Here is the same idea, not so relaxing:
Audio: http://www.freesound.org/samplesViewSingle.php?id=28058
Video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zxryKaGKxAA
This was recorded the morning after a strong wind storm on the Oregon coast.
At 3:05 in the video (2:20 in the audio) a fast wave consumed the whole beach
and I had to sprint up the bank to avoid getting soaked. I was not quite fast
enough though. I got wet well above my knees and had a pretty good scare.
I wish I would have had a good recorder to fully capture the roar of the water
in the gravel as the wave retreated.
--- In Martyn Stewart <> wrote:
>
> There are many beaches around the world and they all sound entirely
> different to one and other. Sand, coral, volcanic. This is the sound
> of ocean waves breaking onto a pebble beach in Puerto Vallarta,
> Mexico. The different sounds of stones moving against each other as
> the tide pulls back out to sea is an amazing sound. Various sizes of
> stones roll against each other with the pull of the ocean making this
> just one of those tranquil sounds. Get yourself a tequila and enjoy...
> Recorded at low tide with the Nagra Ares PII+ recorder. 44.1K 24 bit.
> 22/3/2010. Puerto Vallarta, Mexico.
> http://soundofcritters.com/natural-sounds/recording-a-pebble-beach-in-puerto-vallarta-mexico
>
>
> Martyn
> ------------------------------------------------
> Martyn Stewart
> www.naturesound.org
>
> 425-898-0462
> -------------------------------------------------
> Make every garden a wildlife habitat
>
>
>
>
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