I Only Heard These Sounds After Moving to America
Комедия
Britain and American don't just look, taste, smell, and feel different; they also come with different sounds. Here are some that I only heard after moving to the United States.
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3:56 Point of order: The tornado siren actually indicates that Mom and the kids should go down to the basement, while Dad goes to whichever room has the best view of the oncoming storm and mutters that it isn't that bad until a cow smashes into the window, at which point he should rush downstairs and say "Its really picking up out there!"
@jackiewindham8199
Жыл бұрын
Until a tree fell on the house during hurricane opal.
@TehButterflyEffect
Жыл бұрын
Yep pretty much. Had our first tornado warning earlier this year, and the dads stood at the window while the moms and kids went and freaked out in the closet.
@monty4336
Жыл бұрын
That sums it up pretty well. The man of the house will be on tornado watch during storms while everyone else runs for cover. When a man says "oh sheet, here it comes" you know things have turned for the worse. 😆
@lidmc796
Жыл бұрын
Typical dad shit, love a drama 😂
@heystella8611
Жыл бұрын
"I gotta let you go we got cows!"
I watched a video recently of a blind British girl who was visiting America. She was absolutely thrilled with the crosswalk designs as they allowed her to safely cross the road and know how much time she had to cross. She said that the crosswalks in the UK aren’t nearly as helpful. So as annoying as the sound is to us sighted people, just remember they’re there to give blind people more independence and safety.
@jamesburton1050
Жыл бұрын
Was that Lucy, I think last name Edwards?
@AmoralTom
Жыл бұрын
@@jamesburton1050 When her hair is strawlike it really gets to her.
@Sarah-ic4yu
Жыл бұрын
@@jamesburton1050 yes I think it was! I stumbled across a video of hers, I think it was a short one
@jamesburton1050
Жыл бұрын
@@Sarah-ic4yu she's such a sweet person!
@dennisharrell2236
Жыл бұрын
That British crosswalk alarm sounded like a smoke alarm.
One sound I never heard until I moved to the mountains was a soft rain falling on hundreds of thousands of leaves. There's nothing quite like it. Loud and yet soothing.
@BenjaminCronce
Жыл бұрын
A gentle roar
@rayanderson5797
Жыл бұрын
A lot of older folks around here talk about rain on a tin roof. I only heard it once or twice, and it was an interesting experience.
@AkumaShadowz
Жыл бұрын
It's my favorite white noise when meditating or trying to sleep 😊
@ajlphoto
Жыл бұрын
I grew up in the rural northern Midwest surrounded by woodlands. One of the FIRST things I noticed when I moved to the city was how much more "flat" and bleak rainfall sounded.
@cdoninger1
Жыл бұрын
Or wind through a pine forest, very distinctive sound.
Anyone who enjoys the sounds of crickets in the evening should visit an area with spring peepers (a tiny frog species here in the US). For many Americans, spring peepers interrupted by the croak of a bullfrog and light rain is a soothing melody that conjures memories of warm summer evenings sleeping with your windows open.
@cynthiagilmore7024
Жыл бұрын
I had to look up what spring peepers sound like because I've never heard of them before (I'm from Colorado) It reminds me a lot of the coqui frogs that sing in Hawaii year round. When I first lived there it took some getting used to, but now I'm on the mainland again I occasionally look up youtube videos of them singing to help me sleep.
@clueless_cutie
Жыл бұрын
@@cynthiagilmore7024 if I ever get out to Hawaii, I look forward to hearing them. I love frogs. Probably from growing up listening to em I hope you get to visit the East Coast and hear em for yourself. It really is an all encompassing experience to chill in a campsite listening to it
@carolnearson7932
Жыл бұрын
I live in central CA and was surprised to hear spring peepers here, too. Didn’t hear them in NYC growing up (😂😂), but did in NJ in my later teen years. It’s a wonderful thing to hear!
@angelinabrown3142
Жыл бұрын
I live in town now but I used to live in the country and the frogs were always fun. Cicadas in the summer, too.
@sandywich7834
Жыл бұрын
My house in Massachusetts is situated across the street from a bog and I love to hear the peepers every year. I grew up in Pennsylvania and never heard them until I moved here.
