l̸̹̍̀a̸̜͋̐͜k̴̼͗̽͆̈́ḛ̵͗̈́ͅ @lake@autonomous.zone · activity timestamp yesterday the US department of agriculture has this 1986 zine on snail farming on their websitehttps://openknowledge.fao.org/server/api/core/bitstreams/e7a4e667-8da3-41f0-8c77-8a73dec277ca/contentincredible Read more Read less Translate Translate 3 media alt An illustration depicting two figures observing snails and their diet at night. The text above reads "see what snails eat at night." An illustration depicting two figures observing snails and their diet at night. The text above reads "see what snails eat at night." alt An illustration showing a wavy barrier designed to protect against snail predators. Arrows highlight the need for the barrier to be tight to prevent enemy access. The text emphasizes that the sheets must be secure. An illustration showing a wavy barrier designed to protect against snail predators. Arrows highlight the need for the barrier to be tight to prevent enemy access. The text emphasizes that the sheets must be secure. alt Illustration depicting various predators of snails, including a rat, frog, beetle, ant, slug, shrew, and a snail-eating bird. Text emphasizes the need for protection against these enemies in snail pen construction. Illustration depicting various predators of snails, including a rat, frog, beetle, ant, slug, shrew, and a snail-eating bird. Text emphasizes the need for protection against these enemies in snail pen construction. Reply Boost or quote Boost Quote You cannot quote this post Like More actions Copy link Flag this post Block
alt An illustration depicting two figures observing snails and their diet at night. The text above reads "see what snails eat at night." An illustration depicting two figures observing snails and their diet at night. The text above reads "see what snails eat at night."
alt An illustration showing a wavy barrier designed to protect against snail predators. Arrows highlight the need for the barrier to be tight to prevent enemy access. The text emphasizes that the sheets must be secure. An illustration showing a wavy barrier designed to protect against snail predators. Arrows highlight the need for the barrier to be tight to prevent enemy access. The text emphasizes that the sheets must be secure.
alt Illustration depicting various predators of snails, including a rat, frog, beetle, ant, slug, shrew, and a snail-eating bird. Text emphasizes the need for protection against these enemies in snail pen construction. Illustration depicting various predators of snails, including a rat, frog, beetle, ant, slug, shrew, and a snail-eating bird. Text emphasizes the need for protection against these enemies in snail pen construction.
tethre @tethre@aleph.land · activity timestamp 2 hours ago @lake you wouldn't snail a farm! 🤔😄 Read more Read less Translate Translate Reply Boost or quote Boost Quote You cannot quote this post Like More actions Copy link Flag this comment Block
AstroMancer5G (she/her) @AstroMancer5G@spore.social · activity timestamp 16 hours ago @lakeApparently escargot is really high in protein and iron. Maybe the USDA was onto something there? Read more Read less Translate Translate Reply Boost or quote Boost Quote You cannot quote this post Like More actions Copy link Flag this comment Block