Pubdate: Sat, 18 Apr 1998 Source: The Herald, Everett (WA) Contact: http://www.heraldnet.com/ Author: David Crary, Associated Press Writer BC BORDER IS NEW FOCUS FOR POT TRADE In the past, Canada's high-profile exports to the United States featured hockey players and comedians. Now there's a cash crop on the list -- homegrown marijuana that ranks among the priciest and most potent in the world. The pot is so coveted on the West Coast that it sometimes trades pound-for-pound for cocaine, officials say. Stepped-up searches for it have led to vexing backups at some border crossings. Although the United States border with Mexico remains its No. 1 smuggling zone, U.S. Customs Service has nearly doubled its enforcement effort there because of a surge of marijuana smuggled in from British Columbia. "The price of B.C. marijuana has become very high," said Gene Kervan, customs director at the busy border crossing at Blaine. "It's the drug of choice in many locations." Much of the prized pot is grown indoors by the increasingly popular hydroponic method -- using bright artificial light and nutrient-laced water, but no soil. Kervan said the product can earn as much as $6,000 a pound in parts of California -- 10 times the typical for marijuana from Mexico. Kervan's officers have been searching more and more vehicles coming south from the Vancouver area, and uncovering more and more pot -- a change that has sometimes resulted in two-hour backups for motorists trying to enter the United States. The border crackdown in Washington has pushed some trafficers east into Idaho. Customs officers there conducted a two-week operation in March that resulted in eight drug arrests -- about the number usually made in a year. Marijuana is believed to rank now as British Columbia's most lucrative agricultural product --with illegal revenues estimated at anywhere from $400 million to more htan $3 billion. Kervan said there is no typical pot smuggler. "That's the toughest part for us," he said, recounting one border bust involving a husband and wife carrying 17 pounds of marijuana along with their two young children. That same day, a couple in their 70s were arrested for carrying 24 pounds of marijuana in their truck.