For now another
tasty little morsel about the perils of fly pitching…
I want you to think
of ten things that are absolutely impossible to achieve and can never happen in
a thousand years. Try hard!
Okay, I’ll give you
some ideas that look good on the surface.
1). A woman becoming Pope! Forget it. It’s
already been done, aka Pope Joan.
2). Everyone being able to go to the Moon! Richard
Branson will sort it out soon if you can pay.
3). Alex Salmond becoming President of the
Republic of Scotland. Impossible? Are you kidding? He’s already being
measured up for the stamps.
4). America going socialist. With the
political crazies they’ve got over there it looks quite impossible until you
recall that what used to be Communist China has now gone capitalist with Russia
not far behind.
5). Men having babies! Bad as it sounds they’re
already talking about it in America. Scientifically it’s not impossible.
6). A Jew becoming British Prime Minister.
Improbable as it seems, because no Jew in his right mind would want to i.e. too
much trouble it’s already been done. Disraeli though got himself baptised
first!
7) Most of the surface of Planet Earth being
covered by water. It’s come close to happening before and given projected
sea level rises in the next two hundred years the fact of it happening again is
by no means impossible.
8) England winning the World Cup in the next
thousand years. Not unless Harry Redknapp takes over the management and
there’s no hope of that!
9) Nick Clegg becoming Prime Minister! Only
if most people go mental but that’s what the Lib-Dems are counting on so
there’s always a chance!
10) Me, you or anyone else fly-pitching in or
anywhere near London’s Portobello Road Street Market and lasting an hour before
being arrested or thrown off.
Okay, that’s it! The
absolutely impossible thing that I’m looking for and the subject of this post.
What I’m saying is
this. That any of the above are more possible, more likely to happen, than me you
or anyone else selling goods on the fly in the above named street market and
lasting more than an hour. If you don’t believe me why don’t you try it? Either
the police will get you, or the street trading inspectors, or any of the
official traders with permits, or their friends, or their dogs. I should know. I once did!
Portobello Road
Market is situated in west London close to Ladbroke Grove tube station. The top
end begins near the Harrow Road and runs south till it finally ends under the
West Way Arterial. It’s the crème de la crème and utter dogs bollocks of street
markets anywhere, not only in London and the whole Western World but anywhere
on the entire fucking planet to say nothing of the known universe. It’s a place
that’s so far up its own arse that it’s never likely to reappear, not even if
England win the World Cup and that’s saying something!
It’s full of
totally precious antique dealers, bric-a-brac and collectable shops run by
Kensington Georges and Jonnies, stalls selling swag jewellery, costume clothing
and hats purveyed by countless old lesbos or gone to seed Jessica’s. It’s a
place where the deeply exclusive meets fruit and veg jack the lads. Where young
and old queens put on an endless variety of ta’s and pardons for American tourists
so that any visitor from Mars would instantly think that butter wouldn’t melt
up arses in this neck of the woods.
There are many
interesting things for sale if you’re lucky to be there at the right time and
you’ve got plenty of money because the fine pieces of jewellery, furniture or
artefacts can cost you an arm and a leg. Portobello Road isn’t for the poor,
the working class or students. It’s where middle and upper middle class dealers
strut their stuff. They may be full of swank but they’re knowledgeable with it.
Just what you’d expect of middle class trade. Pretentious to the gills and all
very darling! It’s a great place for
finding and seeing beautiful things but all the action’s around just a few
streets. It’s nothing compared to the Rastro in Madrid though it’s certainly as
famous.
It’s impossible for
anyone without a permit to trade in the Portobello Road street market and just
as impossible to obtain one. It’s not just that the number of official pitch
sites and spaces are limited. Nor is it the fact that the waiting list to get
on is so long that a hundred generations have to go by after someone dies -
they actually never retire – before you can get their place and even then you
need to be a blood relative and have all the necessary certificates to prove it
before you can take their place, and even then it’s not enough! They might take
DNA samples and you’ve got to match. If you don’t, tough!
If you’re not a
blood relative, just a top end Royal, an ‘A’ list celebrity or a star in the
Premier League, do you think for one moment that gets you in? Well forget it!
You can be an oil sheikh trillionaire, a Russian oligarch or computer chip
king… any one of these and you’ve put a million quid up front to get a place
the answer’s still no. It’s not about money or power or class, pedigree or
breeding. Nothing like that. It’s about tradition. You can be a humble fruit
and veg trader, a jack the lad from Essex and know with cast iron certainty
that when you die it won’t be Elton John, Willy Wales or Roman Abramovich
who’ll be stalling out on your pitch on a cold and frosty but your eldest boy
Billy from Bow.
