Pubdate: Fri, 20 Aug 2010 Source: Cranbrook Daily Townsman (CN BC) Copyright: 2010 Glacier Interactive Media Contact: http://www.dailytownsman.com/section/cranbrook Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/723 Author: Gerry Warner B.C. BUD, BEARS AND BUSINESS "If you go out in the woods today, you're sure of a big surprise. If you go out in the woods today, you better go in disguise. For every bear there ever there was will gather there for certain because" . well don't we all know the rest? With apologies to John Walter Bratton, who wrote the infectious melody in 1907 and Robert Browne Hall, who added the words to Teddy Bears' Picnic in 1932, just what is going on in the woods these days? Especially the B.C. woods? As if we didn't know. According to Forbes Magazine, BC Bud adds $7 billion annually to the province's bottom line, which is close to five per cent of the province's GDP. But Marc Emery, B.C.'s "Prince of Pot" estimates the 10,000 to 20,000 grow-ops in the province produce close to $30 billion worth of untaxed revenue for the province every year. Is it any wonder then that you have Goldilocks and the Three Bears guarding a grow-op in the woods near Christina Lake with more than 1,000 specimens of the province's largest cash crop? B.C. has been long renowned for its ditzy politics, but the province's real claim to fame is its marijuana industry, reputed to be the largest in the world and producing the best quality product on the planet. Perhaps they should add a BC Bud leaf to the provincial coat of arms. Considering the state of the lumber industry these days, it would make more sense than a Douglas fir. Kinda sad though. Remember the good ol' days when people in the province boasted that 50 cents of every dollar earned in B.C. came from the forest industry. Boasting about BC Bud somehow doesn't sound quite the same. But wasn't it said at the time Ross Rebagliati tested positive after winning his Olympic gold snowboarding medal that you could get "high" in Whistler by just driving through town with your window open? As Dylan said those many years ago "The times they are a-changing." Innocence lost is seldom a pretty thing, but I'd be less than telling the truth if I didn't allow that on a slow news day in August the story of Goldilocks and the Three Marijuana Guard Bears is the kind of item any reporter with conjones would kill for. Some of you older readers may remember the all-time classic BCTV news story 30 years ago when the RCMP busted, I think it was, a tugboat full of pot around Vancouver Island and then disposed of it by burning the stash. With the camera running, the TV newsman got as close to the "smoke" as he could to interview a burly cop giggling beside the flames with a look on his face that could only be described as loopy. It was a new high in TV reporting, so to speak. I also remember a trip I made to Vancouver about 10 years ago when I saw an interesting hardware store with a weird psychedelic sign on the front of the building. This piqued my interest so I went inside and I saw rows and rows of nothing but big electric fans, aluminium duct pipes and grow lights of every description. I started asking the bearded proprietor a bunch of questions and he got very nervous thinking I was a nark. Quite the contrary. Just a naive up-country boy. Whatever the case, the party may soon be over in the Land of Bud. This fall, voters in California are voting on a referendum to allow people to legally grow up to 25 square feet of marijuana for personal use. Considering that California has a larger population than all of Canada and is one of the 10 biggest economies in the world, the effect on B.C.'s unofficial, but incredibly valuable, cannabis industry could be devastating. Especially in the Lower Mainland where it's estimated 80 per cent of the province's grow-ops are located, but also communities like Nelson smack in the centre of the Kootenay backwoods pot zone and even tiny Christiana Lake where Yogi, Smoky and their friends have been trained to guard the stash. "Ev'ry teddy bear who's been good ?is sure of a treat today. ?There's lots of marvellous things to eat ?And wonderful games to play." Only in British Columbia, you say? Where else in the world do picnicking teddy bears moonlight as marijuana guard dogs? - --- MAP posted-by: Matt