ORDERING and POSTAGE


Ordering:
Note: Please make cheque payments out to Hill View Rare Plants.

Just forward order via letter with cheque, money order or cash enclosed. Given rarity and short
numbers, please order as soon as possible to avoid disappointment.

Substitutes:
Please indicate any substitutes that you will accept if stocks of your first selections become
exhausted.

Despatch:
Orders will be despatched in the sequence that they are received by us beginning around the
25th of January.

Delivery:
By Australia Post. Plants will be carefully packed in a suitable medium.

Packing and Freight Costs:
(For orders over 20 plants please add $3.00 extra to final amount)

Packing Within Tasmania $7.00
Freight to Victoria $9.00
Costs To other states $10.00

Please note WA customers add $7 extra for quarantine fees.

Naming: These bulbs and plants are from a high quality collection derived from seed exchanges
world wide so a high degree of confidence is placed on their identification and provenance. If
by some remote chance you receive the wrong plant immediate steps will be taken to rectify the
mistake.

Sizes: FS - size to flower (but not guaranteed)
1st = 1 year to flowering
2nd = 2 years to flowering



OVERSEAS CUSTOMERS

Our overseas customers do need to note the following:
There are some extra costs for overseas orders but they are few. Freight is charged at AUS$15 per 20 plants then $9 for every 15 extra plants over that.
The biggest cost is the phytosanitary certificate which is A$45 but if I can get your plants inspected with other overseas orders it will be reduced. Some countries do not require this certificate or you can choose to forego it, which quite a few people do, but the risk is with you. Apparently small parcels get through without difficulty.
Insurance can be arranged if required and this will be charged at 3% of insurance value.
We aim to make purchasing bulbs from Hill View as easy as possible. If extra information about acclimatisation and plant heath is requested we will provide advice based on our own decade of experience of importing bulbs from the northern hemisphere