
Mooring here is good (a nice place to moor), mooring rings or bollards are available. Mooring is limited to 2 days. 150ft, and additionally 50ft at an angle, of Floating pontoon just upstream of the bridge.
There is a bridge here which takes a road over the canal.
| Tattershall Bridge Visitor Moorings | 7 miles, 2¼ furlongs | |
| Belle Isle Marina | 6 miles, 3 furlongs | |
| Dogdyke Visitor Moorings | 6 miles, 2½ furlongs | |
| Orchard Caravan and Camping Park Moorings | 5 miles, 5½ furlongs | |
| Chapel Hill Junction | 5 miles, 3 furlongs | |
| Langrick Bridge | ||
| Langrick Bridge General Store and Marina | ½ furlongs | |
| Anton's Gowt Junction | 2 miles, 1 furlong | |
| Boston Lock Visitor Moorings | 4 miles, 1¾ furlongs | |
| Boston Motor Yatch Club | 4 miles, 2¾ furlongs | |
| Boston Gateway Marina | 4 miles, 3¼ furlongs | |
Amenities here
48 hour visitor mooring pontoon for 3/4 Narrowboats, just upstream of the bridge.
The Ferry Boat Inn marked on some guide books is closed (2017).
There is a small General store on the opposite bank but the pavement over the bridge is narrow and the road busy.
Geordies yard below the bridge on the opposite bank provides red diesel and pump out.
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Nearest water point
In the direction of Boston Grand Sluice Lock No 3
In the direction of High Bridge Lincoln (the Glory Hole)
Nearest rubbish disposal
In the direction of Boston Grand Sluice Lock No 3
In the direction of High Bridge Lincoln (the Glory Hole)
Nearest chemical toilet disposal
In the direction of Boston Grand Sluice Lock No 3
In the direction of High Bridge Lincoln (the Glory Hole)
Nearest place to turn
In the direction of Boston Grand Sluice Lock No 3
In the direction of High Bridge Lincoln (the Glory Hole)
No information
CanalPlan has no information on any of the following facilities within range:self-operated pump-out
boatyard pump-out
Wikipedia has a page about Langrick Bridge
Langrick Bridge is a village in the civil parish of Holland Fen with Brothertoft in the Borough of Boston, Lincolnshire, England. The village is in the Lincolnshire Fens, 5 miles (8 km) north-west from the town of Boston and 24 miles (40 km) south-east from the city and county town of Lincoln. It is at the southern side of the bridge of the same name which spans the River Witham. At the north side of the bridge the settlement is in the civil parish of Langriville. The southern boundary of the village of Langrick is 200 yards (180 m) north from the bridge.
The bridge has moorings on both banks, the next nearest moorings being 5 miles (8 km) upstream at Chapel Hill, and 2 miles (3 km) downstream at Anton's Gowt. The B1192 Coningsby to Kirton road runs through the settlement, which at the north of the bridge is Main Road, and at the south is Langrick Road that has an immediate junction with Ferry Lane which runs west to the North Forty Foot Bank.
To the north of the bridge is a secondhand car & automobile repair business, a restaurant which was formerly the Ferry Boat public house, and a transport cafe on part of the site of the former Langrick railway station. Closest to the bridge is Witham House, a Grade II listed two-storey building, dating to the early 18th century with later additions. To the south of the bridge on Ferry Lane and Langrick Road are detached and semi-detached houses, two farms, a fuel station, a shop selling boating equipment and food supplies, and a former Wesleyan Methodist chapel, built of red brick, with a datestone inscribed with '1868'.



![Langrick Bridge. Some distance from the village of Langrick this bridge was built in 1907 to replace the former ferry, still commemorated in then name of Ferry Boat Farm. The original purpose of the bridge was to improve access to the railway station which closed in 1963, made redundant by the road traffic.The flags are those of England and Lincolnshire, flown in the correct relationship. They can be seen in [[4676946]]. by Bob Harvey – 07 March 2015](https://s0.geograph.org.uk/geophotos/04/37/68/4376852_1e99e32c_120x120.jpg)


























