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Lowestoft Water Sports
Welcome to the comprehensive Ufindus Water Sports directory. The Ufindus water sports directory features a large number of essential links to the web sites of UK businesses offering equipment and services related to the fields of water sport. With the Ufindus water sports directory, a wealth of water sport related information, lessons, equipment and services are just a click away! The Ufindus water sports directory is provided to assist users to obtain the information they require. Wherever you are in the UK, the Ufindus water sports directory can put you in touch with businesses in your area. The sites listed in the Ufindus water sports directory cover areas including scuba diving and jet skis as well as kayaking and power boating. The Ufindus water sports directory supplies you with all the essential contact details for your area.
About Lowestoft - show infohide info
Lowestoft is a town in Suffolk, in the UK region of East Anglia. Lowestoft Ness is the most easterly point of the UK. The town is thought to date from Viking times, the prefix 'Lowe' being a Viking male name, and the suffix 'toft' meaning 'Homestead'. The town developed into a fishing port in the middle ages, and rivaled nearby Great Yarmouth. The coming of the railway brought a change in the fortunes of Lowestoft. Sir Samuel Morton Peto built a railway linking Lowestoft with Norwich and a number of other towns. He also developed moorings for 1000 boats, which boosted international trade with the continent. Peto's efforts also made Lowestoft a thriving seaside resort. Fishing was a huge industry for the town, however in the 1960's, the catches from the drifter fleet declined, and they soon disappeared from Lowestoft. Many trawlers were adapted to work a service boats for the North Sea oil rigs. Now the fishing industry in Lowestoft is practically dead, though a fisheries reserch laboaratory still exists in the town. The towns other major industry, the Eastern Coach Works, also disappeared, as have the two shipbuilding companies which emplyed over 1000 men at their peak. The town retains its rail conncection, and sees frequent services to Norwich, Ipswich and London Liverpool Street. The town is also linked to Norwich via the A146; and to London via the A143. Towns nearby include Norwich, Great Yarmouth, Beccles, Bungay, Dereham, Wymondham, Thetford and Southwold.
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