Ferdie,
One of these days we ought to get together.
We could swap horror stories about this issue ---the guy with the best (or worst, actually) story doesn't have to pay for his beer. But I make too light of a very serious matter.
This is exactly what I meant about not trusting BFAR, no matter how ethical the lab staff are. The old switcheroo... lumang gimik ma 'yan, and the ONLY way to cut through the smoke and mirrors is to personally escort the samples, and SIT ON BFAR in person- until the certificate is coughed up.
Ferdie, kapag lumampas ng 48 hours ang hintay sa resulta, you KNOW something's not right. I do understand that the CDT lab in Main can periodically get ovewhelmed with grouper samples from time to time, and if the applicant is a heavyweight, then that 48 hours figure mightn't hold (After all, foodfish
properly are a bigger, priority concern for BFAR, 'di ba?), but still...
IIRC, Mark said 24 hours is normally plenty of time to allow for other tasks to get the test done, and then it's another day for the paperwork to get issued. I agree you can trust Sandy and her staff, but if non-BFAR ang transport ng specimen, and then non-BFAR pa rin ang pickup of the test results... you're wide open to what just happened.
Tell you what.
The next time you have a sample you want to send, either get BFAR personnel or deputies to fetch it, and let me know. Our group will see if we can't help babysit the test here in BFAR QC so nobody filches the correct results.
The result won't even have to leave the lab for you to get it, 'tsong.
Fax
agad, even before the ink is dry ---let's see them try to intercept that.
horge
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Others,
Banning Philippine ornamentals?
How about banning reef-keeping?
Would it make a difference regarding poisoning of reefs?
Considering that the overwhelming majority of cyanide use is for live foodfish (grouper) capture, not much. It
might make you feel better knowing that you're not bankrolling the poisoning ---and maybe it's worth consigning the growing netcaught movement to oblivion (and then cyanide capture goes on... smuggling the specimens to Manado or Taiwan prior to LAX, Frankfurt, etc.).
Rather than cure a patient, easier to just euthanize?
Even with all the positive, hard earned gains... you want the easy out.
Sheesh, is it possible you haven't even put in a cent's worth of effort where it counts and YOU want to tell US it's too hard?
I'm sorry, but the only thing a ban serve would is to ease your consciences.
It would do next to nothing to save Philippine reefs.
You know what?
Ask anyone who
saw the reef denudation of the mid-80's to 90's in, say, the coral-rich eastern half of Balayan Bay in Batangas. Ask them if there isn't a marked improvement in reef health today. Success in Batangas is a slow matter, but it's there to last.
Keeping a reef tank takes patience and perseverance,
often in the face of repeated frustration.
Why expect saving the reefs to be any different?
horge