The sound of crickets might be relaxing when you're out in the country, but having one inside your house making that sound can drive you bonkers. The noise becomes so pervasive that they're difficult to find.
@frantremblay1630
Жыл бұрын
A field of crickets outside can be quite pleasant to listen to when falling asleep - a single cricket in your laundry vent chirping all night, not so much.
@maxwellmurdoc9256
Жыл бұрын
Yeah, a cricket in the house is hell. As soon as you get near them, they stop chirping so you can never find them. I found that spraying apple cider vinegar around the area where you think the cricket got in does the trick. It's not that bad of smell and it fades quickly (or you just get used to it I suppose).
@sheenajae
Жыл бұрын
@@SuzA8110 lol the hell? 😂
@tay13666
Жыл бұрын
I find the sound of a cricket in the house to be soothing. My grandfather always said it was a sign of good luck. And then later when I was an adult, I had tarantulas for pets so I always had a tank of feeder crickets.
@reginaphalange1830
Жыл бұрын
I have successfully captured and release around 50 crickets since I got my cat. He find s them and wears them out until the cricket is just praying for death. I'm able to pick them up and put them back outside. But before the cat - they would drive me crazy if they got in the house as I could never find or catch them. Good kitty also caught a few lizards. Yikes!
It's going to sound weird, but living up in the mountains, one of the sounds I've grown to enjoy is the sound of falling snow. When there's just a light snow falling with little to no wind, you can hear it hit the snow on the ground, the trees, and whatever else. It is incredibly peaceful.
@mwhitelaw8569
Жыл бұрын
Then , when it's snowing heavily It sounds like a giant stomping around Comin' down in clumps.....gotta love it
@TraceyMush
Жыл бұрын
Sounds amazing.
@jijitters
Жыл бұрын
Oh wow. There's a lot of snow where I live but I've never heard it. That sounds lovely.
@snow-wlkr7xplorer494
Жыл бұрын
Tis indeed a marvelous sound!
@HappilymarriedChris
Жыл бұрын
I live on the side of a mountain in Pennsylvania. The sound of it snowing is amazing. I love opening the window, having a fire blazing and snuggling under a blanket. It is simply the best.
I lived in Japan for a few years and I remember very clearly that the bird sounds were different. At first, it surprised me, but I quickly realized "duh, there's different species here." I actually started to miss the Ohio bird sounds because I think they're more melodic and Japanese birds kind of sound like squeaker toys for dogs.
@lonesparrow
Жыл бұрын
I moved from Ohio to Texas and I miss robins. I get excited when they pass through a couple times a year on migration. In Ohio robins were everywhere!
@arbiterbleeds2761
Жыл бұрын
@@lonesparrow we still get them year-round in east texas, do you live in a more arid part?
@lonesparrow
Жыл бұрын
@@arbiterbleeds2761 No but I live in an urbanized prairie area and they are woodland birds. So they only pass through my neighborhood on migration. If I went to where there was more woodland, maybe I would find more of them! I could hop in a car and go on a robin hunt one of these days, which is funny because when I was learning to identify birds in Ohio there were so many robins I had to learn to ignore them!
@cauldronmoon
11 ай бұрын
😂 you made me chuckle 😂😂
2:08 in the US it’s actually become somewhat nostalgia inducing for people around my age (I’m 30) to hear a mourning dove call. Somehow, we all had the collective experience of hearing the bird, not knowing what it was, but having it ingrained as a distinctive sound of our childhood.
@WeaponizedGoochsweat
Жыл бұрын
It's nostalgia for me and I'm in my 20s. They're not the brightest birds though.
@MetsterAnn
Жыл бұрын
They are all around my house, they make horrible nests in my eaves that their eggs fall through. Mourning Doves are lazy birds, a couple of sticks shoved together and it’s home. They do have a lovely call. As a kid I thought they were owls! We also have lots of crows, not such a pretty call but they don’t squawk much, they line up on wires, staring at you. I’m older, but I used to hear frogs nightly each summer, a very pretty sound. Back in the safer days we’d sleep with windows open, listening to frogs and crickets. They are gone now, or at least, are not in my area. I’m back in the same city but I’m 45 minutes from where I used to live as a kid.
