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Searching the web for you every morningDr. Hannigan, a general dentist specializing in implants, wants to give his new patients something to smile about. Mention this ad to receive a $50.00 credit toward your first appointment. (Orleans)
Making your business fun by making it work, Barry Neagle is a business and executive coach who can help your business with sales leadership and business planning. (Barnstable)
Budget cuts at DA's office; Turbines galore available; Economy claims Cape Cod Sports Report; Thanksgiving is No Turkey; Giving, not forgetting
Cape Cod Sports Report bids farewell
Troubled economy claims beloved newspaper
In March of 2007 the local sports world was saddened to learn of the passing of an icon, Frank Finn, writer-editor-everyman of the Cape Cod Sports Report. That same world was tinged with sadness again this week when it was learned that the paper had published its final issue.
A letter posted on the CCSR Web site states that the publication “suffered irreparably from the toll of our latest economic crisis.” The paper was no longer able to afford the high costs of publishing and distribution.
The Cape Cod Sports Report was the brainchild of Finn, a well-known and highly regarded sports writer from Osterville. Having written for both The Register and The Barnstable Patriot, Finn longed to do more regarding sports in his hometown of Barnstable... Barnstable Patriot.
Cathy Finn's final column is an eloquent farewell:
.....I’ll admit, I’m crying while I write it, but that’s okay, too... Sure, fall has come, and the marigold along the side of the road is going to die; its will to grow will only last until the first real frost. But remember what happens to dying marigolds; they go to seed.
That’s what I hope Frank and Sean and I will have left behind after the Sports Report is gone; a few very important seeds. I hope that we have helped instill a concept that every person who makes an effort and tries to do their best deserves to be praised and acknowledged, not just the stars. I hope that we have carried on the history of years of sports on Cape Cod recorded it in great detail, and have shown the value of sports to the quality of life on our little spit of land.
I hope that there are lots of little Cape Cod Sports Report clippings from our paper tucked away in drawers that parents will be proud to show their children, to show that those moms and dads had their moments in the sun, once.
Take all those seeds and run with them, all my friends- spread them around, and I’ll be satisfied that Frank and I and Sean did what we wanted and needed to do, and, like that stubborn marigold and its seeds, we’ll have been beautiful in the past, and will be carried on into the future.
Love, Cathy Finn
_____
Cape and Islands District Attorney Michael O’Keefe said he and his fellow DAs have proposed 2.5 percent budget cuts.“It will hurt all the facets of our offices, and it may, in some instances, result in furloughing people” - O’Keefe.
Budget cuts force furloughs at DA’s Office
O'Keefe warned of problem in October
In an effort to trim $218,000 from his budget, Essex County District Attorney Jonathan W. Blodgett has asked his staff to take up to three days of unpaid leave between January and June 2009.
“It’s the only thing that I can do to keep people from being laid off,” Blodgett says.
When Gov. Deval L. Patrick announced in October that the state would
have to slash its spending, the commonwealth’s district attorneys
volunteered to cut 2.5 percent from the 2009 budget. At the time, Cape
& Islands District Attorney Michael D. O’Keefe told Lawyers Weekly that the cuts might “result in furloughing people”... Lawyer's Weekly.
_____
Siemens turbines now available to North American projects
The product is similar to ones proposed for Nantucket Sound

The NaiKun 110 turbine project is in the Hecate Strait south of Alaska in waters not unlike Nantucket Sound
NaiKun Wind Energy Group (TSX VENTURE:NKW) has signed a letter of intent (LOI) for the purchase up to 110 wind turbine generators from Siemens Wind Power for NaiKun's offshore wind energy project in northern British Columbia. NaiKun will purchase Siemens' SWT-3.6-107 model turbines, along with service, maintenance and warranty provisions. Installation of transmission facilities and turbine foundations will begin in 2012, and the turbines will be installed in 2013 and 2014, according to the terms of the LOI. The offshore turbine farm will be built in Hecate Strait, off the northwest coast of British Columbia.
The first phase of NaiKun's project should produce between 320 MW and 396 MW of electricity, enough to serve approximately 130,000 homes in British Columbia with clean, renewable energy. A buried, submarine cable will transmit the power generated from the offshore turbines to the mainland. NaiKun is working with Siemens Canada Limited's Power Transmission and Distribution Division on this leg of the project... EEM-News. Each turbine is capable of generating 3,600 KW.
