LittleBill21
Elite Member
I don't know what you mean there is no noise? I have atv'd near them for years, you can hear them 100 yards out.
Whatever the other pros and cons are related to windmills, they don’t necessarily take farmland out of production. A good example is the Texas panhandle around Amarillo. Tens of thousands of acres of land are farmed for wheat and cotton, all of which also do double duty as wind farms that stretch on for miles.Hawkins,
Being from farming background I really struggle with the thought that taking fertile farm land out of production for wind mill or solar is a good thing vs counter productive. We only have so much farmable land and when it is gone someone is going to get hungry. I suspect but have no actual data to support the thought on a lot of the fields are on property not owned by actual family farmers but by some investment group looking for quick payout vs what will land be growing 20 years from now. Local farmers just rent the property.
Some of the restrictions imposed were farmers couldn’t drive on access roads to the towers but power company could at will drive on your crops to repair the tower. There was some reimbursement that I am not certain how it worked. This was a real problem for the farms that raised food for their animals.
The huge, huge unknown is what happens when the tower wears out or farm is decommissioned.
Quote from a landowner in posted article:I don't know what you mean there is no noise? I have atv'd near them for years, you can hear them 100 yards out.