FatherTed wrote:
It would be best suited to coastal valleys i think, inland the wind direction is harder to predict. Nice bit of thinking though.
Inland works too, if placed in valleys/plains where the wind always comes down the mountains from the same direction.
Or place them on the mountains themselves, where especially on the ridges the winds always move the same direction.
This is at 1902m above sea level in the middle of the European Alps (I lived there, down in the valley a few years ago):

They have heated rotor blades to prevent ice on them and automatically shut down when wind speeds are too high.
Pug wrote:
About a year ago, my town put up big wind turbines and the environmentalists freaked about bird kills. I imagine putting the blades up where birds like to roost isn't going to be very popular with them.
I've just read an article where a German biologist and environmentalist says that only 1-2 collisions of birds with wind turbines occur each year in Germany, as opposed to millions which die in road traffic.
Also, most birds are not frightened by the moving shadows, some keep a distance of several hundred meters and only few species of birds and bats are endangered, if the location isn't carefully selected (e.g. in or near wood, next to bodies of water).
http://www.wind-energie.de/fileadmin/do … _Flyer.pdf