Foghorn
Last night was damp and foggy, and a ship anchored off the coast was sounding its horn - the first time I've ever heard this from the house.
Recorded with a Sennheiser K6/ME66 microphone and an Olympus LS-10 recorder. Filtered in Cubase LE to remove noise and boost low frequencies.
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Whitethroat
Recorded on a breezy day at Warren Point in Dawlish Warren NNR. For the first few minutes of the recording the bird is singing in the distance. It then makes a short song flight near the microphone, falls silent for a minute and then sings close by.
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Recorded with a Sennheiser K6/ME66 microphone and an Olympus LS-10 recorder. Gain boosted and aircraft noise removed using Cubase LE.
Nightingales
Over the weekend we visited family near Gloucester. Their house is about a mile from the RSPB reserve at Highnam Woods, a breeding site for Nightingale (Luscinia megarhynchos).
It's over ten years since the one and only time I'd heard a Nightingale, and that was just a few brief snatches of song from a hedgerow in the Cotswold Water Park, so I was keen to hear the birds and maybe get some recordings. On Saturday morning we headed out to the wood to scope out possible recording sites. The weather was patchy, with strong gusts of wind and rain showers interspersed with periods of sun. We heard a few brief Nightingale calls at a couple of places in the wood, which of course stopped the moment I took out my recording equipment.
We decided that, weather permitting, we'd have another try in the evening when the birds would be in full song. Throughout the afternoon the weather remained changeable, but around 7pm the clouds broke up and the wind dropped, so we headed back to the wood. The site is close enough to the A40 main road for there to be significant traffic noise. For this reason, together with the need for a kit that could be packed up and taken to shelter quickly if the weather broke, I chose my Sennheiser K6/ME66 in a Rycote windshield instead of the NT1A stereo rig.
On arrival at the wood we made our way to the first site where we'd heard some brief song during the day, but although the evening chorus was in full swing there were no Nightingales to be heard. The second site we'd found during the day was a 2km walk along some fairly swampy paths, so instead we wandered along a ride we hadn't explored earlier. We hadn't gone far when a brief burst of song from the bushes announced the first Nightingale of the evening. I set the microphone up using the trunk of a large tree as both support (for portability I had the Rycote zeppelin mounted on a telescopic monopod) and to block out as much road noise as possible. There were at least three, possibly more, Nightingales in the immediate area and they continued to sing for about an hour - not always from the same spot, but often close enough to the mic to get a good recording. They were competing with a nearby Blackbird and I'm fairly sure there was some interaction between the two species, as their phrases almost always came simultaneously, as can be heard in this first recording:
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As the sun went down the other birds fell silent and the Nightingales continued singing, but unfortunately they moved across the ride. This meant my microphone, which had previously been pointing away from the road with a tree as a baffle, was now pointing directly at the traffic. With some heavy parametric EQ in Cubase LE the song can be rescued from the overwhelming roar of vehicles, but loses some of its richness:
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Both recordings were made with a Sennheiser K6/ME66 microphone (mounted in a Rycote windshield with windjammer) and a Tascam HD-P2 recorder. Post processed in Cubase LE for EQ, level boost and fade in/out.
Willow Warbler
A few weeks ago I picked up a Sennheiser ME66/K6 combo at a bargain price on eBay. The ME66 is a short shotgun microphone capsule, which fits onto the K6 power unit. The K6 runs off 48v phantom power or from a single AA battery, meaning the microphone can be used with any of the smaller audio recorders which don't supply phantom power. The microphone makes a nice light-weight alternative for when I don't want to carry around my NT1-A stereo rig. It's mono only of course, but unless you have over £2000 to spend on a Sennheiser MKH30/40 mid-side pair, you're not going to find a low-noise stereo solution that fits into a single Rycote windscreen.
To test the mic out, I took it to our local nature reserve, Dawlish Warren NNR. It was a beautiful Saturday afternoon, and the reserve is immediately behind a popular tourist beach, so most of the recordings came out with a lot of human noise. After walking around for a bit I found this Willow Warbler (Phylloscopus trochilus) singing in a clump of birch trees. You can just hear some quiet conversation from the nearby golf course, and an occasional vehicle, but these are drowned out by the incredibly powerful song of the warbler, which was a good 20m from the microphone. Also audible are Rook (Corvus frugilegus), Blackbird (Turdus merula), Blackcap (Sylvia atricapilla), Blue Tit (Cyanistes caeruleus), Herring Gull (Larus argentatus) and Linnet (Carduelis cannabina).
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