Down & Out In Barrow-In-Furness

I left London by train and have arrived in Barrow-In-Furness. The journey pushes to the north weast of England, passing up the coast. White sheep dot the green hills on one side; on the other, the low tide sea reveals chocolate-coloured mudflats pock-marked with pools of silver water. The sky is grey.
Barrow-In-Furness is home to a massive shipbuilding industry that has, like most globalized company towns, slowed to a crawl since the end of the Cold War. For years, this town of 70,000 people has pumped out big bad nuclear submarines, oil tankers, frigates, and ferries. Now the docks are empty. The last boat to leave was the ill-fated Canadian HMS Chicoutimi that burst into flames in the north Atlantic: a weapon of mass destruction turned into a weapon of self-destruction. The tragedy seems to be a bitter send off the local industry that won't see another launch until 2007 (or so they say).
Any rumor of a future nuclear-powered ship-building contract will make more headlines than would a nuclear war.

Burrows-In-Furness is on the border of England and Soctland -- so close that you have to be careful not to to mix it up, because people can be sensitive about that. It's low-lying, with squat, 2-storey homes in neat lines that all have a stubbly moss growing up through the shingles. The town hall is the crowning glory of the town's Victorian accoutrements. The older buildings house Chinese take-aways, two-table pubs, and barren travel agencies. Beyond, the massive shipyards look like airplane hangars. They loom over the town, fenced off with barbed wire. This peaceful-looking town makes some of the worlds largest, most lethal weapons on earth. Beyond you can see the sea, bringing in the smell of salt. When the wind shifts, you can smell sheep in the surrounding hills.
I am staying in the Hotel Majestic. But Majestic it is not. In the lobby, they proudly display a framed copy of the Tourist Authority's 2-Star hotel rating. The elevator moves so slow, it feels like an old man is hoisting me up in a fridge. The walls are covered in acres of white wallpaper with bright pink flowers. The showers spill out water that should boil a lobster or sooth a polar bear. The carpet is its own self-sustaining ecosystem.

It is a refreshing pace here -- people make eye contact with you in the streets. People are patient. If you want to tie your shoe in the middle of the street, no one will bump into you. It's a young town; it has a strip of decent pubs and clubs -- including one with a mechanical bull on the main floor that everyone attempts to conquer after a few beers. It also has a shady side. The local paper speaks of "dozens" of childen addicted to smack. As my taxi driver said: "aye, is kin'a dead dooring the week, but eh, on a fry-eh nigh' it get priddy even!"

