Earth Song - 10 hours of yellow warbler and least flycatcher song from May in Idaho - 10 horas de los cantos de chipe amarillo y papamoscas chico
Description
[EN/ES] A 10-hour track of midday May song from yellow warbler (Setophaga petechia), least flycatcher (Empidonax minimus), and song sparrow (Melospiza melodia) from riparian cottonwood forest at the Kootenai Wildlife Refuge, Boundary County, Idaho. This recording accompanies Wild With Nature Episode 65: Earth Song (https://open.spotify.com/episode/1SNB2VdvzkTxLnLLiVDLVY?si=HoBR23rNQUyVBDpme_Il0w). Sounds recorded by me, Shane Sater. If you enjoyed this episode, I invite you to check out my community of supporters on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/wildwithnature.
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10 horas de sonidos de la naturaleza para dormir, sin interrupción. En este episodio escuchamos los sonidos de los cantos de los pajaritos a mediodía en mayo por un bosque ribereño de álamos en el Refugio de la Vida Silvestre Kootenai en el Condado de Boundary, Idaho, EU. Las aves cantoras que escuchamos son el chipe amarillo (Setophaga petechia), papamoscas chico (Empidonax minimus) y gorrión cantor (Melospiza melodia). Este episodio de sonidos ambientales acompaña al Episodio 65 de Wild With Nature: Earth Song (hasta ahora sólo disponible en inglés). Los sonidos fueron grabados todos por mí, Shane Sater. Si te gustó este episodio, te invito a unirte a mi comunidad de seguidores en Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/wildwithnature.
[EN/ES] 10 hours of the hauntingly beautiful song of a varied thrush (Ixoreus naevius) and the comforting refrain of a Townsend’s warbler (Setophaga townsendi) from a late May morning after a rainstorm in a western redcedar (Thuja plicata) forest in northwestern Montana, USA, as raindrops drip...
Published 11/01/24
[EN/ES] 10 hours of September rain falling on grape leaves in a garden in western Montana, with a soft introductory quack from a hen mallard (Anas platyrhynchos) in the background. This ambient sound track accompanies Wild With Nature Episode 98: Waiting for Rain: Making it through Climate Change...
Published 10/04/24