I may have mentioned that jet lag coming home from Australia kicks my butt. Generally for 2 weeks after I get home I suffer from disturbed sleep, diarrhea, and even depression. So I know that driving for two days straight wasn't the smartest thing to do. The first day wasn't bad - I drove 12 hours, checked into a hotel, and even stayed awake to watch TV a couple of hours!
Day 2 was a little harder. Even though it would be a shorter day, I found myself all fidgety and cranky, and worst of all, sleepy. Driving through South Dakota, I really kept wishing I was in Minnesota already. So knowing that I couldn't shorten the drive anyway, I decided to at least "get to Minnesota". I exited on Highway 90 and turned east. Before you knew it, I was in Minnesota! And I had never visited Southwestern Minnesota before, so I felt like a tourist.
"So it came to be (1993) that a cluster of more than 70 wind turbines was erected about Hendricks and Lake Benton in Lincoln County, MN, as the U.S. government, the State of Minnesota and several energy conglomerates began a serious effort to create electricity from wind. Soon a second cluster of turbines - more than 140 - was erected near the same site.
A dozen years later there is uncertainty attending the precise number of wind turbines across and along Buffalo Ridge. There are thousands of them. Southwest Minnesota’s landscape has been transformed, just as the search for energy has been transformed. Minnesota’s southwest corner, in particular, has become an American center for the production of electricity.
The sleek, nearly silent wind turbines are all about 250 feet high. Each turbine weighs nearly 100 tons. Most have three blades with a rotor diameter of more than 150 feet. They are awesome structures.
Each turbine may generate the annual electrical needs of up to 250 homes. The wind-driven turbines supplant the burning of hundreds of thousands of tons of coal which would be required to fill the needs of the power now harvested from Minnesota breezes.
Some farmers in the southwest region, who have watched turbines being erected on their lands, call their farms “wind farms.” They now reap harvests from winds which once only rustled their corn crops."
No comments:
Post a Comment