Conisholme

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Conisholme
Conisholme is located in Lincolnshire
Conisholme
Conisholme
 Conisholme shown within Lincolnshire
Population 87 
OS grid reference TF402955
   – London 135 mi (217 km)  SSW
District East Lindsey
Shire county Lincolnshire
Region East Midlands
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town LOUTH
Postcode district LN11
Dialling code 01507
Police Lincolnshire
Fire Lincolnshire
Ambulance East Midlands
EU Parliament East Midlands
UK Parliament Louth and Horncastle
List of places
UK
England
Lincolnshire

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Conisholme is a small settlement and civil parish in the East Lindsey district of Lincolnshire, England. It is on the Cleethorpes to Mablethorpe A1031 road, and 7 miles (11 km) north-east from Louth.

Community

Conisholme is approximately 3 miles (5 km) from the Lincolnshire coast. The parish covers an area of 1,240 acres (5.0 km2), but only a small amount is taken up by the A1031 road - from Ludney to the west to halfway between the village and Braygate Bridge, to the north-east. The major village of North Somercotes is to the east. The parish mostly extends south-west across Conisholme Fen towards the Louth Canal and North Cockerington.

The county council Louth Marsh and district council North Somercotes wards are both Conservative, and represented by Robert Palmer who is also the Chairman of East Lindsey District Council.[1]

The parish church is dedicated to St Peter. It is in the North Somercotes group of churches, with Grainthorpe.

Wind turbines

The wind turbines[2] at Fen Farm on Conisholme Fen, south-west of the village, have the capacity to supply 24% of electricity needs in East Lindsey,[citation needed] Each turbine has a hub height of between 165 feet (50 m) and 252 feet (77 m), a rotor diameter of 157 feet (48 m), an overall height of 292 feet (89 m), and produces 800kWe.[2] The farm, operated by Ecotricity, produces enough energy for 13,000 homes.[citation needed]

The turbines were designed by architect Norman Foster[citation needed] and built by Enercon. Construction began in December 2007, and was finished on 17 April 2008.

During the early hours of 4 January 2009, one of the twenty wind turbines was damaged. National newspaper coverage speculated that it had been hit by an Unidentified Flying Object after local reports of strange lights in the sky.[3] The story received coverage on the BBC, ITV News and Sky News.[citation needed] Ecotricity, after its preliminary examination and before forensic results, stated that UFO's were "at the bottom of its probability list for the cause", and they were considering that the turbine may have suffered from a lightning strike, collision, metal fatigue, or design, material or maintenance failure.[4]

References

External links