There's been some interest in this piece on these boards in the past. I notice that it's to be played ('Traditional', recorded by Casals; not the version by Murrill) on the Sunday Morning programme tomorrow (08/07/2012). (No timings are available, but I would guess at about 11am - but don't blame me if I've got it wrong .)
Song of the Birds
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Though I overslept somewhat, I managed to use the Zoom H3-VR ambisonic recorder to record a good measure of the dawn chorus from about 05:05 hrs this morning. Around 06:15 it would appear a small bird decided that the hairy windshield I was using might offer some handy nest-building material. An 8'25" 320kbps stereo mp3 clip derived from the 48/24 4 channel ambisonic recording of that section may be downloaded from https://we.tl/t-psw1oEmNBV for the next 7 days. Anybody care to identify the species of the culprit from its tweets?
Should anyone be interested in a binaural mp3 derived from the full 4 hours 35-minute recording, I would be happy to also upload that to wetransfer.com . That file is 629MB in size.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostThough I overslept somewhat, I managed to use the Zoom H3-VR ambisonic recorder to record a good measure of the dawn chorus from about 05:05 hrs this morning. Around 06:15 it would appear a small bird decided that the hairy windshield I was using might offer some handy nest-building material. An 8'25" 320kbps stereo mp3 clip derived from the 48/24 4 channel ambisonic recording of that section may be downloaded from https://we.tl/t-psw1oEmNBV for the next 7 days. Anybody care to identify the species of the culprit from its tweets?
Should anyone be interested in a binaural mp3 derived from the full 4 hours 35-minute recording, I would be happy to also upload that to wetransfer.com . That file is 629MB in size.
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Richard Tarleton
Bryn, your dawn chorus consists (on a single listen) of robin, blackbird, great tit, goldcrest, woodpigeon, blackcap, greenfinch (brief song flight) and carrion crow. The loud songster close to the mike at around 3 minutes is a blackcap, but I wonder if the bird attacking your mike is a robin? I'll have another listen later!
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostDawn Chorus here currently starts with a blackbird at 5.30am.
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Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostBryn, your dawn chorus consists (on a single listen) of robin, blackbird, great tit, goldcrest, woodpigeon, blackcap, greenfinch (brief song flight) and carrion crow. The loud songster close to the mike at around 3 minutes is a blackcap, but I wonder if the bird attacking your mike is a robin? I'll have another listen later!
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Up at 4.30 this morning to set up the H3-VR to record the dawn chorus. Now listening to the 5.1 surround mix from the ambisonic original. Pretty much dominant are the robins, but also rooks, tawny owls, magpies, jackdaws, ringneck parakeets, blackbirds, fox, collared doves, wood pigeons and many others I have yet to identify. Also my next-door neighbour, around 5 o'clock, checking on his children who tented last night, complaining that it was too cold for him.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostFeral pigeons nest beneath a neighbour's solar panels, despite all his attempts to keep them out.
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We inherited my sister-in-law’s house when she died and we found 17 pigeons’ nests in the loft. The noise was amazing. The council no longer treated them as vermin so we had to get rid of them privately. One evening a man in a van arrived and surreptitiously took a gun from the boot and took it up the loft ladder, later to emerge with some lumpy black bin-bags. All very surreal. He later returned to fumigate the loft and block off the holes in the eaves. Cost us £150.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostUp at 4.30 this morning to set up the H3-VR to record the dawn chorus. Now listening to the 5.1 surround mix from the ambisonic original. Pretty much dominant are the robins, but also rooks, tawny owls, magpies, jackdaws, ringneck parakeets, blackbirds, fox, collared doves, wood pigeons and many others I have yet to identify. Also my next-door neighbour, around 5 o'clock, checking on his children who tented last night, complaining that it was too cold for him.
Here's a link to a high data rate binaural mp3 (best listened to via headphones) of a c. 17-minute extract of that section:
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