Greate Lakes’ lake sturgeon revives its stock

April 28, 2010

Good news are scarce. Especially when it comes to ‘sturgeon’. One very good reason to spread this one. The Greate Lakes’ lake sturgeon is coming back to live. It’s stock is getting bigger and bigger. That’s not due to a natural phenomenon but thanks to the strict spearing limits, poaching laws, restocking efforts and the  well-protected spring spawning.

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Louis Vuitton Caviar Box

April 26, 2010

The legendary brand went a step further and comes up with a tailored caviar box which does not only contain the usually suspected caviar spoons but also a refined oven, dinner furnishing and cups. It’s meant to preserve style when the trip gets bumpy.

And as always with LV, style is guaranteed.

Read more and see pix following this

What’s wrong with cops eating caviar?

April 9, 2010

Nothing at all, suggest Louis Vuitton and Hyundai.

See the commercial, aired during the last super bowl.

All Russians eat caviar?

April 7, 2010

Of course not! Not only in the present face of sturgeon getting extinct, caviar has become quite scarce. Even back in the (glory?) days of the Tsars and more recently of the KGB, caviar was always accessible to the members of certain societal circles. Or ‘classes’, to stay in line with Marx. But of course, the current meteoric fall of the wild sturgeon populations in the Caspian Sea region doesn’t help fighting the ‘classy tradition’ of caviar and turning it into a general commodity.

According to a poll, only 17% of the Russians have bought and/or eaten caviar in the last 2 years…

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How much banning is needed?

April 5, 2010

Last week I posted something about a rumour, that the Russians want to convince their Caspian Sea border states members to pass a 10-year fishing ban in order to restore the tiny sturgeon wild-stocks in the region.

Now, after I cheered to that for a while as a gone-mad-greenpeace-disciple, I had to make one step back and reflect about what actually hangs in the air. Let’s be clear, even if the direction might be right, a 10-year fishing ban doesn’t bring these critically endangered sturgeons to their well-deserved bright future. Because of their slow maturation – wild sturgeons lay their eggs at the age of  aprox. 15 years old (depending the species) – some scientist suggest a ban of at least four decades to be effective! And there is just no way, that any fishing and/or customs authority (might it be legal or corrupt) of the bordering states is up and ready to sacrifice some additional pocket-$$$.

As far as I know, only the Japanese know how to follow plans that take 50 long years to play out. And I am talking about ‘A’ and not ‘B’ plans. I just dont see how the Russians (not talking about the rest) could manage such an undertaking.

And even if they would declare such ban, let me put it in the words of sturgeon expert and conservationist Phaedra Doukakis: “The challenge for Russia is the vastness of the Volga River Delta. It won’t just take this moratorium, it will also take a pretty good crackdown on illegal fishing.”

And about that ’10-year ban rumour’ I mentioned, the latest that I picked up in the internet void was, that they reduced it to 5 years. Don’t act surprised…

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Learn about the important work of Phaedra Doukakis and Ellen Pikitch. Both of them, sturgeon experts.