@trippsmclovin
11 ай бұрын
Its awesome but not when you close a bar and they wake up at 0630😅
@LadyCynthiana
11 ай бұрын
I'm in my 30s and it's very nostalgic to me, but my mom would always point out that it was a mourning dove (and that's what I think about every time I hear it, my mom :D)
@karnerbutterfly
8 ай бұрын
I'm 70, and right up until the past 3 years or so, I thot they were owls! I never could lay eyes on who was actually making those sounds. (Pun not intended, but now that I think about it, it's kinda cool... who who.)
Crickets might be a relaxing and almost welcome sound if you're outside. Inside it's one of the most maddening sounds imaginable.
@russellstarr9111
Жыл бұрын
I came down here to say just that.
@maiamaiapapaya
Жыл бұрын
Are you saying there are crickets inside your house?
@russellstarr9111
Жыл бұрын
@@maiamaiapapaya Not at this time, but it has been known to happen.
@riggs20
Жыл бұрын
Yep! They’re impossible to locate & capture! 😂
@nancyholter5646
Жыл бұрын
@@maiamaiapapaya When I was on the farm, yes. Constantly. Here in town, occasionally.
I grew up in Illinois and Indiana, I'm surprised you didn't mention cicadas! Also an insect that makes a loud (yet comforting) noise. I didn't realize that wasn't common until my Irish neighbor from Dublin reflected on when she moved here about how "the trees were screaming" hahahah it's my favorite sound in summer.
@Nyronus
Жыл бұрын
I came into the comments to bring this up. I moved to Louisiana as a lad and I remember just one day becoming aware that the entire forest around me was thrumming and hissing with this unnatural noise that came from every direction at once and never seemed to end. It was frankly a little freaky at the time.
@catbird7007
Жыл бұрын
Yep, good ol' Midwest! Cicadas on the hot summer days, katydids at night, and crickets for 3 seasons!
@mahenchaphotog170
Жыл бұрын
Cicadas are how you know it is high summer in Chicago!
@fredheyman5434
Жыл бұрын
@@catbird7007 - katydids are the best! You van almost understand their language as they talk to each other across the street.
@catbird7007
Жыл бұрын
@@fredheyman5434 As long as they stay across the street...from me! Lol. They kinda creep me out, as do most bugs.
Mourning doves are sometimes more reliable than my alarm, i love those noisy guys. For bird-watchers (or those curious) the Merlin app is great for identifying new birds!
@slushelhusky2448
Жыл бұрын
I used that app!! Very helpful to identify birds i hear in the morning screaming outside my window :)
@AFmedic
Жыл бұрын
Same here. My 2nd floor apt has a balcony/deck and I have a bird-bath with a small solar fountain. I have 2 pairs of Mourning Doves that habitually visit. While I'm sitting outside they will walk along the railing 2-3 ft away from me. Their call is so relaxing.
@lissi6931
Жыл бұрын
And Cornell bird ID!
@Arelenedhel
Жыл бұрын
I love my eBird and Merlin apps.
@TheJulithegreat
Жыл бұрын
I'm in Texas and mourning doves are everywhere! I love their cooing in the morning.
I'm surprised you didn't mention the routine testing of tornado sirens on sunny days. I grew up in the Midwest, and it seemed like all my peers had a story about a time they panicked and ran home from playing outside before they had the life experience to understand that there was absolutely no chance of a tornado in that beautiful blue sky. I can't imagine what foreigners think the first time they hear that siren and everyone around them just carries on with their utterly normal activities.
@rayevinnmartin7462
Жыл бұрын
Was it on the first Wednesday of the month for you guys as well?
@Dustyvv
Жыл бұрын
We had a tornado warning on a sunny day. It took out a long line of houses in my neighborhood. It went from blue skies and sun to dark clouds and an EF-2 tornado within minutes.
@beaker_guy
Жыл бұрын
I had something of the experience of "foreigners" when my sister came to visit from California. I'd been living in the Midwest for about 20 years at that point. When the tornado test happened we were just idling in line (in the car) at a Hardee's. She looked at me and said something like, "Are we supposed to DO something?" I couldn't even figure out what she was talking about at first as the test had barely registered in my mind. 🙂 I assured her that it was only a test, but I could tell she was still looking out the windows for a few minutes to be sure. 🙂🙂
@kimu.6227
Жыл бұрын
First Wednesday Of the month at noon.