_____
Giving, not forgetting
These Christmas Trees keep on giving all year round
The values of family, love and sharing are celebrated every year during the Festival of Trees in support of Cranberry Hospice. With more than 50 personally decorated Christmas trees from 6 to 15 feet tall on display at Plimoth Plantation Friday, Dec. 5, through Sunday, Dec. 7, the Festival of Trees attracts thousands of people from not just Plymouth, but all across the South Shore and Cape Cod.
The Friends of Cranberry Hospice raise approximately $100,000 a year from the Festival of Trees, now in its 19th year, to provide direct patient care and support for the hospice’s Children’s Bereavement Program, according to event coordinator Sue Withington. A Friends board member and volunteer, Withington has been coordinating the event for the last six years.
“We get such great support from families, companies and individuals in many communities,” she said... Carver Reporter.
_____
Thanksgiving Is No Turkey
From a relative by marriage of Oceanus Hopkins
You can’t go too far wrong with a good Thanksgiving. For starters, everything smells good all day, even me. Then, everybody’s nice as pie for as long as they can stand it. It’s our only holiday when we’re supposed to think about what we eat, the folks who produced it and the land it comes from. Thoughts of Pilgrims and Indians may flash by between a wing and the prayer. Then everyone falls asleep watching the Detroit Lions lose another football game.
I’ve shirked my fatherly duties to 23-year-old Molly. She never got either my three-hour, before-the-meal lecture on The True Meaning of Thanksgiving or my four-hour, after-the-meal talk on Indigestion, Its Causes and Cures... I’ve never told her that I was once related by marriage to Oceanus Hopkins, the one child born on the Mayflower during its two-month crossing in 1620... Oceanus did make the First Thanksgiving in 1621. The second was held in 1863 after President Lincoln issued his famous “Eat-A-Turkey Proclamation,” which freed20all the geese in Yankeeland but did nothing for those in the Confederacy.
The 1621 get-together wasn’t called Thanksgiving incidentally. The Pilgrims reserved that name for religious celebrations. It was, instead, a three-day, boogie party, which Puritans were not exactly known for. As a traditional English Harvest Festival, it was held in late September or early October. Had the Pilgrims deferred eating until late November, the only thing left to harvest on Cape Cod would have been Red Sox hopes for the next season... Curtis Seltzer in the Huntington VA News.
40 comments
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Their undying propagandized support of OFFSHORE WIND/Blue H stylized ~floating wind~ utilizing the same turbine size within 1/2 megawatt...
Hence offering:
CAPE WIND will not be able to obtain the turbines necessary for their project?
They...
Are shot down on the birds & radar "issues"...
Because they are simply: Lame.
Lost almost a dozen ridiculous court cases...
Also because they were:
Lame.
They continue to embarress themselves while spending millions of their benefactors money on the same LAME postulations, fabrications, misrepresentaions, red-herrings & outright LIES...
(The electricity will cost 2x as much - a really BIG BONER)
And this... Is the best they can do?
Try: "The sky is falling!" - Because of...
CAPE WIND...
Coming to a sound near:
US:
NANTUCKET SOUND!
P.s. Barnstable Patriot poll (Sister of CCTimes) 85% IN FAVOR of CAPE WIND.
Who'd a thunk?
Not gonna happen...the influential millionairs who rule won't let it. Wind is not the answer. Geothermal is! Let Mav have his sound the way it is...the Osterville crowd won't ever let those ugly steel rods be in their backyard view. It's really that simple. Waterfront properties will lose value.
Honestly.
More than a lot going in CAPE WINDS favor and growing daily in support from ALL government agencies & most pols except the few out of touch for various & sundried reasons.
"Influential" types such as disgraced Stevens in Alaska the tip of the (sic)iceberg.
P.s. There has NEVER been an area/property... Land or sea that has value because of a wind turbine/farm: FACT.
I like mav & enjoy his humor; but in this purview...
Sadly, he is way out of touch with reality on a number of counts.
"It's really that simple."
Honestly.
Good nite all...
I fail to see how Cape Wind is going to generate the amount of energy required for the entire island of Cape Cod which consists of trophy homes along the site As the Richistan sprawl continues to change the otherwise quaint landscape, those homeowners don't want it either. Scientists who have built models claim wind turbines cost more to build and maintain than amount of energy they will actually produce. Has Jim Gordon appeared anywhere in a large public forum to contest what the scientists already know from models tested? To put a windfarm on the Cape is to alter it's natural appearance. Personally, I feel it would greatly impact a number of economic resources. I've already stated my arguments long ago when Dona and Barbara first joined the site. So when is the decision being made? Or will it be an ongoing debate for years to come?
