Monday 28 October 2013

Canal Boat Hitchiking

*My brother and I spent 5 days hitchiking on canal boats from Manchester to Lichfield in September 2012.*

Ordinarily as a hitchhiker one hopes for as much passing traffic as possible, so that the slim chances of getting a lift from any one of the staring faces that zoom by are compensated for by sheer numbers. When hitchhiking on canal boats there is very little traffic, but the odds of being taken onboard are extraordinarily good, it seems. In five days hitching from Manchester to Lichfield down the Macclesfield, Trent & Mersey, and Coventry canals , my brother and I asked for lifts from seven boats and only had two refusals.

Mostly we parked ourselves at the front of the boat, smoking his electric cigarette and chatting about the new turn his life was taking post university. I saw an otter slip into the water just ahead of us somewhere around Rugeley as we chugged along with a retired couple (a sewing machine mechanic and a hairdresser), and somewhere around Stone the last of the swallows swooped across our bows and thought about slinging their hooks before the weather turned. We soon learned to incorporate “we’ll stay out of your way at the front” into our pitch.

At Bosley locks on the Macclesfield canal, on the second day of our trip, we were picked up by Brian and Ann-Marie on the Alton, a 1936 coal barge built at the Harland and Woolf yard at Woolwich. At one time there were as many as 300 of these ‘Big Woolwich’ barges, but after the British Transport Commission discontinued canal freight in the early 1960s almost all of them were turned into houseboats or pleasure cruisers, or scrapped. Perhaps only ten remain in their original form, Brian reckons, with an engine room and a tiny one room living space at the stern, and the rest of the 70-odd feet of the boat filled up with 30 tons of cargo covered with tarpaulin.

Brian grew up on the Wirral and used to work as an automotive engineer, making car parts for Toyota, but he has been in love with canal boats since he took a holiday on his dad’s mate’s boat one summer when he was fifteen. He’s a stocky bloke with a big brown beard, wearing a heavy padded neon construction site jacket engrained with grime. Ann-Marie had a wooly hat half pulled down on top of blonde hair and a padded check shirt, and looked tired. We later learnt they had been up since 5.30 that morning.

The Alton is still a working boat. Brian and Ann-Marie run the Renaissance Canal Carrying Co. selling solid fuel, diesel, gas canisters and a few other bits and bobs along the canals of Cheshire and Staffordshire. Their regular round, a loop that starts and finishes near Macclesfield, takes about a fortnight, and they do it about once a month, with rest and restocking time at their houseboat. They sell to anyone who wants along the canal, including pubs, boatyards and so on, but most of their customers are people who live aboard. There are more customers in summer as there are more boats around, but fuel orders are larger in winter, so broadly speaking it seems to level out.

Brian’s full of knowledge about canals. When this or that one was built, how they came to be narrow unlike the canals and navigations in Europe, who’s the best boat builder in Staffordshire. He talked about the horse rope marks you find in bridges, or about the places on the Trent and Mersey around Stoke where they fitted cast iron covers at the stone corners, and that even these have been worn by ropes, or where they fitted wooden rollers, the iron brackets for which can sometimes still be seen. He talked about canal characters like Caggie Stevens of Birmingham, who used to collect factory rubbish on his barges, pulled by a horse right up to the 1990s. We tried to help out as we made our way down to Kidsgrove, lugging bags of coal or holding ropes to stay alongside a boat as Ann-Marie pumped it full of diesel. Sometimes we’d pass a holidaying narrowboat at a set of locks. “Is that a working boat?” they’d say, full of excitement and a hint of envy, “It’s good to see there are still working boats.”

That night our kid and I fetched up camping on waste ground between the West Coast Mainline and the Trent and Mersey canal, next to G.Park Blue Planet, a warehouse built on the site of a former colliery by Gazeley, an international developer of ‘sustainable distribution space.’ The centre has been empty since it was built with Regional Development Agency money in 2009. You can’t miss a five second view of it as you whoosh past on the West Coast Mainline just north of Stoke, a big green thing showing off a long row of empty lorry docking ports.


In the early evening a few dog walkers skirted the edges of the boggy ponds nearby and looked over at us curiously as we heated up water on a camping stove for cous cous and Tesco tinned curry sauce. Night fell and we went to bed, the lights of the empty warehouse shining mistily through the tent fabric and the trains rushing past every ten minutes. The next morning it was raining and the canal was still sleeping, so we walked through Burslem, the ‘Mother Town’ of the potteries with its old branch canal drained and filled in in the 60s, and skirted more of England’s underside, until we finally got a lift from another retiree in Stoke; a former IT manager at Rolls Royce.

In China Town

Since the summer, members of the London Chinatown Chinese Association say, the UK Border Agency has been targeting businesses in Chinatown, looking for people who may be living or working in Britain illegally. Most of the raids, according to the LCCA, have been speculative ‘fishing’ trips, based on no intelligence and designed to intimidate. Almost every business in Chinatown has been hit. At one restaurant the officers showed the manager their warrant only after the raid was finished – they were at the wrong address. 

On Tuesday afternoon, most businesses in Chinatown shut down in protest, their owners and employees marching through the streets of Soho. The demonstration was organised by the LCCA and Min Quan, a project of the anti-racist Monitoring Group. 

Read the rest here: 
http://www.lrb.co.uk/blog/2013/10/24/harry-stopes/in-china-town/


A Marikana Continua

There were no more than twenty of us outside South Africa House the other week. Londoners are used to small demonstrations outside foreign embassies, and passers-by didn’t pay much attention. We were there in support of the Abahlali baseMjondolo (Zulu for ‘shackdwellers’) movement. AbM was founded in Durban in 2005, after land at Kennedy Road, which the municipality had long promised would be used for housing for the poor, was sold to a developer. Echoing the language of Lefebvre, AbM call for the poor’s ‘right to the city’.   

The state’s response has been unyielding. In 2007 the Kwa-Zulu Natal provincial government passed the Elimination and Prevention of Re-emergence of Slums Act, which provided for forced evictions without a court order. AbM went to the Constitutional Court to have the law overturned. They won the case, but on 26 September 2009, shortly before the judgment was passed down, an AbM meeting in Kennedy Road was attacked by an armed gang, which AbM leaders say was connected to local ANC figures. Two people were killed. Thirteen AbM supporters were arrested, and no attackers.

read the rest here:
http://www.lrb.co.uk/blog/2013/10/18/harry-stopes/outside-south-africa-house/