Log in to Freesound

Problems logging in?
Don't have an account? Join now

Problems logging in?

Enter your email or username below and we'll send you a link to help you login into your account.

Back to log in

Almost there!

We've sent a verification link by email

Didn't receive the email? Check your Spam folder, it may have been caught by a filter. If you still don't see it, you can resend the verification email.

Default title

  • Sounds
  • Tags
  • Forum
  • Map
    • Sounds
    • Packs
    • Forum
    • Map
    • Tags
    • Random sound
    • Charts
    • Donate
    • Help

Remote solitude with skylarks and wind, on Cut Hill, Dartmoor (improved)

Not enough ratings
Philip_Goddard

November 15th, 2025

Follow
Soundscapes > Nature
Yelverton, Devon, England, United Kingdom
Animals (including birds and insects)

(Improved version of https://freesound.org/people/Philip_Goddard/sounds/667372/ , with correct degree of widening this time, and thus much more solid and 3D soundstage.)

A peaceful and eerily intense sense of remote solitude here (you can surely almost cut it with a knife!), on what is reputedly southern England's remotest spot, on the top of Cut Hill, Dartmoor, Devon, UK, with fairly stiff breeze chasing around the peat hags. The odd meadow pipit can be heard, and a distant carrion crow.

This is a concatenation of two pairs of concurrent recordings I made on 6 May 2013, on the summit of Cut Hill, with the recorders at least part-sheltered from the breeze by suitable peat hags. The wind often produces a dry rustling sound, which is mostly from the dead purple moor grass from last season. At this stage the green new growth is hardly showing yet, so the landscape here is still mostly a very anaemic straw colour rather than green, though beginning to change.

Advisory
This is a quiet, immensely peaceful soundscape, with a very quiet opening, so the wise listener goes easy with the volume control!

Cut Hill in the distance, from south spur of Amicombe Hill
On the broad south spur of Amicombe Hill, on my way to Cut Hill (broad rise in centre on skyline) for this recording session (i.e., on 6 May 2013). Very challenging terrain for hiking, but at least one is serenaded by skylarks at this time of year.

This recording session on Cut Hill summit area
View during this recording session (the first concurrent pair) — R2 recorder, with some rushes close-by, which give a distinct 'rushing' quality to the wind sound, while R1 was sheltered by one of the skyline peat scarps in the centre of this view. Positions for the second consecutive pair of recordings were some 10 to 20 metres to left of this view, again sheltered from the stiff breeze by respective peat hags.

Techie stuff:
The recorders were Sony PCM-M10, with Røde DeadKitten furry windshield, and they were both placed on respective Hama mini tripod, which meant they were only a very few inches above the ground, but at least could be relatively sheltered by suitable peat hags.

Initial post-recording processing was to apply an EQ curve to compensate for muffling from the furry windshield, and, much more recently, to apply 160% widening of stereo soundstage, using A1 Stereo Control, followed by an EQ tilt away from the treble (straight line from no change at 100Hz, to -6dB at 8kHz) to compensate for the treble boost resulting from the stereo widening.

In the earlier version I'd overdone the widening (200%), which had weakened integrity of the soundstage, though that was still a great improvement on the atrocious stereo imaging of the original.

Please remember to give this recording a rating — Thanks!

This recording can be used free of charge, provided that it's not part of a materially profit-making project, and it is properly and clearly attributed. The attribution must give my name (Philip Goddard) and link to https://freesound.org/people/Philip_Goddard/sounds/833550/

Sound illegal or offensive? Flag it!
ambiance
ambience
ambient
birds
birdsong
Cut-Hill
Dartmoor
Dartmoor-National-Park
Devon
England
field-recording
high-moorland
moorland
natural-soundscape
nature
open-moorland
peaceful
peat-hags
remote
remoteness
skylarks
solitude
spring
UK
wilderness
wind

Type

Flac (.flac)

Duration

99:06.510

File size

448.3 MB

Sample rate

44100.0 Hz

Bit depth

16 bit

Channels

Stereo

Comments
Please log in to comment
Philip_Goddard

3 days, 17 hours ago

(This is an adaptation of a comment of mine on the previous version of this recording here.)

It could be very chilly out there, especially with the stiff breeze, but on that day, with quite strong sunshine, I was very comfortable in shorts and T-shirt (possibly added a long-sleeved shirt for the lingering), and had lost a lot of body water getting there from near Sourton just outside the NW edge of the Moor, and had already drunk the lion's share of my water by the time I arrived on Cut Hill.

There was a consequent funny-scary thing about that session. During the second pair of recordings, after a little quiet prowling around I lay down in the partial shelter of the large summit peat hag area for a nap, and just enjoyed the sound of the wind and the birdies, just letting it all wash over me. Pure bliss! But then the 'fun' came when I decided to get up from that. Both my legs, both upper and lower, went into severe cramp the moment I started moving them for getting up!

Boy, was that scary! I tried all sorts of manoeuvres, and every time the cramp came on more. I was getting desperate to drink my last 1/3 litre of water, which looked to be my only chance of getting out of this, if indeed it would be enough to stave-off the cramp, but to be able to that, unsurprisingly I had to get up first. All sorts of death scenarios were racing through my mind as I was wondering what the eff to do, having no mobile phone on me to do a 999. I could bellow really loud, so could probably get some distant mortal eventually to hear my distress calls if I really had to take that line of action.

Anyway, after about 20 minutes of struggles I managed to haul myself, gasping like a stranded fish, up to a semi-upright position, leaning on the nearest peat hag edge, just by my rucksack, and thinking What the eff do I do now??!, and managed to get the water bottle out and drink the remainder — so of course burning my boats, so everything was at least potentially still very much not okay at that stage!

Fortunately I'd already had some pretty terrifying episodes (always on my own), especially in the Scottish Highlands, where I'd got myself into a potentially fatal situation, where all it took was amusedly to acknowledge the worst-case scenarios without rejection and then switch attention from 'what if' to the actual nitty-gritty of 'what is'. I recount a real fun example on my page "Fear versus reality — a salutary mountain experience", https://www.clarity-of-being.org/fear-reality-experience.htm .

So, this time, while gradually recovering, still leaning against the peat hag edge, I looked around in the excellent visibility, and ran through my mind how much challenging leg-work would be required respectively for each of the possible escape routes from this remote spot.

In fact in these very dry conditions (in a prolonged dry spell), the answer was (almost) a no-brainer, staring me in the face. Go south, over the whole tract of boggy terrain, via Devil's Tor and down the West Dart valley to Two Bridges. In those conditions the particular boggy terrain was just soft and springy, and my legs' cramp threats progressively diminished to nil before the end of that walk-out. Big sigh of relief!

  1. 6 downloads
  2. 1 comment
Attribution NonCommercial 4.0
You are free to share (to copy, distribute and transmit) and to remix (to adapt and modify) as long as you credit the author of the sound and do not use the sound for commercial purposes. Get attribution text...
Login to download
Share url:
920 x 245
Embed example, large size
481 x 86
Embed example, medium size
375 x 30
Embed example, small size
About Freesound Terms of use Privacy Cookies Developers Help Donations Blog Freesound Labs Get your t-shirt!
© 2025 Universitat Pompeu Fabra