A perfect recipe for relaxation, Martyn. Similar to Grant's recently share=
d Whiritoa Evening#1 recording, yours also features a slow cadence, around =
5 oscillations per minute, of background geophony with animal species respo=
nding in cadence. The owl in yours waits for the lulls in the wind. The t=
rill of cricket's in grant's rises and falls reflecting the cadence of the =
waves. Both exquisite compositions.
John Hartog
--- In Martyn Stewart <> wrote:
>
> http://soundcloud.com/mijdog/early-evening-at-a-ferruginous
>
> The sounds of this owl greet the dusk and the winds that rustle in the hi=
gh canopy are a relaxing sound, in fact I actually fell asleep monitoring t=
his....
> Thank the powers that be I was awaken from insect bites...
>
>
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>
>
>
>
>
>
> Martyn
> *************************************
> Martyn Stewart
> www.naturesound.org
> www.soundofcritters.com
>
> Redmond WA
> 425-898-0462
>
> 47.65420118705451
> -121.98158740997314
>
> Make every garden a wildlife habitat
> **************************************
> Listen to the Birds and the Bees at
> http://naturesound.libsyn.org/
> ------------------------------------------------
> View a Nature Recordists Blog!
>
> http://naturesound.org/Blog/Blog.html
>
> http://naturesound.org/this_weeks_recordings/this_weeks_recordings.html
>
> Follow me on AudioBoo
> feed://audioboo.fm/users/31466/boos.atom
>
>
> Listen to my sounds on Facebook:
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>
> My dropbox for files:
> https://dropbox.yousendit.com/Naturesound
>
> P please consider the environment before printing this email
>
>
>
>
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