Status Updates From The Sound of a Wild Snail E...
The Sound of a Wild Snail Eating by
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Allie Frazier
is on page 128 of 208
Eggs are usually laid below ground in several clutches of thirty to fifty each.
— 15 hours, 59 min ago
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Allie Frazier
is on page 127 of 208
"But snails don't sit on their eggs," he explained.
"They bury them in damp earth and leave them."
"The ideal way of bringing up a family," said
Mother, unexpectedly but with immense conviction.
"I wish I'd been able to bury you all in some damp earth and leave you."
— 16 hours, 0 min ago
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"They bury them in damp earth and leave them."
"The ideal way of bringing up a family," said
Mother, unexpectedly but with immense conviction.
"I wish I'd been able to bury you all in some damp earth and leave you."
Allie Frazier
is on page 125 of 208
A romantic encounter between a pair of snails can take up to seven hours from start to finish and involves three phases. First there is the lengthy courtship… exchanging tentacle touches… the second phase, the snails embrace in a spiral direction and mate… the last phase, resting, the snails… withdraw into their shells… fertilization occurs internally, after the lovers have parted.
— 16 hours, 1 min ago
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Allie Frazier
is on page 120 of 208
A snail may find a partner randomly or show a preference for age or size. They mate in late spring, cary summer, or fall, after an elaborate and complex courtship.
A terrestrial snail that has been isolated for a while can, rather conveniently, self-fertilize, thus founding a new colony and ensuring the survival of its genes.
— 16 hours, 4 min ago
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A terrestrial snail that has been isolated for a while can, rather conveniently, self-fertilize, thus founding a new colony and ensuring the survival of its genes.
Allie Frazier
is on page 116 of 208
It was amazing how the snail, with virtually no sight, found such perfect hiding spots.
— 16 hours, 7 min ago
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Allie Frazier
is on page 115 of 208
For a gastropod, survival of the fittest often means survival of the slimiest.
— 16 hours, 11 min ago
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Allie Frazier
is on page 113 of 208
hit by a raindrop
he shuts himself in …
snail
—YoSA BUSON (1716-1783)
— 23 hours, 51 min ago
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he shuts himself in …
snail
—YoSA BUSON (1716-1783)
Allie Frazier
is on page 108 of 208
I envied my snail's many abili-ties. I wished I could create an epiphragm at a moment's notice and seal myself off from the challenges around me.
— 23 hours, 58 min ago
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Allie Frazier
is on page 87 of 208
THREE AND A HALF billion years ago, when life on earth began, the snail and I shared a common ancestor, some kind of simple worm that over time evolved into two animal groups.
— May 05, 2026 06:43AM
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Allie Frazier
is on page 85 of 208
little snail facing this way where to now?
—KoBAYASHI ISSA (1763-1828)
— May 05, 2026 06:42AM
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—KoBAYASHI ISSA (1763-1828)
Allie Frazier
is on page 75 of 208
Some terrestrial snails even "gallop" by picking up the front of their foot and leaping forward, leaving behind a dotted slime trail. This may save on slime use or possibly outwit a preda-tor. If frightened, one snail species will lift itself up on its posterior and speed-glide eighteen inches per minute.
— May 05, 2026 06:41AM
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Allie Frazier
is on page 75 of 208
Snails will often reuse their own or another snail's trail in order to save on slime production. By detecting pheromones in a trail, they can determine whether it leads to foe, friend, or potential mate.
— May 05, 2026 06:41AM
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Allie Frazier
is on page 72 of 208
a special kind of slime for locomo-tion, called pedal mucus, over which it traveled. While its ability to glide over a patch of moss appeared effort-less… I could see bands of minute ripples moving across the underside of its foot. These ripples momentarily turned the mucus from solid to liquid, disrupting friction and allowing the snail to advance at a speed of a few inches per minute.
— May 05, 2026 06:40AM
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Allie Frazier
is on page 71 of 208
rather than making a single batch of "all-purpose" slime, my snail had a species-specific recipe for each of these needs and for different parts of its body. It could adjust the ingredients, just as a good cook would, to meet a particular occasion. And in a catastrophic accident in which a snail is squashed, it can release a flood of lifesaving, medicinal mucus packed with antioxidants and regenerative properties.
— May 05, 2026 06:38AM
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Allie Frazier
is on page 71 of 208
Slime is the sticky essence of a gastropod's soul, the medium for everything in its life: locomotion, defense, healing, courting, mating, and egg protection. Nearly one-third of my snail's daily energy went into slime pro-duction.
— May 05, 2026 06:38AM
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Allie Frazier
is on page 70 of 208
Slugs, despite what one might think, given their naked look, do not predate snails on the evolutionary tre but were once snails that evolved over time to be shell-less. Without a shell to tote around, they can change their shape more easily than a snail, thus squeezing into smaller crevices.
— May 05, 2026 06:31AM
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Allie Frazier
is on page 64 of 208
Bishop's poem "Giant Snail" that is so enchanted, with its own shell that it made me want my own:
Ah, but I know my shell is beautiful, and high, and glazed, and shining. I know it well, although have not seen it. Its curled white lip is of the fines enamel. Inside, it is as smooth as silk, and I, I fil to perfection.
— May 05, 2026 06:30AM
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Ah, but I know my shell is beautiful, and high, and glazed, and shining. I know it well, although have not seen it. Its curled white lip is of the fines enamel. Inside, it is as smooth as silk, and I, I fil to perfection.
Hannah
is 65% done
This book isn’t like any other book I’ve read
— May 04, 2026 07:14PM
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Allie Frazier
is on page 55 of 208
While we humans have five senses, relying most heavily on vision to find our way, a snail relies almost entirely on just three senses: smell, taste, and touch, with smell being the most critical. My snail could not hear anything at all; it lived in a world of silence. Its "sight" was highly limited — just a general awareness of dark and light to help with orientation.
— May 04, 2026 10:54AM
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Allie Frazier
is on page 49 of 208
Aristotle noted that snail teeth are "sharp, and small, and delicate." My snail possessed around 2,640 teeth, so I'd add the word plentiful to Aristotle's description. The teeth point inward so as to give the snail a firm grasp on its food; with about 33 teeth per row and maybe eighty or so rows, they form a multitoothed ribbon called a radula
— May 04, 2026 10:53AM
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Allie Frazier
is on page 47 of 208
The scientific name for a snail or slug— a mollusk with a single muscular foot— is gastropod; derived from Latin and Greek, the word means "stomach-foot."
— May 04, 2026 07:38AM
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Allie Frazier
is on page 41 of 208
“I liked the sound of the word "snail" every time I said it; the word was as small and simple as the creature itself. It is a word from Old English, with an earlier derivation from the German schnecke, for snail, spiral, or spiral shaped”
— May 04, 2026 07:35AM
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