Mr.MacAlpine, I appreciate your fixation on decibel measurement, but
I want to relate a story of my own.
You know where I live...on top of Seawall Hill. It was very still here this
morning and the stillness brought to mind nights when I am kept awake or
awakened by noise. I jumped in my car and calculated the mileage from my
door to the site of numerous beach parties on the shore in summer.
My bedroom faces the east. Many a night when the young are celebrating their
lives, I not only hear the noise of music and talking; I can understand
every word distinctly - every cuss word and expetlive, even the words of the
playing music as if it was outside my open window.
It is 1.5 km. from my driveway to the shore. How do you set a proper
distance with the decibel measure as all you've got and seem to trust in?
There are nights when I close my window and bedroom door and move accross
the hall to a bedroom on the western side.
Let me add another true story. On Saturday last, a wedding took place at a
neighbors nearby. Again it was a fairly still evening. I heard nothing at my
place, but in another direction a neighbor cleary heard the music at 300 m.
away.
That may not seem so strange.However,over the mountain, 3700 m. away from
the party, according to the map,in Gullivers Cove just below the mountains
crest, the music from the party was heard, not as clearly assuredly as at
300 m., but nonetheless it was heard clearly enough that a resident stepped
outside to see if the music was coming from the nearby woods, if not
consistently but certainly with some sporadic regularity.
I am not criticizing my neighbour for celebrating a family members wedding.
It's the bravest who have the courage to marry today. They need to be
celebrated. My question is: "What distance would a bylaw have to set, and
what sort of decibel measurement would be effective in that case? Noise
differs, of course, when the grass is long than when it is flattened by the
elements...., when trees are cut or grow, and countless other factors.
It seems to me that determining a fixed decibel maximum would be
commensurate with shooting yourself in the foot.
Dan Mills
Wednesday, August 5, 2009
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3 comments:
Mr Mills: This has nothing to do with windmills but you say you live on top of Seawall Hill? Do you live on Robicheau Road? Near the old Robicheau Farm?
I live on highway 217, a short distance to the entrance to the Robicheau Rd. just west of me...That road is no longer passable by car all the way through and ends at the St.Longinus Cemetery....dan
I'm new at this.You may have rec'd a reply before....d
Hullo Dan, I am not so good with the blog stuff either, my kids do the Facebook or whatever, and my son made one for me, but I dont have a clue how the face thing works. I picked up on this blog thing because I was looking for info on the cem on Seawall Hill (Robicheau Rd), in 1966 I think they tore down the old chapel and built a new brick church, Mary Queen of Heaven, then some years ago they closed it down all-together(not enough Catholics to go around) and sold the church as a house to a retired priest. I emailed St Patricks about the cem but got a pretty short reply (and they dont even know who is the caretaker,it used to be a fella named Thibault, but they did not have any info on him).email me at crzypopmac@aol.com I am just not used to blogging and have a hard time to figure out how to write on it. MAC
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