@fireborrito1082
Жыл бұрын
@@rayevinnmartin7462 no first Friday for my area at least. Although we had a tornado siren go off the other day but there was no tornado and it wasn’t the first Friday.
I moved from the American South, full of birdsong and trillions of insects in its sound, to Alaska. The silence of an Alaskan winter outside is so unsettling that ones ears can eventually become sensitive enough to hear the sound of snowfall. It was spooky for me but sort of peaceful. But then I realized it was -21F and I needed to keep walking.
@dirtywhitellama
Жыл бұрын
Snow is very muffling also. Even in normally noisy areas, a decent snowfall cuts the sound down immensely.
@OssianMills
Жыл бұрын
As a southerner in the summer, the sound if cicadas is the song around here. Such a unique sound to the south in the summer.
@qeijkak
Жыл бұрын
I love the sound of snow falling.
@ronniechilds2002
Жыл бұрын
Can you hear the 100-zillion trillion Alaskan mosquitoes?
@NYx3
Жыл бұрын
I live in NYC so there is always constant background noise. When I was in Virginia in the Blue Ridge Mountains and lost power the silence kept me up all night. I felt like shouting out my window, "WILL SOMEBODY START MAKE NOISE!!! I CAN'T SLEEP WITH ALL THIS SILENCE!!!" Then I started hearing off in the distance the sound of a motor. I thought it was a work crew trying to restore power. I was told everyone hears that and nobody know where it comes from. During the lockdowns here it got unnaturally silent in the city and I heard the same sound. There have been reports of sounds like this as far back as when the first settlers set foot here. Even the natives said they always hear it. The planet is making noise and there has never been an explanation to what is causing it.
I grew up in the midwest, and when I moved to south Florida, the thing that suprised me the most was how much I missed hearing songbirds. Floridian birds are all exotic-looking, but they sure don't sing purty.
@dennisharrell2236
Жыл бұрын
I feel sorry for anybody who doesn't know the difference between the songs of a cardinal, a red winged blackbird, and a red throated sparrow.
@joshuamccaulley7040
Жыл бұрын
First time there I was next to a ritzy golf course and a long this course was a sanctuary. I swear when the sun went down the pterodactyls and velociraptors come out. Those things make some crazy sound's.
@SSHitMan
Жыл бұрын
Haha yes Florida birds always sound angry. Probably because I see them mostly when they're fighting over fish scraps.
@madabouthollyoaks411
Жыл бұрын
@@dennisharrell2236 loons. Loons everywhere
@TurboGC8
Жыл бұрын
A tree full of blue-jays sounds like 50 car alarms going off at once
My grandmother was in a tornado and said it sounded like a freight train. So, when I heard a freight train one night at 1:10 a.m. and didn't live by any train tracks, I knew it was a tornado. By the time you hear it, you have only seconds to get downstairs before things begin hitting your house. And, yes, I kept telling my husband to get down and he kept running around doing I don't know what until we both smelled fresh pine where trees were now through our back glass doors. I found it strange for a disaster to have such a nice smell as fresh pine trees. Which brings me to Britian. I visited there in the late 80s and I remember the smell. It actually had a smell which I thought was interesting. It wasn't a bad smell. They had these sodas you could buy that were grapefruit flavored. And, the smell was like those sodas. And, I remember these black and white dogs running around and everyone seem to have the same dog which I very mistaking thought was a mutt. I had no idea they were the beloved border collies that herd sheep, very much a pure bred and smart dog. And, I remember the Brits were very nice and would tell us that they don't like Americans, but they liked us. I felt special to be liked by the Brits. They asked if I lived near Hollywood or Disney World. I don't think they knew the US was at least 3000 miles across, but that's Ok. I was most impressed that they kept their country so beautiful. There were no ugly strip malls and tacky signs. I hope it's still that way. We had a jolly ole time and I would go back to visit anytime.
@Flyboy207
Жыл бұрын
I had a Border Collie growing up, if they’re all over England then I might have to go just for that… I miss mine.
@anneteller3128
Жыл бұрын
@@Flyboy207 They were all over the place back then. But, that's been years ago. I hope they are still that popular. As you well know, they are one of the smartest dogs.
@gujwdhufjijjpo9740
Жыл бұрын
What's wrong with strip malls?
