Seems the question has been answered, but unless one is in a very good wind zone, the price/watt for solar is much better than for a wind turbine. The wind generators are also far less reliable, and subject to constant maintenance (if you can continue to find parts, that is). No doubt wind and solar are complimentary technologies, but financially you may be better off just doubling the size of the solar array, or taking the wind turbine money and investing in solar water heating, given that heat is a big deal at high latitudes. Just 6 years ago solar was considerably more expensive and wind generators looked like a better deal.
Ideally, one approaches the task by building the most energy efficient house with passive solar design, then buying a solar array and battery/inverter to power the house. If one applies efficient lighting, solar water heating, hot water storage, a backup hot water heater, in slab radiant heat, then many of the large electrical loads will not exist in the first place.
My plan does include a diesel genset that is tied to the hot water system as a co-generation system (recover heat from coolant, oil and exhaust) to power high loads, such as running equipment in the workshop or an electric clothes dryer. The location has no regular utilities and propane is very expensive, so all fossil fueled systems will run on diesel, same as my truck, backhoe and other equipment. I have access to inexpensive softwood, so wood heat will be the primary heat source and diesel only to maintain a minimum safe temp if I am away from home for an extended period during very cold weather.