ghostsword said:I know the above sounds too harsh, I do apologize, this is meant not at you directly, but as a lesson to all.
Mate, though I still think you're completely wrong there's absolutely no need to apologise. All you're doing is stating your perfectly well reasoned argument as part of a civilised debate. To be frank the considered and grown up approach of people like you is one of the main reasons I love this forum. On many other places this thread would have turned into a flame war by now.
cheebs said:I'm not sure i agree with your sofa analogy either saj but I also dont think its that similar to this situation. As a dog owner, you have a responsability to control your dog when it puts other members of hte public at risk, but also a responsibility to keep the dog safe. If it was a dog toy you bought, that got ripped apart, and subsequently caused the dog to choke to death, then I would agree with you.
No mate, I still think the sofa analogy is more appropriate than the dog toy one. That's because, ultimately, a plant is part of the environment (the furniture if you like) of a tank in which a shrimp lives. I think a poisoned catappa leaf would be more akin to a dog toy.
ghostsword said:To use your example, had I bought a sofa, the dog chewed on it and died do you think that I could have any standing on a court to argue my case? Do you know any supplier of sofas that says that their items are safe to be chewed by dogs?
Luis, I think you've inadvertently made my point for me. That being that the sofa manufacturer shouldn't have to say that the sofa is dog safe. The customer shouldn't have to check on the manufacturer's website whether it is dog safe. The manufacturer should just make it dog safe. They shouldn't be making or selling products with toxins in. And a company that sells plants for aquariums shouldn't be selling plants that are covered in poison.
I think the legal issue is neither here nor there. As I said in the previous post, I'm not saying that the seller has a legal responsibility. They have a moral one and a reputation to keep.
I agree that java plants are on the right track. But let's be clear here, following their advice wouldn't have saved my shrimp. I did more than the advice said and they still died didn't they. The only way that advice slip would have helped would be if I had decided to chuck the plants in the bin because it scared me. Of course I would have already paid for them at that point wouldn't I.
So I say to you again, do you seriously expect the average punter with shrimp in their tank to quarantine plants for days? Are you really saying to that punter it's your fault that your shrimp are at risk and not the seller? Because if you are then you're saying that keeping shrimp is for a small elite who have the time and resources (and understanding partners/family) to do that quarantine and the rest aren't allowed.
What I'm saying is let the seller do the quarantine and then we, the buyer, pay a bit extra for safe plants. It shouldn't cost vast amounts more after all so I don't think this will be pricing customers out of the market. It will be keeping their livestock safe though.