Thursday, April 11, 2013

Ashley Jackson: Tilting at Windmills


In Don Quixote by Miguel de Cervantes, the title character spurs his horse into an attack on the windmills he believes to be giants menacing his beloved homeland.  From this important 17th Century Spanish novel, the phrase “tilting at windmills” has entered the English language.  It refers to those we sometimes incorrectly view as our enemies, or actions we undertake in response to threats that may not be as dangerous as we believe.

Last week, I looked through the pictures that Ashley Jackson placed on his Facebook page.  Many are photographs of his paintings.  Ashley has often said that the novels of the Bronte sisters served as a huge inspiration to him.  The feelings that imbue Charlotte, Emily, and Anne’s writing are the same ones he tries to evoke in his paintings.  Understanding his love for their stories helps me understand how much he loves the landscape surrounding Haworth, where the sisters lived and wrote some of their immortal stories.  Given that, he naturally opposes anything that might blight his beloved moorland.  Chief among his concerns are a wind farm five miles away from Haworth, which plans to erect taller giants than those Don Quixote battled.  These new invaders will stand over three hundred feet in height.


Having visited Haworth last year, I can attest to the surrounding moorland’s beauty.  The wind farms he is protesting are nothing in comparison to the army I saw marching outside Mojave.  Yet, he is concerned that constructing more and taller windmills will not only desecrate the land, but also damage it in the name of green energy.  As a lover of Fiction, much of the impetus for my visits to England came from reading the works of English authors, as well as the TV show adaptations.  Could I visit Haworth, and in the presence of such tall windmills, still see the landscape of Jane Eyre or Wuthering Heights?  And is that an important consideration, when weighed against the potential benefits to the local residents?


I love the sleek design and capabilities of these modern windmills, and I thought they enlivened the landscape near Mojave.  That doesn’t mean that I would have welcomed their presence in Red Rock Canyon State Park, however.  So, is Ashley right to oppose these proposed behemoths?  Ultimately, it’s up to those living in a given area to decide how best to use their land.  For Ashley’s sake, and for all who hold the Bronte sisters’ moorland sacred, I hope the locals get the public debate necessary to make a wise decision in this matter.  For how our world looks to us—how we make it look--and consequently how it makes us think and feel, is just as important as how we use it to generate power and ease our finances. 

Dragon Dave

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