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Nature recorded near farm in Holland during an 85% eclipse in the Netherlands.
An audio study for you freesounders. Leave your comment if you like.
Start of a partial solar eclipse on the beginning of the recording 9.32 am.
Max eclipse (sun covered 84.2%) after 1.05 hour 10.37 am
End eclipse 28 min after end of the recording 11.48 am.
Total duration eclipse 2.18 min.
Sorry that I did stop the recording to early. It was a mistake of me. Even that I hope you get an impression of what happened with nature during this eclipse.
What you hear;
In front of me a small farm with cows and stable in front on 30m. Around me the fields. Left two farmers with tractors harrowing.
17.00 – farmer opens the stable and let the cows inside. Door remains open.
21.00 – (44 minute before eclipse) starlings (twittering birds) become very active, fly around in large group and land in the trees around the farm like the do during sunset. A lot of crows calling. Lapwings in the field and other small bird active. Sometime a woodpecker in the distance.
36.35 – (28 minutes before eclipse) all the starlings land in the trees again and make a lot of noise. Other birds including the cock start to sing loud also.
53.00 – (12 minutes before eclipse) most of the birds become quiet.
66.00 – (moment zero of the eclipse, some sparrows audible for a minute.
72.00 – (6 minutes after eclipse) first active and more and more join in slowly.
84.00 – (20 minutes after eclipse) cow become restless and want to get out, starlings start singing in the distance.
93.00 – (29 minutes after eclipse and normal daylight again) cows are driven outwards
Not any special moment that can be called as dawn-chorus. I was expecting that, but I was wrong. Maybe dawn-chorus starts usualy one hour before sunrise. Is that an explanation???? One thing Is for sure; in the beginning of the eclipse there were more birds audible than after 50 minutes after the maximum eclipse. Next time, in 2048 I will try again. ;-)
More on this field/polder though the year
Weather: temp 4c, cloudy fog, wind N 1-2bft,
Location: Grobbendonksekooiweg, Gement polder, Vught, Van Gogh Nationaal Park, Noord-Brabant, Netherlands (Holland), Europe. Google Maps 51° 40' 20.00" N 5° 16' 11.00" E (see geotag) 51.67222 5.26972
Date/time: March 20th 2015, 09.30-11.30 am
Gear chain: Rode NT4 XY (fore sides left and right) and a Rode NTG-1 shotgun (for mid-signal) in Rode Blimp > Sound Devices 302 (coder for MS-recording >Tascam dr-100 Mk2.
This strange MS-setup is developed by me to make it possible to make wide stereo recordings on a distance.
This is a MS (mid-side)-recording is encoded in STEREO Left-Right, so you can encode it to MONO without losing quality of sound.
This is a modern high quality -q10 (1500kbps) OGG Vobis compression file (48000Hz/16bit). The quality is almost as good as the 48/24-WAV original file. You can easily use this file in HD-film and HIFI music-tracks. The sound-quality is, after this compression technique is still very high. The file size reduction is about 75% of the 2304kbps WAV-track
Larger and original 48/24 flac-file available on request by PM. Send me your email address than and I will wetransfer it to you. Licence and personal terms of use will be the same a this track.
When you use this sound it would be nice if you spent a voluntarily donation to freesound.
YOU ALWAYS HAVE TO CREDIT/ATTRIBUTE me (klankbeeld) and freesound.org in your work if you use this sound. You can do it like this please: http://freesound.org/people/klankbeeld/
This sound may NOT be used in (royalty free) stock material. Thank you.
To hear, you first have to listen
Type
Ogg Vorbis (.ogg)
Duration
113:05.699
File size
388.8 MB
Sample rate
48000.0 Hz
Bitrate
480 kbps
Channels
Stereo
9 years, 4 months ago
thanks hackerb9 for your real nice comment and information.
9 years, 4 months ago
Great work and wonderful documentation. I love the concept of making an audio diary of an eclipse and thinking to capture the animals and their "dawn chorus."
I saw a Japanese study showing that roosters (and I presume other birds) have an internal sense of time. They can be induced to crow by light, but not as much as at the actual time for dawn. As you mentioned, they actually start crowing an hour or two beforehand. http://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/how-do-roosters-know-when-to-crow-3501338/
(P.S. Love the name of your city, it looks like Gobbledygook to me.)
10 years, 10 months ago
As I'm typing I'm on "21:00". Very active birds indeed :-)