Scaling regeneration

Behind the scenes, we’ve been doing the work—demystifying escargot, connecting heliciculture to circular ag systems, and fielding the same two questions over and over:

  1. “What do they taste like?”

  2. “But can it scale?”

Let’s talk about the second one.

Under optimal conditions, helix Aspersa snails can reach reproductive maturity in about 5 to 7 months. Each mature snail can lay between 120 to 180 eggs per clutch, and with proper care, the hatching rate can be 80-99%. Unlike livestock or tree crops, the snail lifecycle is rapid, self-replicating, and compact enough to run inside modular infrastructure. Cool huh?

This isn’t a distant dream—but it is pre-deployment. The groundwork is laid. Designs are being tested. Partners are circling. What’s needed now is ignition funding to bring the BioCycle Hub out of the blueprint and into the field.

We’re not scaling by acreage—we’re scaling by replication, resilience, and circular logic. One snail becomes hundreds. One hub becomes a network. One compost-fed protein cycle becomes a living, local economy. Still think “snail-paced” means slow? It doesn’t. It means deliberate. Regenerative. Designed to endure where extractive ag can’t.

We’re gathering participants for all stages of the BioCycle. If you're interested in participating or learning more about this initiative, feel free to reach out.

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What we waste could be what saves us

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Quick note on conservation and snails