The following article was kindly written by Woodlore Field Staff member Keith Whitehead:
On my way home from a course, I was walking a stretch which takes in part of the Basingstoke canal’s towpath. One stretch, between two locks, had been drained for maintenance and the muddy bed was covered in what looked like mussels. I decided to take a closer look and removed my pack so that I could climb down the bank.
[caption id="attachment_630" align="alignleft" width="270" caption="One of the mussel shells found by Keith"]
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I found tens of empty freshwater mussel shells, some of which were of a considerable size. All of them had been scavenged by the time that I found them, but I was still amazed by the richness of the resource that I had been completely unaware of beforehand.
Whether eating a filter-feeding shellfish from a stretch of water such as the canal would be a wise thing or not, is another matter. I’m just glad that I know that they’re there and that my eyes have been opened a little further.
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I found tens of empty freshwater mussel shells, some of which were of a considerable size. All of them had been scavenged by the time that I found them, but I was still amazed by the richness of the resource that I had been completely unaware of beforehand.
Whether eating a filter-feeding shellfish from a stretch of water such as the canal would be a wise thing or not, is another matter. I’m just glad that I know that they’re there and that my eyes have been opened a little further.
14 comments
Swan muscles are also in the Royal Military Canal at winchelsea in east sussex
Dear Dave C and others, please be aware that freshwater mussels in the Wye are a precious resource and conservationists have been fighting to protect them. It is actually illegal to even handle them without a licence let alone dine on them. Please conserve our heritage for years to come and stick to canned sardines.
Have eaten them after cleansing them for a week and feeding them on oats; taste wise, well basically same as the water they came out of to me.
I was walking along Bolton-Manchester canal today, I could see a large quantity of very large mussels on the bed of the canal. Some were live/occupied shells but some are empty. I have walked along this route for a few years but not noticed them before. I fished out one complete shell which was about 10inches wide.
Just for the record, there are 5 river Stours in England: Kent (‘mine’), Suffolk, Dorset, Worcestershire and Warwickshire.
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