For any outsider,
no matter who he may be, trading legally on or anywhere near Portobello Road
market is impossible. It can only be done illegally as a fly pitcher. You’ve
got to be mad to even think about trying it let alone actually doing it! I mean
go there with a paste table, black cloth and holdalls full of your gear and
have the sheer bloody nerve to set up… You know the impossibility of the whole
thing and all the dangers involved, particularly the hostility of all the
legitimate traders who’ll grass you up the minute they see you or give you the
verbals and worse. I know what it feels like, the fear that something bad can
happen at any time, yet I still went and did it.
There I was.
Everything inside my head telling me NO… I’d
never get away with such damnable cheek but I still had to try. Maybe it was to
see how long I would last or how much I would take but most of all it was
because I’d know in my head that I’d actually done it. Like some crazy death
defying stunt. In a way maybe that’s the real truth of it all. That I wanted to
conquer my fear.
I’d already visited
the Portobello Road area and had a look round. Sussed out in my mind what was
what. The stallholders were a bunch a
bullshitting tarts. I really didn’t like them at all so why not put a little
mud in their eye? Louise was absolutely against it so when she drove me there
on a Saturday I knew she was full of anxiety. That said there I was, on the
pavement slap bang in the middle of the Golborne Road junction with Portobello,
holding my table and bags full of stock.
Late Saturday morning
and the main drag already jammed packed with punters. Stalls to the left of me,
stalls to the right of me, stalls just about everywhere but nothing bang on the
corner! Lucky boy! Bags down, table opened in seconds and covered with my cloth
then out with my gear. Right at the front animals on marble, immediately
behind, baskets of crystals and semi-precious tumble-stones then pendants on
silver chains. Further back, ‘Tiny’ size gem-trees with leaves of amethyst,
rose quartz, crystal, tiger eye and green quartz polished chips. Finally right
at the back a few superb willows. Everything set up quickly in a neat compact
display that sparkled brightly in the sun. Soon people were wandering across
from the route up the drag to have a look and the stall was surrounded.
“Never seen you ere
before mate,” was a regular comment to which I invariable replied with a smile,
“doing a spot of fly-pitching before the policeman comes! Everything cheap,
made of precious stones. Straight off the back of a lorry!” Then with a serious
face, “my wife and I make it ourselves. Nothing’s expensive.”
Some animals went
in the first few minutes then four pairs of earrings. Two-fifty a pair was a pretty
good price. People were looking hard at the small gem-trees wondering whether
they’d break or the leaves come off so I picked up a couple of araldite
specials I’d purposefully put out and squashed them flat, throwing one onto the
pavement. In seconds I made them all good again. Soon there were questions. Did
I have this stone or that for someone’s birthday? In the next ten minutes I
sold 8 Tinies at six quid apiece along with a few crystal pendants, keeping a
smile on my face with my eyes on the lookout just about everywhere. No sign of trouble
so far. As for the Trading Inspectors I didn’t know who they could be. Same
type of blokes as at Camden Lock or Leather Lane, clipboards and pencils in
hand. So far no sign and miracle of miracles, no nosey regulars either.
Half an hour and
first contact! A couple of antique dealers, you can tell them a mile off with their
polo neck sweaters and gabardine jackets, had a suss over the stall then a quiet word in my ear. “Wouldn’t let the
inspector catch you doing that here.” I caught the smell of whisky mixed in
with cologne then felt an eye up my arse.
“Such a nice boy
isn’t he? Be a shame to see him in trouble.”
I thought fuck the pair of you but thanked them
both for their concern! Expressed a real gratitude! They had nothing to gain by
my being there but nothing to lose either. It didn’t matter. Fly boys were the
lowest of the low where the regulars were concerned. Scum out of the vilest
housing estates. That was their judgement. To me these oh so respectable people
were snakes! Even so it amused me to counter their posh upper class accents
with an oh-so-superior accent of my own. What could they have thought? Probably
that I was taking the piss until I told them that I was part of a group of
students down from Oxford trying to raise money for the rowing club charity.
That shut them up!
Forty-five minutes!
No trouble so far and sales still rolling in. I couldn’t believe it! People
were actually buying. As quite a few of them said, they’d never seen anything
like it. There were also plenty of tourists. People being drawn over by the
crowd round the table. I was talking incessantly now. Our stuff was made of real semi-precious stones… The price of the
jewellery was good… And feeling on a high I came out with it all. Yeah, our prices were great but I was
trading illegally so I didn’t know how long I would last…
Till the policeman comes was a favourite expression of fly pitchers! I
didn’t make any effort to hide anything. I was quite open. And while I was
talking and selling I felt no resentment from anyone. Putting myself out in a
good natured way got a good natured response. They liked my stuff and my
honesty with it. If I was fast it was
because fly boys had to be fast.
