Farewell Govan - bathed in a baking sun littered with betting shops and no win/no fee criminal lawyers and a myriad of pubs caked in years of libation steeped in history of industry and shipbuilding blackened smoked walls etched with gangland symbols: tooled-up local carnivores who ride shotgun on a BMX swapping discrete envelopes for indiscreet wads of cash.
Farewell Govan - you fractured my ribs once in a moment of mistaken identity I didn't heed the advice to not walk through the park at night I didn't hear the pitter-patter of adolescent feet speeding my way in brand new trainers across the grass but I did feel the clunk of something solid on my head as the ground rushed up to meet me in a concrete embrace and watched as 4 bags of overladen shopping spewed out lying face up spread-eagle in Lilliput fashion and a mobile torch-app in my face with the repeating words “Ima tellin’ you man its naw him, its naw him” I reassured them frantically that I was definitely not him! as the hooded troupe picked up what was left of my shopping and even gifted me a couple of cans of super strength lager, a cube of dubious council estate hash and an usher to leave immediately (and think myself lucky).
Farewell Govan - you got me blazing on cheap beer at the local pub which had recreated a holiday beach scene with a hand-written sign that read: Better than Ibiza! awash with carefree children and pit-bull terriers wearing bespoke Barbour dog jackets and brand spanking new Adidas white trainers purchased from Tam out of a nondescript blue plastic bag who always passes the day's pleasantries while topping up his pension chatting with auld Billy who was in the war (don’t you know) via the Merchant Navy and the version of how he was gunner on an oil boat in Vietnam via the umpteenth pint that afternoon.
Farewell Govan - your late night shadows harbour an underlying tension masked with comic humour only if you can understand the lingo words that are distasteful anywhere else are in fact a term of endearment here I shall miss the odious vernacular and doth my cap to your spirit the Salt of the Earth and the Lifeblood of the Community with at least 40% proof liquids mixed with Irn Bru purchased at the 24/7 corner store along with a can of processed peas; one of your five a day.
Farewell Govan - I go to the sunny side of the Clyde where it rains just as much but you don’t get mugged for carrying an umbrella or asked for the time from a watch-wearing tattooed sailor and joy-of-joys there will be actual fruit & veg shops where I don’t have to explain what fresh coriander is and what you use it for, other than on a pizza; I was offered dried bottled parsley instead.
Farewell Govan.
Govan - shipbuilding heartland of Glasgow, a hard-man reputation but if you look under the surface you find good people with stories to share