Advice is what we seek when we already know the answer - but wish we didn't
I'd rather have a full bottle in front of me than a full-frontal lobotomy ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ kirkstaller wrote: "All DNA shows is that we have a common creator."
cod'ead wrote: "I have just snotted weissbier all over my keyboard & screen"
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ "No amount of cajolery, and no attempts at ethical or social seduction, can eradicate from my heart a deep burning hatred for the Tory Party. So far as I am concerned they are lower than vermin." - Aneurin Bevan
I have spoken with some people who I would include as nimbys who were perfectly happy to use lots of electricity and happy for massive power stations and strings of pylons to be built all over the place, providing it's not where they live. These people need to take a reality check.
Nonetheless, whilst I am, on balance, in favour of wind turbines (and renewables in general), we do seem sometimes to be putting them in places where they should not be.
Nonetheless, whilst I am, on balance, in favour of wind turbines (and renewables in general), we do seem sometimes to be putting them in places where they should not be.
I am absolutely in favour of renewables, but they have to be sustainable, having to build over-sized turbines in a part of Ireland that "isn't that windy" just seems nonsense to me, there's a "farm" of about 20 near where we live, if you believe some people you can hear then "churning the air every night", but that simply isn't true, you can hear them if you stand under them (and I have, and taken some quality photo's of the sun set through the blades), but you really cannot hear them 2 miles away. And if you can, how you manage to live in a house with a fridge, central heating and neighbours is beyond me.
I am absolutely in favour of renewables, but they have to be sustainable, having to build over-sized turbines in a part of Ireland that "isn't that windy" just seems nonsense to me, there's a "farm" of about 20 near where we live, if you believe some people you can hear then "churning the air every night", but that simply isn't true, you can hear them if you stand under them (and I have, and taken some quality photo's of the sun set through the blades), but you really cannot hear them 2 miles away. And if you can, how you manage to live in a house with a fridge, central heating and neighbours is beyond me.
Couldn't agree more. Would you agree that there are places, especially almost wild places, where turbines just don't belong?
Couldn't agree more. Would you agree that there are places, especially almost wild places, where turbines just don't belong?
I tend to have the same view on turbines as I do on most planning, if there is essentially a "built environment" then adding a few turbines is neither here nor there, if there's vast swathes of nothing, then it should remain as such. What makes no sense to me is building them in "relatively windless locations".
The best place to build a lot of them near us would be on the site of former pit heads, brown field sites and clear of trees all around, strangely enough, none of the residents want that to happen.