Source: Vancouver Sun (Canada) Contact: http://www.vancouversun.com/ Pubdate: Saturday 4 April 1998 Section: TOP STORIES Author: Ken MacQueen, Vancouver Sun OUR POT IS RATED HOT - BIG EXPORT ITEM A world-class reputation is a carefully cultivated thing, and so it is with B.C. pot. Within the span of a generation home-grown marijuana has gone from outlaw weed to major export item by following -- with glaring exception of the Criminal Code -- all the accepted rules of commerce. Imported expertise, initially in the form of Vietnam-era draft dodgers, research and development, security of supply, and international marketing have all played their part. Even the U.S. Border Patrol, run ragged by B.C. pot-smuggling traffic, pays a grudging compliment. "The potency of the Canadian marijuana is such they'll trade, pound for pound, cocaine for Canadian marijuana," says Gene Davis, deputy chief patrol agent for the Blaine region. "There is nowhere that's got better quality marijuana than B.C." Davis says this with the resigned air of a man who knows the record 160 kilograms his agents have seized this year represent the tip of the tip of the iceberg. Local police are also fighting an uphill battle -- against the scale of the endless harvest, and the weight of public and judicial indifference. Apart from outdoor cultivation -- hidden in forest, field and island outpost -- police estimate indoor hydroponic operations in Greater Vancouver alone number in the thousands. Just Thursday, local police made four marijuana seizures. One, an elaborate grow operation in a Burnaby fertilizer warehouse, netted 2,200 plants worth more than $2 million. Most grow operators without previous convictions face fines and equipment seizure, something they treat as a business tax, says RCMP Sergeant Chuck Doucette, provincial drug awareness coordinator. Such busts do little to undo the marketing bonanza that B.C. pot has enjoyed in both the international mainstream and the outlaw media in recent years. Consider the protective public attitude to Whistler snowboarder Ross Rebagliati, whose gold medal redefined the Olympic ideals of "Faster, Higher, Stronger." His pot-positive urine sample, far from generating outrage, became an endorsement of the power of B.C. pot. "Our boy shredded!" said the Doonesbury colour comic in last weekend's papers. "He's way worthy, man! Who cares if he hangs with stoners?" Put aside for a moment the nagging question of its illegality [as do 12 per cent of British Columbians who smoke pot, according to a Health Canada estimate] and you have an economic success story akin to the reborn B.C. wine industry. Except, very probably, the numbers are larger. Even marijuana seed catalogues are reminiscent of the Wine Spectator's reverential descriptions of taste and lineage: "Northern Lights [10 seeds, $300] has dominated the various Harvest Festivals." "Slyder" offers "a strong lethargic stone." "Western Winds" is "fantastic for conversation or romance, with its relaxing and invigorating qualities." The RCMP's Doucette won't publicly estimate the value of the pot crop, saying it gets too much glorification as it is. CNN, ABC TV, The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal are among the latest media outlets to look at B.C.'s high-test pot and tolerant judiciary. Most recently, the April 2 Rolling Stone magazine celebrated "Vansterdam's" easy ways. "The drug is being cultivated, smoked and championed in Vancouver more openly than anywhere else on the continent." Will this "common-sense drug policy" spread, asked the magazine, "or is it just a Prague Spring for pot activists?" Lately, the betting is on Prague Spring. Such articles have a way of getting up the authorities' nose. Raids have a tendency to follow with renewed vigour. Even Marc Emery, ex-Vancouver mayoral candidate and the city's most visible potrepreneur, has been laid low by a successive series of police raids. Several pending trafficking charges over the sale of marijuana seeds, a mountain of legal bills, and Vancouver's withdrawal of his business licence forced the sale of Hemp B.C. and Cannabis Cafe on West Hastings to some of his 30-odd employees. Still, the cafe remains open, as does the rival Amsterdam Hemporium around the corner. Emery is still publishing the bi-monthly Cannabis Canada magazine, and his Internet seed outlet is still operating, although down from his pre-raid high of $20,000 a week in sales. "I'm a bit despondent actually," says Emery, who nonetheless talks in exclamation points. Not just police are barking at his heels. He is now going -- head-to-head -- against four or five seed-order competitors. Emery estimates B.C.'s crop has an annual value of $2 billion to $4 billion. He credits his ability to sell his message in the media for much of this. His critics tend to agree. "There is no more perfect economy than pot," Emery says on a recent afternoon in the funky Gastown distribution centre for Hemp B.C. "Here you start with bull-s- - -, water, a few seeds and some dirt. Three months later, an American is giving you a big wad of money, taking your stuff, going home -- and he burns it!" With bull and seeds Emery grew what he calls a "revolution by retail" since 1994, although he claims to have never sold pot. His niche is serving those who grow and those who smoke. The notoriety of B.C. pot he credits to "a harmonic set of circumstances." The strains carried north by draft dodgers combined with local expertise has created hundreds of varieties. Hydroponic techniques are shared and refined. The Hemp B.C. website runs continuous discussion groups on everything from home-wiring to advanced techniques for cloning and growing. Prohibition keeps the price artificially high -- $4,000-$6,000 retail in the U.S. -- while lower penalties lessen the risk. "You've created an environment where it is very profitable and very fortuitous to grow here and export to the United States," he says. The potency of today's product would shock boomers used to the buzz of the bell-bottom era, says the RCMP's Doucette. It is a business, he says. "They do marketing. They try to make their product better than their competitor's product. That's why we have this high-grade marijuana with a THC level now routinely in the high teens and as high as 30 per cent, compared to the stuff out there 15 years ago that was only one or two per cent." The ratio of profit to risk has brought a new generation of entrepreneurs: bike gangs and other organized criminals, and Americans who have moved north to lesson their chances of pulling serious jail time, says Davis of the U.S. Border Patrol. The B.C.-Washington border is a cat-and-mouse exercise pitting a handful of border patrol agents and RCMP officers against a corps of professional pot couriers, amateur adrenaline junkies and quick-buck artists. With trans-border delivery payments of up to $1,000 a pound, the incentive is obvious, and the odds are stacked in the smuggler's favour. About 300 border agents are deployed along the northern U.S. border, compared to 7,000 fighting the human flood across its southern flank with Mexico. Just 25 U.S. agents patrol the stretch from Blaine to the mountains at Sumas, although it is part of a U.S.-designated "high-intensity drug-trafficking area." Smuggling techniques range from the elaborately high-tech to the disarmingly obvious. One group simply stuffed the pot into plastic trash bags and pitched it south across the border, which is little more than a ditch between two residential roads at some points. There it sat, like all the other garbage bags along the street, until the smugglers drove through a border port and picked it up. More hardened pros are rigged with body armour, night vision goggles, camouflage, scanners and often weapons. Their sprint along any number of forest paths or suburban back gardens -- often picked up by border-patrol sensors -- is timed to the second. Before agents can scramble to the site, a vehicle rolling along the American side has scooped up the cargo. Another shipment of B.C.'s finest disappears down the I-5.