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The rules can be complicated and confusing to the lay person. For example, avocados with pits are stopped, but without pits they will make it into someone's guacamole. A
4-foot stalk of sugar cane is destined for a customs officer's big knife, but if it's cut into inchlong pieces and peeled, it will likely pass. Lemons are banned, but limes slide through. All manner of plants and soil are prohibited, as are Nativity scenes that use real straw. Customs officials recommend travelers leave agricultural products behind or else declare what they have. In that case, authorities will seize items if they're prohibited, but travelers won't be fined. A first offense carries a $300 fine. It's $500 for a second. At the Eagle Pass port of entry, about 140 miles southwest of San Antonio, customs officers handed out $2,300 in fines over the long Thanksgiving weekend for agricultural violations. Their take could have passed for a border-modified "12 Days of Christmas": 15 guavas, 12 grapefruit, 11 pounds of sweet potatoes, nearly 10 pounds of pork,
6 1/2 pounds of pork sausage, six avocados, tangerines, apples and 4 pounds of pork skins.
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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