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Fishing was one of the first industries to develop here in the late 19th century, when Russian colonists settled here Balykchy started working click lake Prostitutes their doorstep. Whatever your degree of interest, however, you probably do not Prostitutes to stay here.
Those left behind - mostly the old - have to cope as best they Balykchy. Following independence in , the town was known for a brief time as Issyk-Kul, but for obvious reasons this caused considerable confusion, and so a couple of years later the Kyrgyz equivalent of its earlier name was settled upon. Those left behind - mostly the old - have to cope as best they can. Although it is undeniable that few towns in Kyrgyzstan have rejected their Soviet past outright, you get the feeling that in Balykchy they mourn the past more than most, and perhaps one indication of this has been a reluctance to dispose of the monuments and ciphers that point to more prosperous times.
Balykchy Kyrgyz for 'fisherman' is the largest settlement at the western end of Lake Issyk-Kul, and even a cursory glance tells that it is no longer the prosperous town that it once was. In Soviet times the town developed as an important transport and industrial centre, with shipping, fishing and shipbuilding all contributing to its economy; now, with the loss of the industrial base that the Soviet Union provided, all of these industries have virtually disappeared, and those who remain face unemployment and little promise for the future.
The railway station still bears this name today, but it is not alone in echoing the name of a bygone age. If you want a warts-and-all perspective of industrial decline in a post-Soviet transitional state, then Balykchy makes a good case study. If you want a warts-and-all Prostitutes of industrial decline in a post-Soviet transitional state, then Balykchy makes a good case study.
There again, much of the town has an abandoned look to it, and what remains is more likely a matter of indifference than any conscious effort to conserve. In Soviet times the town developed as an important transport and industrial centre, with shipping, fishing and shipbuilding all contributing to its economy; now, with Prostitutes loss of the industrial base that the Soviet Union provided, all of these industries have virtually disappeared, and those who remain face unemployment and little promise source the future.