Kievnstavick
Chumono
As the grand majority have already stated, just get a refund.
Both the shipper and receiver need to have the correct paperwork and licenses. The tree will have to sit in a quarantine building for upto 2 years (could be a lot shorter) while being tended to by the USDA employees who probably don't know the first thing about the needs of a bonsai tree compared the hundreds of thousands they have to look over.
As an government employee with a great work ethic, I can imagine how those employee probably work like. It will probably die there.
To top it off, you are in California which is notorious for its strict importation standards to where it is hard to move trees between state lines. Doubly so with an agriculturally important species like an Olive.
In a podcast I had listen to in the recent past, a curator of a bonsai museum talked about the process of how the got some trees imported into the USA. It took a few years to assemble the paperwork and they even had to use some political leverage to get the green light. While the trees were in quarantine, the trees were looked after museum staff that spent a year to train as USDA caretaker staff.
All-in-all, the whole process is simply not worth it in the slightest as it comes with great expense as a very long wait. All with a strong likely hood of the plant substaining serious damage or even death.
Both the shipper and receiver need to have the correct paperwork and licenses. The tree will have to sit in a quarantine building for upto 2 years (could be a lot shorter) while being tended to by the USDA employees who probably don't know the first thing about the needs of a bonsai tree compared the hundreds of thousands they have to look over.
As an government employee with a great work ethic, I can imagine how those employee probably work like. It will probably die there.
To top it off, you are in California which is notorious for its strict importation standards to where it is hard to move trees between state lines. Doubly so with an agriculturally important species like an Olive.
In a podcast I had listen to in the recent past, a curator of a bonsai museum talked about the process of how the got some trees imported into the USA. It took a few years to assemble the paperwork and they even had to use some political leverage to get the green light. While the trees were in quarantine, the trees were looked after museum staff that spent a year to train as USDA caretaker staff.
All-in-all, the whole process is simply not worth it in the slightest as it comes with great expense as a very long wait. All with a strong likely hood of the plant substaining serious damage or even death.