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Looking for Strumaria species

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Vinny 123:
So far as I am aware, Lifestyle do not offer phytosanitary, but I have not searched their website exhaustively.

Beware their search option. It brings up every single listing that they have ever had that fits what you are searching for. In many cases, most or all will not be in stock, many will not have been in stock for years (it gives dates for harvest for seeds and listings. It also give locality data for wild-collected seeds).

Seeds (and plants) are added to their list as and when available, so searching regularly is advised.

Standard packet contents is 100 seeds, but rarer species are packed in smaller quantities, which is obviously noted on the listing (but can easily be missed). So far as I am aware, they only use the RSA PO for shipping, which is cheap but very, very, very slow. prices vary from very cheap to horrendous - some offerings of 2-3-4 seeds of very unusual species are into the tens of USD.

Of the seeds that I have had from them, they are on a par with Silverhill, which should not be a surprise as very many that I would be interested in would be wild-collected by both companies.

Auricular:
Thank you!

I try to find them inside Europe because of some reasons:

- South African Post Office is a desaster (arrives never or arrives after some months) and couriers are expensive

- Phytosanitary Certificate costs more than some bulbs

- When arriving in Germany from outside EU I have to pay 30-50 Euro for the phytosanitary import check

So its better to buy inside EU

 :-\

Vinny 123:
Most sellers in RSA do not use the PO, but i have had seeds sent via the RSA PO and they have taken ages, but been fine.
Phyto' cert's cost the same, within a little, everywhere in the world - around USD20-30. If I can't put together an order for more than something like USD100, I don't order. An order from SABC will cost around USD60 for phyto and carriage with DHL.
There is no charge for inward inspection into the UK, (most are not inspected - that is what a phyto' cert' is for), so it is strange that there is in D.

Auricular:

--- Quote from: Vinny 123 on May 05, 2022, 10:32:19 AM ---There is no charge for inward inspection into the UK, (most are not inspected - that is what a phyto' cert' is for), so it is strange that there is in D.

--- End quote ---

In the EU every plant for planting and some seeds must get a phytosanitary check when entering the EU. (and every seed for sowing, every plant, some woods/wood products and every fresh plant material/fruit needs a phytosanitary certificate - exceptions are only 5 fruits: ananas, bananas, dates, durian and coconut)

So there are 2 checks:
First check in the country of origin for the phytosanitäry check and then the second check when entering the EU (document check, phytosanitary check).

This is how it normally should work.

I´m a phytosanitary inspector in Germany  8)

Vinny 123:
Weird!!

Either the phyto' is acceptable from the sending country, or it isn't. If it isn't acceptable, why insist on one? Occasional spot checks on import would make sense, but routinely reinspecting on arrival?

That is a seriously strange list of exceptions

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