Rode my bicycle to the creek and recorded this on a zoom h4 at 44100 hzthere may be a few disturbances such as from myself (i am an amateur)this was recorded at a creek in colorado.
Birdsounds recorded with zoom h5 and post-processed with audacity. I think there are sparrows and a great-tit. Correct me if i am wrong, i am not an expert in bird sounds :) enjoy!.
Common terns are pale gray overall with a black cap. Breeding birds have a fully black cap that extends to the back of the neck and a gray belly. Terns comes from lac des chanteraines next to paris. I love listen to terns next to highway. It’s a pretty shocking contrast of noise pollution.
These sounds were made by this upxon-brand, key-size combination lock box: https://www. Amazon. Com/gp/product/b08ldj479d/. I bought this, and while fiddling with it i became mesmerized by the sounds it made. So i decided to record them foley-style. Recording starts with 15-second noise floor. Recorded with an iphone 7.
The sound of birds singing in springtime in a suburban forest. It was recorded with the internal microphones of sony pcm-d100 and then filtered to remove low-frequency rumble.
See title &. . . Https://freesound. Org/people/strangehorizon/sounds/610554/. Before-bleep-after-after-after-after. After's have noise-reduction & compression & pseudo-stereo.
Opening a cash register drawer. Beep then receipt printer spins up and the drawer slides out. Spring loaded clips flipped to take cash. Drawer slammed shut.
This was recorded by a pond with frogs calling, birds chirping, and the occasional car passing by. There is a little bit of wind noise, (still learning how to make decent recordings). Those parts can be edited out.
A recording made on the bank of a small stream. The prominent bird that you will hear -- especially at 30 seconds into the recording -- is a beautiful little bird called the louisiana waterthrush. I made this recording by attaching my zoom h4n to a sturdy tripod, and using the built-in internal stereo microphones on the zoom. The built-in microphones have a 90-degree and 180-degree setting. For this recording, i set the angle on 180 degrees.
I found this fairly small low area, in deep woods, with about 5 inches of water in it. I wouldn't really say it is a pond because it will probably be dry in a month or so after the spring rains. (i think ecologists would call this small body of water an "ephemeral" pond). These spring peepers were putting on quite a chorus as the sun was going down. You'll hear a different sounding frog - or peeper - several times in: at 9 seconds in, 13 seconds in and 15 seconds in. When i first heard it, it sounded like a creaky door! hope you find this fascinating and enjoyable as well. Would make a great soundtrack for a swampy piece. Recorded using my trusty rode ntg-2 going into a zoom h4n recorder.
Pacific tree frogs (pseudacris regilla) croaking in a disused quarry. This clip has one frog close, others in middle distance. Quite a bit of wind noise from nearby trees.
Recorded from inside a stone hole closed to a waterfall at tea's river, pontevedra. Spain - take 4. Sample rate 192 khz. Recorded with a rode ntg2 condenser shotgun microphone & tascam dr-100 mkiii.
This is a field recording i did on the morning (around 5-6 am) of may 20, 2020 in tenney park, madison wisconsin. It is a 2 minute recording of a bird colony. A bird expert told me they were probably purple martins, and there is a redwing blackbird chirping in the background. Recorded with shotgun microphone.
Edited from a sound that i uploaded recently. I removed the sound of something tapping the microphone. Sound of birds in a forest. Recorded with a phone and edited in audacity.