You do have the most interesting and complete recordings out there.
I am still struggling at year 2, to get "class A" recordings of corn
growing as inspired by you. Much more boring, but I have to have it
and there has to be a better way to get it than what I have so far.
It is just hard to find a corn field during the right weather without
traffic.
Rich
--- In Wild Sanctuary <>
wrote:
> Thanks, Dan. No CDs w/ dunesong, yet. Maybe in the next series if I
> can get it off the ground.
>
> The nearest example is a recording of the Hubbard Glacier (Alaska)
> moving over the terrain that can be heard on WHALES, WOLVES AND
> EAGLES OF GLACIER BAY. As far as I know, it is the first and only
> recording of actual glacial movement. It was recorded by climbing
> down into a crevasse in the middle of the damned thing (not
> recommended), boring a large hole at the base, and dropping a
> hydrophone into the water that filled the hole and crevasse. As the
> glacial mass moved, creating the moraine, I was able to record (using
> a TCD D-10 Pro II) the signal that was measured down to 5Hz.
>
> Bernie
>
>
>
> > >Bernie's recording of the Kelso Dune is now posted in the
group's Files.
> >>
> >>http://groups.yahoo.com/group/naturerecordists/files/Dunes4.mp3
> >
> >Wow! This is fantastic. Is it published on any of your CDs, Bernie?
> >
> >-Dan Dugan
> >
> >
> >"Microphones are not ears,
> >Loudspeakers are not birds,
> >A listening room is not nature."
> >Klas Strandberg
> >Yahoo! Groups Links
> >
> >
> >
> >
>
>
> --
> Wild Sanctuary
> P. O. Box 536
> Glen Ellen, CA 95442
> t. 707-996-6677
> f. 707-996-0280
> http://www.wildsanctuary.com
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