Based on scientific wind studies conducted at the data tower in ACK Sound it has been calculated that CAPE WIND will in fact supply -on average- more than 75% of the electrical demands of the Cape AND Islands...
ISO NE agrees, and so do many more engineers etc with much more analytical brain power than (I suspect) you or I when it comes to these studies.
There are & will always be doubters & naysayers and most for their own personal agenda I suspect...
I don't think Jim needs to contest to anyone public or otherwise what he has applied for within specified guidelines of the State & Fed regulations for the project he has proposed... Nor should he be expected to subject himself to same.
As far as "altering it's 'natural' appearance"... You can say the exact same thing about:
- Houses... Especially those along the shoreline I would argue.
- Malls, commercial buildings, stores
- Marinas
- Telephone poles
- Microwave towers
- Heck... How about all those paved roads?
I expect final permitting will be early spring!
They cry "The view!" "The view!"....meanwhile, they build big mansions right on the beach that destroys the view of everybody in town!
And what has been destroyed in the name of the oil and coal industry??
We don't have the luxury of luxuries!
You don't want the wind farm?
Then give up the "American" way of life....and I see a TON of it around here.
Excess and greed.
Must digress/disagree to a point however...
"They" cry most everything BUT the ~VIEW~.
If not the Birds, it's the radar; if not the radar, it's navigation; if not oil leaks, it's search & rescue; if not tourism, it's we'll see it from the airport rotary...
It's ALL the S.O.S.
Thing is so much of the opponents $$$ comes from COAL & OIL...
Is it any wonder they don't want wind to compete?...
Probably more precious than the view eh?
You might try getting sound information: Blue H's demonstrator is to be a 3.5MW unit installed next summer. Their actual units will be 5MW. Their half scale unit now moored at sea off the Italian coast at Puglia is operating at far better rate of generation than expected and has already weathered two severe Mediteranian hurricanes with no problem.
In addition to all this, Blue H is not intending to compete with Cape Wind. Are you saying that Cape Wind will be the only wind farm we'll need. Also, the recently retired head of reasearch and design for GE, also head of GE Global, has signed on as a board member for a U.S. wind developer/manufacturer who recently obtained some very large financing and who will be using two blade technology. Gee, should this tell us something? Two blades are better than three for several reasons. But, you knew that, didn't you? Sounds to me as if Cape Wind is a little afraid of Blue H. Why?
You folks who claim to be so green-minded should be jumping for joy at what Blue H has to offer. But, you are Cape Wind flacks, pure and simple.
Wind farm developers have a choice of which turbine manufacture they choose just as power plant developers have choices for gas fired combustion turbines, like GE and Siemens for example.
Siemens is a competitor for both kinds of turbines. The Siemens 3.6 MW model SWT-3.6-107 dominates the world of large scale offshore turbines particularly in the United Kingdom with sales of at least 296 of these units. Here’s the current list of UK projects either currently in operation or under contract: Burbo Bank - 25, Lynn Skegness (with Inner Dowsing) - 54, Rhyl Flats - 25, Gunfleet Sands I and II – 52, Greater Gabbard - 140. Total: 296. With the NaiKun project in Canada the total jumps to 406 turbines.
I’m sure Siemens would be happy to sell their offshore turbines anywhere in North America.
It’s too bad that America trails the world in the offshore arena. The first in Europe was 1991. They have built 15 offshore windfarms since Cape Wind issued their application in 2001 and 11 more are under construction.
Here we sit and fuss over the view.
As for choices, you are so wrong. If you specify the GE model 3.6s turbine to MMS (section 2.1.1) you damn well better know that they are available ....and they are not. How many people from the upper ranks of wind turbine technology who know Jim Gordon have you asked about turbine availability? the most impressive one I asked told me that he told Gordon, "You can't make money out there." Gee.
Vagueness, it turns out, is the refuge of the wind rascal. In the case of Cape Wind we are talking about the GE 3.6MW model 3.6s turbine, specified to MMS (section 2.1.1) in 2005, but discontinued by GE in 2005.
Of course, we are also talking about Jim Gordon who does not live on Cape Cod, as he has told many, many people.
