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French snail farmers struggling as restaurant shutdown kills trade

AFP
AFP - [email protected]
French snail farmers struggling as restaurant shutdown kills trade
Sylvain Peyrot, snail breeder, picks up snails in his greenhouse to prepare an order of Bourgogne snails on February 19, 2021, in Etrigny, central France. - Restaurants closed, markets cancelled, fairs suppressed: in Bourgogne, land of snails, many breeders that Covid-19 has deprived of prospects "have the knife to their throat", without being able to count on a government aid, that they judge unsuitable. (Photo by JEAN-PHILIPPE KSIAZEK / AFP)

Successive Covid-19 lockdowns may have given people in France, as elsewhere, a newfound taste for home cooking, but one delicacy has yet to worm its way back onto the nation's plates: snails.

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With the country's restaurants closed since the start of a second lockdown on October 30th, producers in France's "escargot" heartland of Bourgogne are battling to stay afloat.

Snails cooked in garlic butter is a classic of French cuisine that has long inspired a mix of fascination and horror among tourists, particularly Britons who recoil at the idea of eating the molluscs.

While few French people buy snails on a regular basis -- they are generally rolled out during parties or the holiday season -- they still regularly feature on restaurant menus.

But with restaurants looking set to remain shuttered for several more weeks as France battles to bring down stubbornly high Covid-19 infections, snail farmers fear for their future.

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"In 2020, my sales were down by 33 percent more than forecast," producer Herve Menelot told AFP, adding that he did not pay himself a wage from June to October 2020 and was living off his savings.

"This year is the same. I have no (trade) show coming up, no farmers' market, no restaurants. We're not very optimistic, Menelot said, adding that he feared he may have to wind down his business.

Olivier Dard, another producer, told AFP his turnover had halved in 2020. Dard was forced to take a job with the local council to supplement the family's income.

The French snail industry is made up of hundreds of small farmers who have been struggling to compete with cheaper imports from Eastern Europe.

Only 5 percent of the 30,000 tonnes of snails consumed every year in France - a protected species that cannot be scooped up off a path and sold - are French.

Snail farmers have received small amounts of aid from the state but say it is not enough to offset their losses.

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