LaDyBuG wrote: Marky Mark wrote: How do you trace a potato back to a spud dating 7000 years ago?? I couldn't even find my keycard for the office this morning btw, welcome back Baina!!!
Isn't this like S.H.I.T. or something..... Doesn't it deserve it's own thread.... Don't we make threads for everything now in days.....
u mean SHIOT... and it was just a btw, not a full greeting, he doesn't deserve his own thread.
ok ok....everything was fine up until this point: Peru is threatening to take the case to the United Nations. for real?? And I thought the title of this thread was more like: "my daddy ain't yo' daddy" LOL
LOL.. i know that's what I thought it was going to be.... ...
men.... that would have been a interesting thread!!!!
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I hate two-faced ppl.... A little bit of respect won't kill you!!!
How do you trace a potato back to a spud dating 7000 years ago?? I couldn't even find my keycard for the office this morning btw, welcome back Baina!!!
Isn't this like S.H.I.T. or something.....
Doesn't it deserve it's own thread....
Don't we make threads for everything now in days.....
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"To be a good Promoter you must have the heart of a Gambler and the mind of a Computer"
A US study found that all varieties can be traced back to PeruThe historic rivalry between Chile and Peru has in the past seen them arguing over territory and the rights to Pisco, an alcoholic drink.
But few imagined that the neighbours would one day be fighting over the humble potato.
It all started when a Chilean expert announced plans to register over 280 potato varieties from the southern island of Chiloe as national patrimony.
Angry Peruvians hit back, saying their nation is the birthplace of the potato.
Protection
The controversial idea comes from Professor Andres Contreras, from the Agricultural Sciences Faculty at Chile's Austral University.
It has been widely accepted that potato originated in southern Peru and therefore belongs to our nation's cultural heritage
Oscar Maurtua Peruvian Foreign Minister He says he only wants to register what belongs to Chileans.
"These potato varieties have grown and developed in this country, and we would like to protect them," he says.
"We don't want unscrupulous people claiming rights to them and asking for money.
"We are not saying that potato is from Chile. We are only trying to shield local varieties," he insists.
Single source
Peru has described the Chilean plans as "inappropriate".
"It has been widely accepted that potato originated in southern Peru and therefore belongs to our nation's cultural heritage," said Foreign Minister Oscar Maurtua.
He added that a recent study sponsored by the US Department of Agriculture supported the Peruvian claim.
The research found that all modern varieties of potatoes can be traced back to a single source - a spud grown in Peru over 7,000 years ago.
Last year, Peru's Congress passed a bill aimed at protecting the potato and the Andean country now plans to patent it internationally as a Peruvian product.
Peru is threatening to take the case to the United Nations.
The two countries have a history of disputes dating back to the 19th Century, when Chile fought the War of the Pacific against Peru and Bolivia from 1879 to 1883, winning Bolivia's outlet to the sea and extensive areas from Peru.
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