Formerly known as Pineapple
*~*~*Videos of My Greenhouse Progress*~*~*
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Here's another sale of Sarracenia oreophila seed:
http://www.ebay.com/itm/Sarracenia-o...item4d0950083e
Also another one of these sellers:
Have at it.Attention International buyers:
Its important to know your country's current import laws regarding nonagricultural seeds. In some countries import of nonagricultural seeds may be restricted or illegal without proper paper work or not allowed entirely.The buyer is fully responsible for all consequences comming from non-respecting of current import laws.
But don´t afraid, I send seeds in white „bubble“ envelope without any declaration and only with my personal address and no problem with shipping to all countries till now.
Grand Hotel... always the same. People come, people go. Nothing ever happens.
C'mon, Warren.
Why so critical? He did offer those anonymous white bubble envelopes.
There's just no pleasing some people . . .
“Sì perché l'autorità dell'opinione di mille nelle scienze non val per una scintilla di ragione di un solo . . ."
-- Galileo "Biff" Galilei
Because it is against US and International laws.
Penalities:
http://www.gc.noaa.gov/schedules/6-E...SpeciesAct.pdf
How did he get the plants in the first place? He's mailing the seeds from the Czech republic. Is or was there a legal means for him to import that species into the Czech republic?Attention International buyers:
Its important to know your country's current import laws regarding nonagricultural seeds. In some countries import of nonagricultural seeds may be restricted or illegal without proper paper work or not allowed entirely.The buyer is fully responsible for all consequences comming from non-respecting of current import laws.
But don´t afraid, I send seeds in white „bubble“ envelope without any declaration and only with my personal address and no problem with shipping to all countries till now.
Growlist / Wantlist - http://www.terraforums.com/forums/sh...01#post1131001
Ramdacc, there are multiple sellers in the EU (which is a single CITES zone) that vend S. oreophila legally. He probably got the plants from them and is now selling seeds from his stock.
<Av8tor1> as big as peat is, the bear runs not him
Big Boss, Founder, and Major Cheese of the Canadian Association for the Cultivation of Carnivorous Plants... Ask if you want to join, I'm the only member...
I largely agree with this. If there's one thing I recommend to plant enthusiasts it's to not keep all their eggs in the same basket.
When it comes to dissemination...incentives matter. It takes time, energy and effort to disseminate a plant. All that time and energy could be put to other uses. Therefore the benefit of distributing a plant has to exceed the opportunity cost in order for the effort to be "worth" it.
So if you want a plant to go from rare/scarce to common/abundant...then respect and appreciate the profit involved. Without that incentive...the alternative uses of people's time and energy become more attractive. Without profit, there's not enough incentive to figure out how to take something that's scarce and make it more abundant. Without profit, there's no way to truly know what other people value. Resources can't flow in the most valuable directions if we don't know what people truly value.
Regarding the efficacy of CITES...here are some passages from Harold Koopowitz's book Orchids and their Conservation...
The chance that [CITES] listing would even help in their rescue from extinction is uncertain and the lists become difficult to regulate if they become too cumbersome. Many of the species referred to here are not threatened by trade but by land conversion and deforestation. In addition, other species will become extinct without our ever being aware that they were threatened, while others will become extinct without us even being aware of their existence. One can predict that, as the ineffectiveness of CITES to save species becomes ever more widely appreciated, the reluctance to support the convention will become more evident.The usual pattern, however, is more like that of Zambia where it is legal to turn a branch bearing live orchids into charcoal but it is illegal to take the orchids off the branch to export before burning the wood.Consider another scenario. You are a professor at a major university and one of your doctoral students calls from Costa Rica. He has picked up some orchid plants from broken branches on the forest floor. The usual fate of orchids that fall is premature death. This is a young man who is intensely committed to conservation and hates to see anything die. You have to tell him to abandon the plants because it would be too difficult for him to get CITES papers.The question is...how much does America value in-situ conservation? Well...we can tally how much money people give to non-profit organizations dedicated to purchasing/protecting habitats. But surely some people feel like some portion of their tax dollars are being used to protect endangered species. Perhaps they don't make donations to conservation non-profits because they feel that they are already contributing via their taxes.Could the money have been better spent? The amount of money spent annually to enforce CITES must be enormous. To this must be added the cost of travelling to the various meetings of committees and conventions. If only part of the money spent on CITES over the last 25 years had been made available to actual and real conservation activities, such as buying up forested lands or policing preserves, the world would now be a better place and conservation would have been far better served.
The solution is to allow taxpayers to choose where their taxes go. It's the solution in the sense that it would allow us to determine exactly where America's heart is. Where people put their treasure reveals where their heart is. The Bible got that one right.
Step 1: Allow people to choose where their taxes go
Step 2: Discern the disparity between where America's heart is and where it should be
Step 3: Disseminate the relevant information to try and help people change their priorities
To learn more please read this tax choice FAQ.
Now, how many countries have a government organization dedicated to protecting the environment? What are the chances that all of them are equally effective? What are the chances that all habitats are equally important/valuable? I think that people shouldn't be limited to only giving taxes to their government...they should be free to give their taxes to any government. So if you think that the Brazilian EPA is creating more value than our EPA is...then you should be free to allocate your taxes accordingly. This would be a global free trade agreement for public goods.