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I'm on business <a href=" http://www.varosvillage.com/manforce-condom-sizes-in-india.pdf#tab ">manforce video</a> The demise of whaling and the consolidation of the cod industry are changing the face of Lofoten, and nowhere is that change more glaring than at Skrova. A generation ago this was a thriving fishing port with no fewer than eight factories working overtime to process cod, herring and other fish. Fishing and whaling were booming then, and Skrova was the place to be. By the early 1980s the tiny community was deemed to have the highest percentage of millionaires in all of Norway. Wealthy factory owners and fishermen liked to take their ease on a dockside bench, which bemused locals christened the millionÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂærbÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂÃÂænken, or millionaires’ bench. The old bench is still there, weathered and worn, but most of the millionaires who sat on it were put out of business long ago by the seafood companies down south and their fleets of factory ships. All but one of Skrova’s fish factories have closed, most recently in 2000. With the loss of jobs, the island’s full-time population has dwindled to about 150.