Here in the island, a storm has blown up after a location was revealed
for the interconnector. The what? An interconnector is a posh word for
a sub-sea electricity cable. As I have reported before, they are
proposing to build THREE windfarms on Lewis. The electricity generated
by these monstrosities has to be transported to the National Grid, and
a sub-sea cable is the only way to do that. The place where they think
this cable may dive under the billowy waves is the tiny hamlet of
Gravir.
View from Gravir to the sea
I am purposefully also giving the Gaelic name: Grabhair. Indeed, people
in the village are grabbing their hair to pull it out. They will be
confronted with an electricity substation the size of 20 houses, lines
of huge pylons marching down one of the more remote glens in Lewis
(Glen Ourn) to bring the power generated from the windfarm in Eishken.
As well as that from the windfarm in Park, across the valley. I know
the area very well indeed, having spent 3 months there in the winter of
2004/5. Want to read about that? Go back to the very first entry in
this blog and read from there. Don't go back manually, this is entry
2,410.
Returning to the here and now, as I have repeatedly written on here,
southeast Lewis, the one remaining wilderness area in the island,
stands to be desecrated and turned into an industrial zone. I know,
nobody lives there. Apart from the 200 people of South Lochs (the
district concerned), and nobody is bothered about them. And they appear
to want the windfarm - do they? It is supposed to be the economic
salvation of their backwater - or so the town fathers have decreed. But
having 200 ft pylons by your front door, as well as a huge substation,
emitting that continuous 50 Hz hum, well that changed the game a bit.
When I was in South Lochs, that winter two years ago, I had a magical
time. I would spend days wandering amongst the lochs and low hills of
the areas, exploring for hours on end, until the sunset put a stop to
it. Many's the time I reached the end of the Gravir Glen road end just
in time, at 3.30pm. I still had to walk 6 miles to return to my base in
the even tinier village of Kershader. But I was alone in the
wilderness, with only the moor, the lochs, the shrikes and grouse, the
rain, the wind and the sun.
That will be lost if this plan for the interconnector goes ahead.
Technorati Tags: interconnector, wind, farm, turbine, eishken, park, pairc, pylons, electricity
Wednesday, 21 March 2007
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It sounds like a wonderful place. I hope it doesn't get ruined.
ReplyDeletePam
How very depressing if this comes to pass Guido. It sounds like a little piece of heaven. Jeanie
ReplyDeletebeautiful pictures. i would not be to happy if they were building that by my house either.
ReplyDeletetake care
hugs
noelle
http://journals.aol.com/rayne1123/ThewaysofRayne/
You would have a special reason for not wanting to see this beautiful area lost. This takes me back to when the big conflict was going on over Glen Canyon dam and the proposed Lake Powell that would cover so much distance. However the lake did not distract much from the beauty of that place and actually made a lot of it more accessible to others, but this would not be the case there. I was struck by you spending so much time exploring the area. What a love for nature you do have. You would love the area where I grew up. Four spectacular roads leading into this little green valley. Scenic spots without end!@ And much more at that end of the state and northern Arizona. But I do like to see this island through your photos, the only way many of us can get to these spots at the ends of the earth from us Gerry
ReplyDeleteSuch a pretty place...hope they don't over do things and ruin it...take care...have a great weekend.
ReplyDeleteJoyce