@klondike3112
Жыл бұрын
@@gujwdhufjijjpo9740 Plenty, but that's an hours-long rabbit hole of urban design theory.
@iesika7387
Жыл бұрын
My granny's house was next to frieght tracks and we all slept right through a tornado the night after thanksgiving one year, except my mom who woke up briefly when a door blew gently shut, just awake long enough to think "huh that train sounds weird" and roll over. Killed 7 people and pulled all our christmas lights down without unplugging them, because tornados are extremely weird that way.
Living in the mid-Atlantic region ( Appalachian mountains) the sound of a screaming Bobcat will send you running for your life. Not because you think it's a bobcat trying to attack, but rather a demon or evil entity chasing you wanting to take your soul. It's almost human sounding. Made me cry when I was camping as a child. I thought it was a witch lol.
@appalachiabrauchfrau
11 ай бұрын
We've got a big female with kits in our back acreage and she sounds like a very drunk man trying to do a demon impression.
Moving from Massachusetts to Texas, I noticed the unearthly sound of cicadas in the summer. It's amazing how loud they can actually get.
@W1Kilo
Жыл бұрын
Oh yeah. Sadly they're not as promanant as they were when I was a kid here in Colorado.
@CheeseBae
Жыл бұрын
Cicadas can get up to 100 decibels loud. That's around the same loudness as a motorcycle, lawnmower, or live music concert.
@HailAnts
Жыл бұрын
Don't they only come out every 17 years?
@W1Kilo
Жыл бұрын
@@HailAnts Oh yeah... I feel a bit dumb now.
@porqpai7082
Жыл бұрын
There are other species of cicadas that come out every summer.
As a kid, two of my favorite nighttime sounds were bull frogs croaking and the howl of coyotes. Of coarse there were crickets but it was always unnerving when they would all stop chirping at the same time. My imagination would conjure up all manner of monsters ambling about in the dark.
@LindaC616
Жыл бұрын
Yep! That's always a sign! 😆
@2008rmartin
Жыл бұрын
Hahaha YES! And they know when you are looking for them. They shut up
@gabrieldee345don5
Жыл бұрын
When crickets suddenly stop, it my be the rain approaching. Or even a storm.
@tbthedozer
Жыл бұрын
Grew up in the country with the frogs and the crickets and with the windows open the noise was quite intense on warm nights - probably close to the volume of a push lawn mower (~74 dB) and more like millions of them out of time like a huge crowd talking. Oh yeah and when it gets quiet you wonder how big is the potential storm that might be coming as a sudden shift to a cooler breeze than 15 minutes ago wafts through the windows. Don’t forget about winter when the lake freezing and cracking in the cold nights rattling the pictures on the walls. 🤷♂️ all pretty normal country living in the upper Midwest.
@danquaylesitsspeltpotatoe8307
Жыл бұрын
gun shots as guns are banned in the Uk the illegitimate monarch doesnt want the revolting peasants to revolt!
I grew up on the Mississippi, the sound of frogs has a very similar tranquil feeling to crickets. Mixing them together with the sound of water and the occasional low hum of a barge is a very peaceful symphony
Thunderstorms sound very different in every geography in the USA. They're a rushing wind, followed by instant downpour in the plains. Echoing thunder with startling lightening flashes, occasional pitter-patter, and an eventual steady rain in valleys / canyons. In wooded areas, a slowly building symphony from a quietening of animals to a rustling of branches and leaves, a quick few spatters of rain upon the canopy, then a rather sudden build up of constant splish-splashing falling from the leaves to the floor, coming to a crescendo in a full, blowing wind with thunder and the crashing of old, dead limbs and trees, and the roar of a river over rapids, falling from the sky. Thunderstorms are awesome in the USA.
@camillep3631
Жыл бұрын
Texas has the second loudest thunder in the US, FL the loudest. Really hard to sleep when 60,000 ft toad stranglers are rattling you out of bed...what we call big t-storms
@LgSutterby
Жыл бұрын
One of my favorite activities is sitting and watching the storms approach across the plains of Kansas. Can see them for miles, watching lightning dance through the thunderheads.
Locally the tornado sirens are tested at 11 a.m. every Friday morning. Years ago when I was attending a local university we had a student from Britain, and one Friday morning she got to hear the tornado siren for the first time. Her mouth dropped open and her eyes grew wide, and she looked very confused why we didn't seem concerned.