In the time I’d
been there I must have done well over a hundred I thought to myself. Another
few hours and I’d make a sweet little killing. Then it happened. Someone bought
a crystal willow for his wife and a few minutes later I bagged up an amethyst.
The thousands of people walking through had never seen my gear before. It was
novelty. The sky was the limit and I was on a definite roll. Another three
Tinies and I’d taken two hundred or more in under an hour. I was buzzing. My
eyeballs were floating… all that money in fifty-five minutes. Suddenly out of
the blue I felt a tap on my shoulder. When I turned with happy expression all
over my face there was mister policeman behind me, and he wasn’t smiling!
At the front of the
table a sharp rat-faced woman with another sallow-faced boy in blue were giving
me the gorbals. “Illegal trading. A criminal offence,” was all that she said.
The crowd drew back except for a determined old gent. “I’ll have that one,” he
said firmly, pointing a rose quartz willow.
“He’s not allowed
to sell anything,” the rat face came in, pointing to her street trading badge.
“I’ll give him the money,” the old man protested. “It’s private, just me and him.”
“The police won’t
allow him to take any money,” she said in a threatening manner. “If I were you,
sir, I’d be on your way. You don’t want to be committing a crime.”
The crowd around me
evaporated in seconds. I was now on my own with two Boys Own coppers and
Kensington’s street trading bitch! I’d lasted just short of an hour. Illegal street
trading! Would I be arrested? Would they confiscate my stock? Make me hand over
my takings? Call for a van and take me down to the nick? Anything was possible.
I’d broken the law. The police could do anything and these were kids, only
interested in piling up their street cred with sarge. I recorded the whole
thing in my Diary Entry made the following day.
“Fly pitched in the Portobello Rd. Good for the
hour it lasted, but was then apprehended by street inspectors who’d called the
police. A very nasty hour followed. The police behaviour was bad and bordering
on intimidation. I may well be summoned for illegal street trading. Bad
experience.”
The woman trading
inspector was an absolute bitch. There were actually two of them but the man with
her stayed silent throughout. I could certainly expect a summons for what I’d
been doing. The two young John Q’s then got to work. Name, address, the whole
works. Yeah a summons was more than likely.
I got it long and
hard in the neck but I wasn’t arrested or charged. Neither did I lose my stock or
my takings. Truth is, I could so easily have been in a cell. It was all simple
enough. They just wanted to scare me out of my wits and threaten me with a
summons to keep it that way. Make it all very clear… If he ever came back he
was dead!
They watched me
pack everything away and fold up the table. I never recorded how I left but it
could only have been in a taxi. I felt no shame at being so publically kicked
out. It was all part of the risk I took doing it. I’d got off lightly and it
was quite an achievement to have lasted as long as I did. It’s an interesting
market all right and could even be better if the creepy crawlies who work it
weren’t so pretentious or precious, bringing it down to the level of an
upmarket shit-hole where reputation is everything.
As for me I’ve got
the t-shirt. Been there, seen it and done it. How many other boys on the fly
can say they had the nerve?
And one more thing
I’d like to add. Another impossibility challenge! Can you think of any other
political party in the UK at the present time that’s even more despicable than
the Liberal Democrats?
Okay, I’ll give you
some clues. Firstly think of one that used to stand for equality, fairness and
justice, and once had ethical values that were clean and good. Now think of
this party which, when in Government, adopted a policy of so called light touch regulation over the banks
(the phrase actually means no controls whatsoever) allowing them to bankrupt
the British economy… Now think of this same party supporting the view that the
vast majority of British people should have to pay for their political crime
which has caused half a million people to become unemployed.
Okay, second clue.
Can you remember which recent Government had a policy of no control whatsoever over the activities of the energy supply companies
on which British people depend to keep warm in the winter and cook their food, so
these companies could raise their prices whenever they fancied and make
outrageous profits on the health and welfare of the general public. Now think
about who these disgusting politicians could be.
Finally, think of
the elected representatives of the political party that once had decent ethical
values making fraudulent claims for expenses while its leadership did its level
best to turn Britain into a police state?
That’s the
challenge. Think of a political party on the British landscape that’s even more
disgusting than the Liberal Democrats. I’ll
give you two seconds!
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