“Very destructive,” is how Mike Provost, a 62-year-old retired insurance salesman describes the so-called Windsor Hum. “If you think of thunder, and you take that thunder and constantly repeat it for hours and days, weeks, that’s all it is.”
Residents on the west and south side of Windsor – a city of 210,000 people that sits just across the river from Detroit – began complaining of a mysterious noise some six years ago, blaming it for rattling windows and trembling wall hangings.
“You can’t get away from it,” says Provost. “You go outside to work in your garden, you go outside to enjoy the sun, the noise is there.”
CapitaLand Ascott Trust Q1 Gross Profit Up 15% on More Demand, Bigger
Portfolio
-
CapitaLand Ascott Trust achieved a 15 percent increase in gross profit
during the first quarter of this year, compared with the same period in
2023, with...
No comments:
Post a Comment