Larry,

> Actually they quietly spin and generate electricity.  I saw a 
> bunch of them in Holland about twenty years ago, set up along 
> the coast.  They didn't bother anyone and just did their job.  

I live in an area where wind turbines are blocked, but there is a waiver
process and people can in fact put windmills on their property once the
location and type has been approved. There are several neighbors with
windmills right now.

The big wind farm near Palm Springs generates quite a bit of power. I don't
see the turbines as an eyesore. I sometimes just watch them turn in the
wind. They can be quite graceful in a way.

The neighbors don't like to look at solar panels either, but we all work
through the approval process and get them anyway. It is a matter of give and
take.

What is needed is for all of us to get used to the "new" reality and make
judicious use of solar, wind, thermal, nuclear, coal, and fossil fuels. I am
an environmentalist that believes the final solution to the energy crunch
will be for each of us to be generating power and feeding it into the grid.

We're going to have to give up the idea that power will be generated
somewhere else far away where we don't have to see it, and get used to the
idea it will be generated right in our own back yards.

Kristyne McDaniel
http://www.shamrocktrails.com



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