“We facilitate the supply of Snails to buyers around the world.”
Snails Supply
We facilitate the supply of Snails.
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Our Service To You
Whether you want to purchase Snails and have it shipped to any port around the world, our world-class team is built to help you close fast, safe, and profitable transactions on time, every time!
About The Services
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- About Snails
- Our Trade Process
What Are Snails?
Snails belong to a molluscan class that has a coiled shell large enough for the animal to retract completely into. But when snails are been referred to, the focus isn’t only on land snails, but also to thousands of species of sea snails and freshwater snails.
Snail farming is a large agribusiness in the United States and the United Kingdom. Many supermarkets and stores place them on their shelves for sale to customers. Irrespective of this international market size, the demand for snail farming products in Nigeria is also extremely large. In Kenya, Ghana, and several other African countries, the demand for edible snails also sits on a high margin.
Millions of households around the world prepare snail meals in their various homes. They also use them for party meals, events, and other occasions.
Despite this large demand for edible snails, many people stay away from the trade. A large reason is a great misconception that snail farming in Nigeria or anywhere else in Africa can only be done by handpicking the snails in a vegetative environment (usually bushes). This reasoning generally places the idea of snail farming as one only done in the rainy seasons.
Types of Snails
1) Land Snail: Land snails are snails that live on land, unlike the sea snails and freshwater snails. Land snail is the common name for terrestrial gastropod molluscs that have shells (those without shells are known as slugs). Majority of land snails are pulmonates (they have a lung and breathe air). A minority, however, belong to much more ancient lineages where their anatomy includes a gill and an operculum (live in habitats or microhabitats that are sometimes or often damp or wet). Examples of land snails include; moss, giant African snail, Helix Buchi and Helix Goderdziana e.t.c
2) Freshwater Snails: Freshwater snails are gastropod molluscs which live in freshwater. They can be found all around the world in various habitats, ranging from ephemeral pools to the largest lakes, and from small seeps and springs to major rivers. Majority of freshwater gastropods have a shell, with very few exceptions. Examples of freshwater snails include; Bithynia Tentaculata, Planorbella Trivolvis, Pomacea Insularum e.t.c
3) Sea Snails: Sea snails are snails that live in saltwater. They are marine gastropods with shells. Many species of sea snails are edible and exploited as food sources by human beings. Examples of sea snails includes abalone, conch, limpets, whelks, etc.
Snails belong to a molluscan class that has a coiled shell large enough for the animal to retract completely into. But when snails are been referred to, the focus isn’t only on land snails, but also to thousands of species of sea snails and freshwater snails.
Snail farming is a large agribusiness in the United States and the United Kingdom. Many supermarkets and stores place them on their shelves for sale to customers. Irrespective of this international market size, the demand for snail farming products in Nigeria is also extremely large. In Kenya, Ghana, and several other African countries, the demand for edible snails also sits on a high margin.
Millions of households around the world prepare snail meals in their various homes. They also use them for party meals, events, and other occasions.
Despite this large demand for edible snails, many people stay away from the trade. A large reason is a great misconception that snail farming in Nigeria or anywhere else in Africa can only be done by handpicking the snails in a vegetative environment (usually bushes). This reasoning generally places the idea of snail farming as one only done in the rainy seasons.
Types of Snails
1) Land Snail: Land snails are snails that live on land, unlike the sea snails and freshwater snails. Land snail is the common name for terrestrial gastropod molluscs that have shells (those without shells are known as slugs). Majority of land snails are pulmonates (they have a lung and breathe air). A minority, however, belong to much more ancient lineages where their anatomy includes a gill and an operculum (live in habitats or microhabitats that are sometimes or often damp or wet). Examples of land snails include; moss, giant African snail, Helix Buchi and Helix Goderdziana e.t.c
2) Freshwater Snails: Freshwater snails are gastropod molluscs which live in freshwater. They can be found all around the world in various habitats, ranging from ephemeral pools to the largest lakes, and from small seeps and springs to major rivers. Majority of freshwater gastropods have a shell, with very few exceptions. Examples of freshwater snails include; Bithynia Tentaculata, Planorbella Trivolvis, Pomacea Insularum e.t.c
3) Sea Snails: Sea snails are snails that live in saltwater. They are marine gastropods with shells. Many species of sea snails are edible and exploited as food sources by human beings. Examples of sea snails includes abalone, conch, limpets, whelks, etc.
Our trade process spreads across CIF, FOB, TTO, and TTT, depending on the buyer's preference.
Here's what they entail:
1). Cost Insurance and Freight (CIF): Here, the seller will handle everything from loading the vessel, paying for insurance, and sending the product to wherever the buyer wants it delivered.
2). Freight On Board (FOB): Here, the seller pays for the transportation of the goods to the port of shipment, plus loading costs, while the buyer pays the cost of marine freight transport, insurance, unloading, and transportation from the originating port to the final destination.
3). Tanker Take Over (TTO): Here, the buyer will take over the vessel, offload the product at their destination, and return it.
4). Tanker To Tanker (TTT): Here, the buyer uses their own vessel, long sides with the seller's vessel, and then the cargo is transshipped when the transaction is fully settled.
Here's what they entail:
1). Cost Insurance and Freight (CIF): Here, the seller will handle everything from loading the vessel, paying for insurance, and sending the product to wherever the buyer wants it delivered.
2). Freight On Board (FOB): Here, the seller pays for the transportation of the goods to the port of shipment, plus loading costs, while the buyer pays the cost of marine freight transport, insurance, unloading, and transportation from the originating port to the final destination.
3). Tanker Take Over (TTO): Here, the buyer will take over the vessel, offload the product at their destination, and return it.
4). Tanker To Tanker (TTT): Here, the buyer uses their own vessel, long sides with the seller's vessel, and then the cargo is transshipped when the transaction is fully settled.
We Are Ready To Handle Your Request
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