Cornucopia



inspired by Jude's Thread Keepers, this elephant shaped puzzle piece is now my Thread Keeper, the handmade black&white thread was a gift from Jude 

Ever since having read Elisabeth Tova Bailey's 'The Sound of a Wild Snail Eating' I have become even more fond of snails and, much to everyone's amazement & oftentimes horror, slugs too.
I cannot quite recall how I came across this book back in 2014*, but I must have fallen in love with the title and therefore was curious as to its contents. I also heard of a remarkable discovery, on the radio if memory serves me well, made by a woman wanting to get rid of the snails in her garden, in a nature-friendly way. She collected them in a shoe box, moved them into the park across the road, only to find them back in her garden the next day. Or so she thought, she couldn't be sure, so she gave each snail a different dash of nailpolish on their shells, collected and moved them yet again. Lo and behold a day later the same snails were back in her garden. She kept moving them further and further away, they kept returning. Proving snails have a sense of direction and are way smarter than we reckon.

Having then decided I liked snails and slugs I did not do any more research into their lives. Enjoying their presence in the garden, where they are seen to be copulating in plain sight, balancing on swaying stalks or even devouring each others dead bodies. I have been known to applaud their nibbling on my art. Sometimes they are content to leave their tiny bite marks in trails on the plain paper, other times they only feast on my ink markings. 

Today I learned a great deal more in this article: what you never knew about slugsU.K. Country Living July 2025; the highlights:

"Slugs are a gardener's best friend: they turn organic waste into compost, devour pests and even clear up dog poo. Only less than a quarter (in the UK) eat lettuces and seedlings. You can deter them in a manner of nature friendly ways. (....)

Slug romance is a long and remarkable proces. They are hermaphrodites, which means they have both male and female reproductive organs, but still need to find a mate to reproduce. Many species mate by entwining together in a tight corkscrew, while hanging precariously from a tree or overhanging wall on a long, sticky strand of slug mucus. Like trapeze artists, they'll dangle mid-air, exchange sperm and both become pregnant. (...)

The collective noun for a gathering of slugs is a cornucopia. It's rather fitting that these garden-friendly creatures are named after the mythical horn of plenty, a symbol of food, abundance and nourishment."

Aaahh, if that's not romantic I don't know what is....imagine us humans, men and women getting pregnant, bet the world would be a different place. Also, what does it say about us that we choose plants that don't belong here and are disappointed when they don't thrive or survive without us killing off what does?
 


booklet i made in April of this year: dogs I would like to date


in the image below you can see the snail bites compared to the one above






*I almost always write my name, where and when I bought the book on one of the first pages; this book is within easy reach in my studio being one of my favourites, as is Virginia Woolf's A Room of One's Own, I mention it here because that too is apparently a snail-favourite: the spine has been almost completely chewn away

Comments

Anonymous said…
Surely the world would be a radically different place if men got pregnant. I remember a professor in law school saying that if men got pregnant, abortion would be a sacrament. (I recently read someone’s comment that if men lost 25% of their bone mass after the age of 50, it’d be treated as a national emergency).

The image of twisted bodies hanging by slime and copulating is gonna stay with me, I’m afraid.

“Dogs I’d like to date.” ha. Great great creatures, as usual.
Anonymous said…
Dee
jude said…
thanks for the slug story, I want to learn to love them. They are huge here. as always your images make me feel joy.
Saskia said…
Dee, dogs really have a way of bringing us back to earth, right!?
Saskia said…
hello Jude, always happy to win folks over to the slimy side;-)
joy is good
Nancy said…
Good points Dee!
Nancy said…
Saskia~ I read that book, around the same time I think (I know I was in the old duplex, so pre 2019) and while I loved the book and saw snails differently after reading it...well, I did not do the deep dive you did!! haha I respect them, but so slimy 😉 Love the title of the booklet!!
Nancy said…
Ooops, the title AND the creatures!!
Saskia said…
well Nancy, I don't know quite how I landed 🐌 up rooting for the underdog 🐌, but that's where I'm at it seems😂🐌🐌🐌the critters are grateful for🐌🐌🐌 whatever support they can find
Mo Crow said…
(((Saskia))) One of my favourite books, it changed my attitude to snails and slugs for life, even when they totally decimated my 2 metre high dahlias near the deck this year (just moved them to a different position!)
ravenandsparrow said…
Slugs and snails seem to be a universal presence in any landscape wet enough to grow plants. Here in the Pacific Northwest we are inundated with them. I get pretty impatient with the interlopers from other ecosystems, but I never kill the giant banana slugs that are native to our woods. They are truly prodigious in size and play an important part in the cycle of life. We also have an indigenous snail that is flat instead of round. They look like little spiral coins.
Nancy said…
Dana~ Ha, love this. My middle niece went to Santa Cruz, home of the banana slugs 🙂
Saskia said…
the immense power of words, art, artists, Mo,
how they might, dare I say it, improve us!
observing another being up close & personal and deciding not to kill it because you don't like how it looks, this book definitely changed something in me too....
Saskia said…
wonder if I'll be seeing any today Dana, after weeks of heat and drought, they became very shy😉this morning however sheets of rain fell, you can almost hear the garden sighing in relief, and yes the slugs have a variety of colours and sizes, maybe I might do some more reading and research; your flat snail sounds enchanting!

tungsten

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