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Date: | Mon, 26 Jul 1999 14:31:06 -0500 |
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Tom: Do just that, soak them in water, they will soften and the animal
will come out easy, I have done this many times, with other shells. If
something gets stuck, either a water pick or the garden hose will blow out
the rest. John Bernard
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> From: G Thomas Watters <[log in to unmask]>
> To: [log in to unmask]
> Subject: freeze-dried snails
> Date: Monday, July 26, 1999 10:01 AM
>
> I recently defrosted a large bag of snails from the beer refrigerator in
> the garage. They (the snails, not the beer) have been in there for 14
years
> and are quite freeze-dried. I placed them outside to "soften" but they
are
> so desiccated that they are still mummified after a month of 90+
> temperatures and near 100% humidity. Ants, flies, chipmunks, even the
> raccoons won't touch them. I hesitate to "reconstitute" them in water as
I
> fear they will turn into a putrifying mess. Has anyone any experience
with
> this situation? We're talking big snails - Busycon, Strombus, etc.
>
>
> *****************************************
> G Thomas Watters
> Ohio Biological Survey &
> Aquatic Ecology Laboratory
> Ohio State University
> 1315 Kinnear Road
> Columbus, OH 43212 USA
> v: 614-292-6170 f: 614-292-0181
> ******************************************
>
> "The world is my oyster except for months with an 'R' in them" - Firesign
> Theater
>
> "Give a man a fish and you feed him for a day. Teach a man to fish and he
> has to buy a license" - GTW
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