First Windmill on St. John Rises on Bordeaux Mountain
Re: First Windmill on St. John Rises on Bordeaux Mountain
My deepest condolences.StJohnRuth wrote:We have our first windmill!
- Greenskeeper
- Posts: 390
- Joined: Sat Mar 08, 2008 2:07 pm
- Location: Cape Cod, MA
This isn't too far from where I live and every time I have the opportunity to drive out to the desert, I look forward to seeing all the windmills! I don't know about the noise factor, but visually I think they're fine, even a whole bunch of 'em. Like Bev said, those crappy pine tree cell phone towers are way uglier!BRY1105 wrote:Are you kidding me? So you wouldn't mind if one day you showed up on STJ for vacation and saw this:
A place like St. John is the perfect venue for wind power! And island needs to be as self-sustaining as possible in my opinion.
I'd be interested in knowing what production they get after a year or so. Placing small wind turbines at such a low altitude and achieving good results is much more difficult than it might seem. You need to get higher off the ground to have consistent wind direction and speed. In the one villa I stayed in near Coral Bay the wind varied on either side of the house significantly, and the higher localized wind direction on one side was different than the prevailing wind due to the eddies in and around the ridge.
I followed a similar discussion in a location in the Rockies, and the smaller home sized generators didn't perform anywhere near as well as the marketing folks predicted. Could have been the specific installation, but the overall message was that the industrial sized ones that get higher off the ground and have significant site research performed better, but "downsizing" is tough to do and get good performance.
I'm all for renewable energy, but it's not as easy as it sounds.
irbgolfin
I followed a similar discussion in a location in the Rockies, and the smaller home sized generators didn't perform anywhere near as well as the marketing folks predicted. Could have been the specific installation, but the overall message was that the industrial sized ones that get higher off the ground and have significant site research performed better, but "downsizing" is tough to do and get good performance.
I'm all for renewable energy, but it's not as easy as it sounds.
irbgolfin
-
- Posts: 499
- Joined: Mon Aug 07, 2006 6:09 pm
- Location: New England
I have seen acres and acres of windmills in CA also, but one thing missing was close neighbors. I remember thinking when I saw them this past summer east of San Francisco there was no developments anywhere near them due to the noise generated by them. Not that I heard any because we were in our vechicle, but because I live inMaine and for the past few years we've had those issues in the news on a fairly regular basis due to citizens complaints. They can be noisy and I for one would not want to have them next to me if I were renting a property on vacation. It appears this might be a very small windmill so hopefully it will cut down on the owners electric bills and not distrupt it's neighbors.
On another note, I will also say...I bought a house next to an interstate after listening to many people say...Oh you will get used to road noise, well...I never did and had to move after not being able to get a nights sleep in years.
On another note, I will also say...I bought a house next to an interstate after listening to many people say...Oh you will get used to road noise, well...I never did and had to move after not being able to get a nights sleep in years.

Hoping for a USVI ticker in 2013!
-
- Posts: 291
- Joined: Wed Sep 10, 2008 3:51 pm
- Location: Cleveland
There has been some discussion here in Chicago about placing a windmill farm a few miles offshore in Lake Michigan in order to remove the eyesore and noise objections. I'm curious if this has been debated in the V.I.
I suspect that the challenges of salt vs fresh water corrosion, and tropical storm sea conditions might be too much of an issue, but am curious.
I suspect that the challenges of salt vs fresh water corrosion, and tropical storm sea conditions might be too much of an issue, but am curious.
- hawksnestbay
- Posts: 123
- Joined: Mon Aug 07, 2006 6:22 pm
- Location: America's Hometown
I think some of the people that objected to the windmill at Annaberg escaped and took a boat to Tortola.Pete (Mr. Marcia) wrote:Wait a minute, I thought that there have been windmills on STJ for hundreds of years. I checked the forum archives and I didn't see anyone complaining about that huge one that was built at Annaberg.
-
- Posts: 1471
- Joined: Mon Aug 07, 2006 4:48 pm
- Location: Madison, Wisconsin