MaryHM":2qbfecdx said:
It would be impossible to do what we have done in Fiji in the Philippines. In Fiji, the divers are employed by the collection station. We tell them what to get, they go get it and bring in back the same day. The Philippines have a much different system. Because the collection areas are so vast and remote it is impossible for a single exporter to employ all of its own divers. For instance, blue face angels are a 2 week collection trip. They're only found in a particular area and there are people that go to that area to collect the blue faces for the entire trade (cyanide caught I might add). Many of the species are like that- impossible to collect and return to the collection station in one day. Most villages will collect all of the "species x" for the entire trade and middlemen will distribute them out to the various exporters. I would never be personally/financially involved in something I couldn't have exclusive control over- and the Philippines allow for little/no control at the export level. Hence the serious handling issues.
Dear Mary,
Your analysis of the situation is of course. I just got back from collecting on Mexico and saw all the discourse on the Philippine situation.
Let me just say that I've always had 100 times more "supporters" than customers. There are 5,000 retailers in this country who buy saltwater fish and the number who would buy only netcaught ...I said ONLY netcaught for ethical, moral environmental reasons is of course negligible, ie...5 or 6. The tired old game of mixing some netcaught fish with cyanide caught fish and calling oneself "netcaught" has ruined the term, ruined the movement of reform and allowed fraud to dilute the truth to the degree that reformers will not prosper. In fact,honestly selling only netcaught fish may well be the kiss of death for a wholesaler.
I have always been jealous of dealers with such ill defined and vacillating ethics that they could pretend at this with so little effort while those of us who dare behave truthfully risk our financial lives every day.
Obviously, the massive repudiation of cyanide fish collecting reform by the population of American retailers has made it impossible to continue as a bill and rent paying wholesaler. Without surviving off the free grant money that 'institutional non-profit organizations ie.MAC and the IMA have historically drawn their livlihoods from...
we certainly cannot go thru the summer dealing in profitless and low variety shipments of net caught fish from SE Asia.
The training organizations that I have started and inspired have raised millions without solving the problem and they continue to this day to milk this cow.
Getting paid without producing results is something that only government people do I thought. I guess it applies to environmental groups as well. If only they did the job half as well as they claim, then netcaught wholesalers would have enough fish supply to survive on. and get a netcaught blue tang once in a while like EVERY OTHER WHOLESALER.
Netcaught shippers in the Philippines also thought there were more divers trained then there really are. Environmental fraud and retail insistance on cheap, cyanide fish have given us our destiny...an unsustainable industry that deserves its bad reputation.
My decades of reform efforts have hurt me financially very much and I cannot continue without support from customers or grant-givers who honestly seek a genuine way out of this reality.
So, I will be dealing in Mexican fish and invertebrates from my own station in Mexico if anyone needs anything. I can't keep talking about netcaught fish that no one wants to buy....I will be too busy producing them, as do you in Fiji..
Sincerely, Steve