howard
H&RH Escargots
Leave a reply
Hi, I am interested in snail Farming, I would appreciate any information I can get in starting.
Hi Helen could you email me the costs of a start up snail Farm and I have plenty of land so just the basic costs for the first year. Best Regards Patrick
Reading the info on snail farming, I am interested and woul love to have my own snail farm.
I am interested in starting a snail farm and will be grateful if you can inform me where you do the course the cost . I live in London and will like to know where I can get a land to start a small snail farm.
Looking forward to hearing from you.
Dear Helen can you let me know when you next course is please.
Dear Helen
I would like to breed snails in a small polytunnel initially and would appreciate any assistance (books/references etc you could recommend).
I did work with Achatina Fulica and Deroceras Carouani at UCNW Bangor.
Many thanks
Simon Phillips
Would love to visit your farm and see how it all works. My family and I are thinking of moving to France. Snail farming was one idea we had, but it looks like you need a very costly three month long diploma to do it commercially! Do you know if this is the case, do you need a similar qualification in England? Could you let us know when you are open for visits?
If mice are a problem and you want to eradicated them totally a ferret is the best choice of predator
As I have now retired it seems to me this is something of interest that could occupy me when I’m not fishing. Are there any pic’s available to show how the farming set up works, also how the hungry little blighters are kept confined, electric wire from car battery I presume? Malcolm.
Hi Malcom
Why noy get in touch with the snail farmer herself? Her link is on the post!
I am interested in taking up heliciculture and would appreciate any information and help you can give me.
Thanks
Hi wayne
Did you receive any replies as im looking to do the same but in France