We are also talking about enormously more expensive power...aren't we?
Don't look to me at all what I said is what you are implying...
And oh yes, can't wait to be there for the Blue H enviornmental impact review...
You folks like nothing better than to change the subject matter if you can't respond to what matters...
Wind Jerks, "...pure and (very) simple."
Puuuleeeassss!
Anyway, this is not Blue H versus Cape Wind. Blue H will be developing its several wind farms in 30-300 meters of water while Cape Wind's one wind farm will be in the shallows known as Horseshoe Shoals. This is not an either or proposition, in spite of Walter's tacky crack about the red herring.
Gee....maybe you know, 'cause you are so smahhhht....what turbines will Cape Wind be using?
Matters not what (sorta like a guy thing ya know?) SIZE the unit...
The bottom line is the deliverable power cost...
25 miles out to sea on ~~FLOATING~~ turbines...
(With a ~~FLOATING ESP~~ Oooooeeee!)
v/s
>6mi out...
Come on you can do it!...
Tell me please tell me the COST of BLUE H's power from 20mi+ out to sea will be less than CAPE WIND's.
As I said: You are still trying to redirect & it ain't workin' here.
Ha... I know & I ain't tellin'!!!
Na na na naaaa na!
He just chokes & swallows hard!
Peter!... Won't you come out to play?
Why would the head of Siemens US comment on contracts signed with Siemens Canada? Different operating companies with different CEO's. But what do I know? I only worked for Siemens for eight years and right now am watching Siemens overhaul a power plant in AZ.
Why would anyone in Germany comment? Again, different operating company.
As far as any problems with new turbines when introduced this is FAR more common than you could believe. Siemens, GE, Alstom, Toshiba.....they all produce turbines of different types (steam, gas, wind) that have problems. There is not a single turbine type ever built that did not have issues when first released, but the bugs always get worked out. Nothing built by man will ever be perfect.
Please take over. I have overextended my welcome & have even scared Peter the Gladfly away...
Good luck trying to get him out again though...
Once you hit him in the no longers...
Well, he can't even (s)cream with the best of them.
Enjoying the warmth of the desert. Staying in Needles, CA and working in Mohave Valley, AZ right across the Colorado. Laughlin, NV is about 30 miles away. Plenty of Casinos. I was out here for the "Tuck Rule/Snow Bowl" game in '02 staying at the Harrah's and watched somebody lose 50g's on that game. Be back in the bay mid-December.
Gotta love the time zone difference....
While on this subject of “….comments from CEO’s….”, did you catch the Sept. 21 Boston Globe interview with Vestas CEO Ditlev Engel? [It was in the business section.]
When asked about the best places to put up wind turbines in the USA he suggested the state of Texas.
Then, when asked- “What about Massachusetts?’ he brought up Cape Wind and said-
”I am really wondering why anybody wants to put them up offshore because it's twice the price. So just as an outsider, I am just scratching my head saying, Why?"
AFTB, Do you think this guy knows anything about wind turbines??
Should we pay any attention to what HE says about where to place them??
Gee, I wish I had some notice of pending problems & it might take THREE DAYS without pay to solve it.
FAD...
(*uck a duck! This really makes me ill.)
I don't know what Vestas CEO Ditlev Engel has to do with a CEO from Siemens (pick one as they have lots of divisions in many countries). Peter thought it odd that the CEO of Siemens US and/or Germany didn't release an announcement when it would have been Siemens Canada making any kind of statement.
But you ask about Vestas CEO Ditlev Engel? Seeing his company still touts offshore wind on their site and it doesn't make a 3.6MW turbine I would say it would be pen1$ envy. Others have a bigger stick.
What's going on with your employer Calpine? Just over a year ago you told me-
"I don't care what the web site says, Calpine is planning to enter the wind market. Get your facts straight next time."
So... I re-checked the company web page about an hour ago, expecting to read a news release touting Calpine's entry into the wind biz. I did a word search for "wind" but the same 'facts' found last year on the Calpine web-page turned up... again.
Quote-
"…unlike traditional renewable resources such as wind and solar, Calpine's renewable geothermal power plants are capable of generating electricity twenty four hours a day, seven days a week.... wind and solar, because they occur intermittently, do not provide a constant, reliable energy source"
So when is Calpine entering the wind market?