@amandap7733
Жыл бұрын
Wow that almost sounds excessive. In my town (in Missouri) they only test them on the first Monday of the month.
@1998tkhri
Жыл бұрын
Let's hope there isn't an actual tornado on a Friday at 11am
@oldiebutgoodie2554
Жыл бұрын
Same where I live and it’s been that way for decades. Every Friday at 11 AM the siren goes off!
@oldiebutgoodie2554
Жыл бұрын
@@amandap7733 Maybe to you it is but to me, I’m fine with it!
@oldiebutgoodie2554
Жыл бұрын
@@1998tkhri With cell phones and modern day media alerting’s on bad weather I don’t think that’s gonna be a problem!
I would have thought a clear and defined letter ‘R’ would have been a sound you hadn’t heard until moving here 😆
@unnecessaryapostrophe4047
Жыл бұрын
Of course he's heard a rhotic _R._ They belong at the end of a word ending in _AW._
@Kelsbels15
Жыл бұрын
Perhaps he’ll have a long hard think about that next time he looks in the ‘meerrrr’ 😂
@LindaC616
Жыл бұрын
@@unnecessaryapostrophe4047 and A. Like Donna, Linda, etc
@GypsyWolf7
Жыл бұрын
Yeah even I think we sometimes sound like pirates after I've listened to British accents for hours on end. 😆
@ohioalphornmusicalsawman2474
Жыл бұрын
The Scottish accent has a pretty strong r sound
An unusual noise I hope never to hear again: In the part of NJ where I grew up we had a lot of a certain species of tree. I think it was called a mock cherry tree because while it produced little while flowers, it didn't produce any fruit... or at least, no edible fruit. Every spring we would see the arrival of tent caterpillars or bag caterpillars. And they had a special preference for this type of tree. So every spring, they would practically strip these trees bare. One spring day I was walking in a dense wooded area that had a high percentage of these mock cherry trees. I heard a faint sound that I couldn't immediately identify. As I stepped closer to one particular tree I realized the sound was the combined munching of all the caterpillars at once. It gives me a shiver now just recalling that noise. It was a noise similar to a gentle rain, but then you realize what it really was.
@kelly1827
2 ай бұрын
As a kid, I remember being involved in an effort to try to reduce the "Gypsy Moth" caterpillar (now renamed Spongy Moth) population collecting them in buckets and drowning them. Those caterpillars were decimating the Pine Barrens. It was unnerving to be in a wooded area heavily infested with them. It sounded like you were in a room full of people eating tortilla chips 😂.
The sounds of summer vaction as a kid in Ohio, The AC running, cicadas, crickets at night, bicycles going by, the bird calls primarily in the morning and evening, the crack of a baseball bat, the music from the ice cream truck, kids playing in the distance. Just good times all-around.
@withthelambs1614
Жыл бұрын
Don't forget the never ending lawn mowers
@misstiger1454
Жыл бұрын
@@withthelambs1614 My neighbor seems to always be mowing his lawn or blowing the slightest scrap of leaf off his driveway
@Jessejrt1
4 ай бұрын
Cicadas, yes! There are a few of those buggers every year that are off cycle and make "that" sound!
My one son-in-law is British and his first time here was in summer. We were on the deck behind the house and he exclaimed, "What is that sound?!". I didn't know what he was talking about but then he made an imitation and I realized it was the crickets! Apparently not a thing in the north country over in England. We don't even really notice them but they are in fact quite loud and omnipresent here on the east coast in PA. Good video as usual!
@mikejohnson9118
Жыл бұрын
Crickets are one thing...the Cicadas are WHOLE other thing! Especially when they are out in force.
@gabrielkovacs1276
Жыл бұрын
@@mikejohnson9118 Yes, Cicadas are out all day and maybe all night in the forested parts of Oklahoma during the summer, and they are always out in force.
@MonstehDinosawr
Жыл бұрын
Don't know what you're on about. I live in North West England and crickets are definitely a thing here. I used to catch them. We also have grass hoppers.
