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Curious about snail mail? 

A slower, screen‑free way for children to receive stories, letters, and connection—delivered through the mail.

Image by Dan Meyers

A Snail Mail Subscription for Kids—Thoughtful, Screen‑Free, and Full of Heart

Designed as a screen‑free experience, each Snail Mail delivery gives children something to slow down with, read, and enjoy—no apps, no notifications, just paper, imagination, and connection.

Happy Girl

Smiles & Joy Delivered

There’s something special about receiving a real letter in the mail—especially when it has your name on it. Bunny & Carrot Snail Mail brings that joy back, delivering thoughtful letters and stories that feel like a friendly hello from somewhere just beyond the mailbox

 

But Snail Mail isn’t just for fun—it supports important early learning and social‑emotional skills in a way that feels natural and joyful.

Mother and Son Hugging

A Friendly Connection

For many children, Snail Mail becomes more than a letter—it becomes a familiar friend. Seeing Bunny, Carrot, or another Glendale critter check in each month helps kids feel connected, remembered, and excited to read.
 

Parents often tell us that Snail Mail creates small rituals: opening the mailbox together, reading aloud, or saving letters to read again later. These moments build connection not just with stories—but with family.

Image by Vitaly Gariev

Lasting Impressions

Snail Mail makes a meaningful gift for birthdays, holidays, or “just because.” With flexible plans—from one‑time letters to year‑long subscriptions—you can start small or commit to ongoing joy. Longer subscriptions offer greater value and allow kids to build a lasting relationship with the world of Bunny & Carrot... and unlike screen‑based subscriptions, Snail Mail creates keepsakes—letters that can be reread, saved, and cherished.

Bunny and Carrot Referral Program_edited.jpg

The Story Behind Our Snail Mail

Snail Mail begins where Bunny and Carrot Are Best Friends begins.

In that first story, Bunny and Carrot don’t set out to be friends. Carrot is stuck—rooted deep in a garden bed, unsure who to trust. Bunny is nearby, minding his own business in the blackberry bramble, when he hears Carrot calling for help. He hops over to assist… and Carrot panics. After all, bunnies do love carrots—as food.

What follows is not instant friendship, but conversation. Questioning. Listening. Negotiating. Slowly, Carrot begins to trust Bunny. Bunny invites her on a walk around Glendale, followed by lunch and tea in his den. By the end of the day, both are surprised by what they’ve discovered: not just help, but companionship.

That gentle discovery—the kind that happens when fear gives way to trust—is where the Bunny & Carrot Snail Mail begins.

Carrot reading a letter Meredith Bezak copyright 2026.jpg

What Snail Mail Adds to the Story

Snail Mail is not a retelling of the books. It’s an expansion of the world of Glendale.

Through letters and cards delivered by post, children hear:

  • First‑hand reflections from Bunny or Carrot

  • Second‑hand accounts from other critters of Glendale

  • Observations about moments that happen between the stories

  • Hints of events that echo forward into future adventures
     

Some letters arrive as reflections. Others arrive as simple hellos.

Each one includes small surprises and adds depth and texture to a friendship that continues to grow beyond the final page.
 

This slower format allows stories to linger, rather than conclude.

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