<i>This photo taken during the recording. The recorders were fairly widely separated, both just a bit off to the left of this view, each sheltered behind a fairly chunky boulder, and very close to the ground, so that the stream couldn't be heard directly, and only as this atmospheric gentle burbling rumble.</i> <img alt="Recording during this session" src=https://freesound.org/people/Philip_Goddard/sounds/667200/"https://www.broad-horizon-nature.co.uk/130420_recording_skylarks_by_black_ridge_brook,_dartmoor_01.jpg"> <i>During this recording session: recorder R1 sheltered by an embedded boulder. All one can make out of it at that distance is the light-coloured speck -- its furry windshield about halfway between centre and full right. The Black Ridge Brook is notionally visible at far left, but in reality all you can see is its rather winding bed, for along that stretch it's slightly sunken into the layer of peat. Hence its sounding so muffled in the recordings.</i> <b>Techie stuff:</b> The recorders were Sony PCM-M10, both with R&#248;de DeadKitten furry windshield, and they were both placed on Hama mini tripod, which meant they were only a very few inches above the ground. Initial post-recording processing was to apply an EQ curve to compensate for muffling from the furry windshields, and, much more recently, to apply 200% widening of stereo soundstage, using A1 Stereo Control, followed by an EQ tilt away from the treble (straight line from no change at 100Hz, to -7dB at 8kHz) to compensate for the treble boost resulting from the stereo widening. <b>Please remember to give this recording a rating — Thanks!</b> <img alt="" src=https://freesound.org/people/Philip_Goddard/sounds/667200/"https://www.broad-horizon-nature.co.uk/me-icon_wink.gif">" />