Calpine isn't my employer it is a client of mine. When working any job I consider that client my employer as they are paying me for a service. I also count FP&L, Dominion, Oglethorpe, Dynegy, and others as clients. I do work Calpine jobs often and am on one right now. I only have a three rules on who I work for and when.
1. I only work five months a year. I can be sweet talked into six, but my price goes way up past five months.
2. I only work steam turbines, gas turbines, or generators couple to the same.
3. No nukes. I refuse to ever step foot into a nuke plant again.
When you were doing your wiz-bang research did you notice that not only did Calpine come out of bankrupcy in January but also has a new CEO by the name of Jack Fusco. Do a little wiz bang reasearch on him then tell me what you think is going to happen to Calpine. I have my thoughts but one way or another it will not matter to me what happens as I turn down more work than I take on.
So again I ask, what does the CEO of Vestas have to do with any CEO of Siemens?
Opps!... Didn't mean to suggest or offer any such thing who might be the ~ONE~.
I do know who will supply the turbines.
For sure... Their undies will stink.
;~)
I love it.
Sorry guys, but Mr. Fusco doesn’t appear to fall into the ‘Wind Fan” category.
He says- “….wind and solar, can only produce power when the wind blows or the sun shines, making them less reliable.”
Seems he is a very smart guy!
- PC's don't work when the sun don't shine...
And...
- OIL: Can only produce power when we can get it; can afford it; and are willing to sacrifice the LIVES OF OUR YOUNG MEN & WOMEN...
And...
COAL: Can only produce power after we STRIP our mountain-tops, POLLUTE our rivers & streams and DESTROY towns, communities & neighborhoods in the process...
And...
Nuclear: Can only produce power after... You can only guess how/when.
And...
Oh yes... GAS: How much; for how long; & when are the pipelines going to be built to get it?
Your so very smart Neil...
Tell us will you?
Choke, choke... Gag?
Let's just pollute the air, water & land more eh?
Yur blowin' in the wind & you know it.
I know it’s hard for you to come to grips with this ‘fact’, but OIL, COAL, NUCLEAR, and NATURAL GAS are RELIABLE FORMS OF ENERGY THAT YOU CAN DEPEND ON. You’ve benefited from them in ways you can’t even imagine- each and every day of your life- but now you take them for granted. I’d like to see how long you could get by without the ‘evil’ fossil fuels. You wouldn’t last for long.
Wind power on the other hand is, and will always be, UNDEPENDABLE.
Remember? You should…. you tell us you’re into sailing.
You are a bit naive.
Look alive.....another story about the slithering, armed to the gills cockroach ....lol ... If only Norman could tell us more.
http://www.boston.com/lifestyle/articles/2008/11/25/hounding_mailer_beyond_the_grave/
We should be utilizing every available source of renewable energy to us to help reduce our dependency on fossil fuels for the reasons I stated.
"Naive" is the mindset of the otherwise inclined...
Locally, that is evidenced by a certain few...
Paid for their 'services'...
Interestingly enough, primarily by the very same COAL & OIL industry benefactors...
Who don't want to 'loose' their seasonal VIEW to CAPE WIND.
They would rather have the rest of us continue to suffer the enormous consequenses of the smog coming from the fossil fueled power plants that blanket the CAPE & ISLANDS with the worst air quality in the state.
Stinkin' thinkin' Neil.
P.s. The benefits we have derived from fossil fuels is indisputable. That is not the point - Perhaps you missed it somewhere along the way...
Then again, it is S.O.P. for the S.O.S. cabal to try to redirect the subject when faced with the facts.
I read that article when it came out as I get that magazine. You didn't do your wiz bang research though. If you had you would realize that every company that Jack Fusco has been CEO of was sold under his watch. Sometimes whole, sometimes piecemeal. I found it funny that right after he was named CEO NRG put in a bid for Calpine. NRG had bought out Texas Genco. At the time of the sale the CEO of Texas Genco was.........Jack Fusco. You're slipping Neil.
Again I ask, what does the CEO of Vestas have to do with any CEO of Siemens making a statement?
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And, right now Siemens is involved in a major research and development project to design a new type of transmission to make their 3.6 MW turbines actually work. This is easily found on the web.
Something about this whole deal really smells. I notice that it was not the head of Siemens U.S. (Mike Revak) or anyone from the headquarters in Germany who made this announcement.
I guess this proves that GE is not making a 3.6MW wind turbine?