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I'm aware they are coming on Monday. My question... or thought perhaps is; perhaps you should see if they will actually breed for you in captivity before you and I quote: "flood the market" with babies.
Good luck!
t
Be here Monday?I take it you don't import to much.It can go one way or the other.Well, they are hatched and will be here Monday. So I'm counting them.
Yeah?Rhampholeons come in on just about everyones paperwork as Rhampholeon sp.A few different species are normally in the mix.Joe had quota for alot of them as he breeds them.
Be here Monday?I take it you don't import to much.It can go one way or the other.
Understand where you are coming from but loose the attitude.Their are loop holes and such around getting them in, again they are a non CITES species, their are ways around it and ways to get permits.I know the legalities of importing not worth doing anything illigal.Im curious if your not getting them from Joe do you tust that they are really cb?
Permits came from the Management Authority in Tanzania. We have trophy permits for them, as well as premission to enter the reserves for collection.
Nice male, I spoke to the gentleman you sold it to the other day. I'm curious, did he come in under that species name or just one in a bunch.
It's not about CITES, it about Tanzanian law. Non-CITES animals need trophy permits from Tanzania. You can not legally export animals there under just the genus name, you ned both the genus and the species. USFWS will even reject trophy permits with just the genus name, as they are not legal. When you violate Tanzania law and export specimens under a different name or genus name, you have just violated the Lacey Act.
If I see anyone else bring them into the USA without the proper paperwork (only CBB will be allowed, aka Joe’s stock), be sure I will be reporting them to the proper authorities and they will getting a nice call and knock on the door for smuggling. I've worked too hard, care to much, and spent too much money to see someone follow up behind me and rape the wild of these specimens in wholesale. I could have easily asked my exporter to ship them out as a more common species, but it would have been illegal.
Justyn Miller is nothing but a thief. He will rip you off like he has done to many others.
Check out this link
http://www.faunaclassifieds.com/forums/showthread.php?t=97408&page=1&pp=5
As I had thought from my previous post, this guy is just in it to milk every red cent from the North American collectors and keepers. He joins the site this month, then brags about the species he's getting in. In the same breath, he tells people he's not selling them here in the USA so that he doesn't ruin his shot at getting top dollar for his efforts lol... How sad. He's not a fella I'd ever care to do business with.
First ....
... and then ....
I'm confused? So if this is the case will you be reporting him??
As per .....
I'm not trying to jump in with everybody else here I'm just trying to understand what you're saying as it seems that you're being contradictory in some of your statements.
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Also ... I didn't see anything negative in the link above? Perhaps I should search around more but the actual link that you posted has people talking of good experiences dealing with this individual. I would think that if you're going to badmouth somebody you should at least have the proper information behind it!!
Just my 5 1/2 cents worth!!
Dyesub Dave.
Wait, I'm selling specimens in the USA.
I will not be sell ALL the specimens in the USA as I do not think the market can accept that amount of animals without the market price being forced to go down
I guess I was wrong to expect people to get excited over something they themselves might not be benefitting from
R. acuminatus is the official scientific name for the "R. montana"/"R. montanus"/"undescribed montane Rhampholeon" that have been known for a decade (original scientific specimens were collected in 1997). They were only officially described and named last year, however. In the same paper describing the R. acuminatus, the R. viridis were described.
I'm fairly certain that the number of trophy permits issued for R. brevicaudatus is actually incredibly small and that they really only come in to the market in any number due to these illegal means being mentioned. Basically, anyone who has purchased R. brevicaudatus is probably in violation of the Lacey Act. Better get dialing Justyn, there are a lot of R. brevicaudatus importers to go after too.
I don't mean to be flip and I understand your frustrations and wanting to protect the investment you've made but the public boasting with associated threats and declarations on your intention to milk every dime you can out of this project comes across as pretty juvenile and shallow for someone claiming to give a damn about their status in the wild. Lets be honest here, your motivation is a lot more about the money then about the status of the animals in the wild as you've alluded to in your posts. If it wasn't, you wouldn't be proud about getting permits to go into protected wildlife reserves to collect wild caught specimens from a species you said yourself is from an extremely limited range. I don't blame you for seeing it as an investment and trying to make money off of it but you're just spewing hypocrisy. If you're going to try to sell the "I'm doing it legally and ethically and prevent anyone else from using a loophole so as not to rape the species in the wild" line, you better find a better way to spin your project then "I'm going into a protected nature reserve to collect a species from a very limited range."
On another note, notifying FWS on the Lacey Act violations of anyone trying to bring these species in will surely bring a lot of attention to the violations in the import of all the other Rhampholeon species. Maybe it would be for the best, especially from the stand point of their status in the wild, but I'm sure the resulting busts on anyone importing brevs would make you very popular in the reptile community (although what would another 830 post thread on Intense Herpetoculture on the BOI possibly due that the first didn't).
I'm very interested in seeing both of these species available to serious keepers in the future. I think its great that they will come in. I also applaud the effort to go through the proper channels to do it legally. I do, however, think your claims of ethical practices are flawed when by your own admission you are going to be collecting from reserves.
Chris
Edit for reference:
I guess I was wrong to expect people to get excited over something they themselves might not be benefitting from.
Super-duper. Next sentence:
Are you are or you not selling them in the U.S.
I get excited over the captive propagation of rare, very rare and/or nearly extinct species of chameleons. Which is why I work with the species I do... Oh and for the record, I'd rather stick pins in my eyes than work with the Rhampholeon, Rieppeleon and Brookesia chams ever again; so jealously is not an issue with me,
I guess I've had it wrong this whole time... monetary gain, not extending our knowledge of these animals is the primary reason to be in the hobby at all.
Good luck with your new critters.
t
Justyn Miller is nothing but a thief. He will rip you off like he has done to many others.
Check out this link
http://www.faunaclassifieds.com/forums/showthread.php?t=97408&page=1&pp=5
Also ... I didn't see anything negative in the link above? Perhaps I should search around more but the actual link that you posted has people talking of good experiences dealing with this individual. I would think that if you're going to badmouth somebody you should at least have the proper information behind it!!
Dyesub Dave.