WINDS OVER AMERICA
recently i was driving down I-39 in the middle of BFE and i happened to have my Mavica handy enough to grab while i was tooling down the road : that was good , because i had been wanting to get a picture or two of these crazy-assed things for over a year now .
this is just near Paw Paw , Illinois ( semi-famous for the notorious "Paw Paw Incident" ) : these windmills are appearantly converting wind into electricity . the first dozen or so times i saw these things i was almost mesmerized while driving down the highway - - they look to be about 110 feet tall and look pretty weird on a breezy day . there are about 65 of them ( i think ) , and it must make a fortune for the land owner on whose property these reside . on a calm day , the wind farmer brings in all his field help and a truckload of beans . this can get quite messy from what i understand , and the city of Paw Paw is not happy .
no , they're not happy at all . .........and this , of course , is the aftermath . it's too bad this guy hasn't figured out two things : 1) this could be sold as fertilizer , and 2) if he erected a huge dome he could harness the power of methane , thereby negating the need for wind in the first place , sort of like a perpetual motion machine of beans , shit , methane , and electricity .i wonder if the EPA is aware of what this guy is up to ?
recently i was driving down I-39 in the middle of BFE and i happened to have my Mavica handy enough to grab while i was tooling down the road : that was good , because i had been wanting to get a picture or two of these crazy-assed things for over a year now .
this is just near Paw Paw , Illinois ( semi-famous for the notorious "Paw Paw Incident" ) : these windmills are appearantly converting wind into electricity . the first dozen or so times i saw these things i was almost mesmerized while driving down the highway - - they look to be about 110 feet tall and look pretty weird on a breezy day . there are about 65 of them ( i think ) , and it must make a fortune for the land owner on whose property these reside . on a calm day , the wind farmer brings in all his field help and a truckload of beans . this can get quite messy from what i understand , and the city of Paw Paw is not happy .
no , they're not happy at all . .........and this , of course , is the aftermath . it's too bad this guy hasn't figured out two things : 1) this could be sold as fertilizer , and 2) if he erected a huge dome he could harness the power of methane , thereby negating the need for wind in the first place , sort of like a perpetual motion machine of beans , shit , methane , and electricity .i wonder if the EPA is aware of what this guy is up to ?
this is just near Paw Paw , Illinois ( semi-famous for the notorious "Paw Paw Incident" ) : these windmills are appearantly converting wind into electricity .
the first dozen or so times i saw these things i was almost mesmerized while driving down the highway - - they look to be about 110 feet tall and look pretty weird on a breezy day . there are about 65 of them ( i think ) , and it must make a fortune for the land owner on whose property these reside .
on a calm day , the wind farmer brings in all his field help and a truckload of beans . this can get quite messy from what i understand , and the city of Paw Paw is not happy .
no , they're not happy at all .
.........and this , of course , is the aftermath . it's too bad this guy hasn't figured out two things : 1) this could be sold as fertilizer , and 2) if he erected a huge dome he could harness the power of methane , thereby negating the need for wind in the first place , sort of like a perpetual motion machine of beans , shit , methane , and electricity .
i wonder if the EPA is aware of what this guy is up to ?
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home