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Firstly you are at the perfect season for sowing these seeds which is the best and what I would do.Perhaps you have too many to accommodate so want to store them and yes provided they are not fresh from the plants and are stored dry and prepared well then they can be kept in a fridge or even freezer.
I am intrigued by your statement that all imports of seed to Australia will require a phyto certificate as of 28th April. I have re-checked BICON and can't see any reference to this change. Please enlighten
I am amazed that Australia has not had a requirement for phyto' cert's before. If anyone had asked me, I would have guesed that they had, long, long ago.Well over 20 years ago I worked for a company shipping plastic sheets (for printing) to Oz, and all pallet timber had to be pressure-treated. I have also read that Oz only got modern poultry strains via smuggling as there was no legal quarantine procedure available (although some arrangements have been in place in recent years).If the UK charges for phyto' cert's are similar to other countries, which I suspect they are (£25-35 per shipment), the answer for any society seed distribution that is large enough, is to bulk ship everything and then split the shipment in the receiving country. It would be unmanageable any other way.
So I'm running the Pacific Bulb Society seed exchange. I have an exchange coming up soon. Up until now we've shipped seed to Australia. Does anyone know if the phytos for Australia requirement is now the real deal or is it still in the coming down the pike phase? I need to know if I can send seed to Australia this time. It would have be done at the receiver's risk. Jan