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Pine-forest with wind between 1-3 bft at daytime / winter / January / Holland.
Audible:
Modulating wind trough the needles of the pine-trees. Whole recording
Creaking of branches or a tree. It squeak sound so now and than in whole recording sometimes
Several woodpeckers searching for insects under the bark of the trees. It gives a soft kind of cracking and soft hammering sound. Whole recording.
Tit singing / calling sometimes.
Far fireworks sometimes
From moment 03.08; kids talking / calling in woods far away
#05:30 woodpecker calling / singing
#16:37 two man on mountain-bikes passing
#22:00 two man on mountain-bikes and running woman passing
#24:20 end; mother with two boys passing, coming from very far away. High altitude plane audible after 2 minutes. Wind increasing. Tit singing.
#33:05- 31.52 Two walkers passing is synthetic clothing and very high altitude plane
About the area, national park Loonse en Drunense Duinen
(Text by Irma de Potter,Ranger of this area) Dutch website: https://www.natuurmonumenten.nl/natuurgebieden/nationaal-park-loonse-en-drunense-duinen
In the Loonse en Drunense Duinen you will find forest, heathland and especially a lot of sand. It is one of the largest shifting sand areas in Western Europe. The wind can blow undisturbed in many places, resulting in an ever-changing landscape. By purchasing it in 1921, it has been protected for 100 years and we can still enjoy this Brabant Sahara today.
You can roam freely on the sand plain. So there is plenty of room to explore extensively. Marvel at the submerged trees, enjoy the chirping field crickets and quench your thirst at one of the many cafes or restaurants on the edge of this nature reserve. Walking, cycling or on horseback: it's all possible here. With the wind in your hair and the sand in your shoes. You may even come across the sheep herd. The sheep keep the heath short and eat away saplings. This is how they keep the area open.
The Loonse en Drunense Duinen still has 270 hectares of shifting sand. That sand creates rather extreme conditions: the soil is dry and nutrient-poor. The difference in temperature between day and night can be as much as 50 degrees Celsius. This ensures a unique flora and fauna. The animals and plants have adapted or feel at home in drought, aridity and temperature fluctuations. Sand sedge and various lichens, for example. And the viviparous lizard, sandpit beetles and sand bees. All species that love sand.
In the last Ice Age, the polar winds blew sand from the north to Brabant, where it remained in thick packages. For a long time this sandy plain was covered with primeval forests. Until the fourteenth century the trees were felled by people. They used the wood as fuel. The bare plain was filled with heather, where the farmers grazed their cattle. This intensive grazing and the sod cutting of the soil depleted the soil. This gave the sand free play. For a long time, the sand was a major problem for the residents. Villages and fields threatened to disappear under it. Trees were planted to stop the advancing sand. You can still see the traces of this today: find the submerged trees that only peak above the sand hills with their crowns.
January 2nd 2013, end of Steegerf Drunen, Nature reserve Loonse- en Drunense duinen, Holland, 1 pm afternoon, wind W, 1-3 Bft
Rode NT4 in Blimp > Sony PCM D50, directed W
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Type
Flac (.flac)
Duration
34:28.889
File size
362.9 MB
Sample rate
48000.0 Hz
Bit depth
24 bit
Channels
Stereo
5 years, 10 months ago
Obrigado! Thanks!
11 years, 3 months ago
thank you great sound :D