@JessieInTheSky09
Жыл бұрын
Oh how I miss the sound of a rural PA night. No city sounds, only nature sounds, and you can see the Milky Way so clearly
@galaxywolf969
Жыл бұрын
Crickets can be very loud in PA but absolutely (unfortunately) nothing like the cicadas here in Austin, Tx. where I now live. I remember growing up in PA and hearing a few crickets but here in Texas and much of the Southwest we actually get cicada swarms which are unbelievable until you see one and hear one.
The reason we like white noise is because it's a good substitute for silence. Sometimes you can't get complete silence depending on if you live near a city or who you live with. If you turn off the A/C, then suddenly you can hear cars and neighbors, etc.
@cathyshappell1148
Жыл бұрын
So true!
I literally cannot sleep in silence, I have to have some sort of white noise because any out of place sound wakes me up. The cricket sounds and frog noises are my favorite, reminds me so much of my childhood falling asleep near a creek or pond bank.
I remember cicadas sounding so annoying to me when I moved from the West coast to Chicagoland. Now I barely notice them lol. Tornado warnings can even be slightly different sounding in other towns so it's actually helpful to hear it the first Tues of the month. It's more freaky to hear it from a distance not on that day....cuz you're left paranoid wondering how close the tornado is to you and if you'll get a soon enough warning lol
@eFrog27
11 ай бұрын
You’ll notice the cicadas next year
@darkstarr984
11 ай бұрын
Different species of cicadas sound slightly different. Like the 17-year cicadas we had a few years ago in Pennsylvania were way louder than the usual ones
@kldawson53
11 ай бұрын
That's so funny. Cicadas sound like summer to me. I love them ... although the special cicada year is deafening 😅
@David-yw2lv
5 ай бұрын
In Southeast Texas,cicadas were called locusts for some reason.
Here in Kentucky, and in other states as well in the south, we have these wonderful little frogs called "Spring Peepers." They come out in the spring in almost any available small to large body of fresh water and they sing to attract a mate. For me, it's a wonderful little sound, beginning at dusk and carrying on through the night. As a child, I would fall asleep to them every spring...and I still think of their little song as soothing.
@hollybeeme
Жыл бұрын
We have Spring Peepers in NY too. If you live near a place with wetlands or a pond, which I used to. I always loved that sound too.
@paulbriggs3072
Жыл бұрын
@@hollybeeme Way up in Ontario as well.
@jmtimmons
Жыл бұрын
And here in New Jersey and Delaware. I love that sound. I had a pond on my property in when I used to live in Delaware so I got to hear peepers and bullfrogs. It was wonderful.
@racheallange2056
Жыл бұрын
I am a Kentucky girl born and raised.. I live in Bavaria,Germany now ...I miss them Peepers so much....
@racheallange2056
Жыл бұрын
@@paulbriggs3072 That is good to know we have talked about moving to Canada one day..
One year we rented a house with railroad tracks running literally at the end of the backyard. I thought I would _never_ get used to the noise (let alone the way the house swayed!) when the trains went by, but it was just a matter of weeks before I was instead startled into waking up in the middle of the night because one of the freights was late. Oddly enough, I miss hearing trains now.
@billolsen4360
Жыл бұрын
I know what you mean
@dimesonhiseyes9134
Жыл бұрын
I lived near some tracks. They were about a quarter mile away. I grew up on a farm with some woods about a quarter mile away in the opposite direction of the tracks. I loved late at night if the train would go by it would blow it's horn and with my window open I could hear the sound bounce off the trees over and over again.
@StamfordBridge
Жыл бұрын
You were quickly trained.
@ryanblack3757
Жыл бұрын
I actually miss them too. There is something strangely soothing about the sounds of the trains as they become familiar and then even expected.
@queenb67
Жыл бұрын
Same here. When I was 7, we lived in a farmhouse that was across the road from the tracks that ran parallel to the road. I would stay up to watch for the trains. Years later, my aunt had a house that was practically next to the tracks. The trains ran every 45 minutes going north.
I love how cardinals sound like little laser guns. One excellent bird ID book is the Sibley Field Guide to Birds. Used it in my ornithology class to great effect
When I lived in a smaller town in Oregon they had a couple of wood mills. When you got up just after sunrise and everything was calm you can hear the mills running and echoing off of the mountains. Also a sound I miss is the deep rumbling of freight trains and the ghostly sound of their horns.
I went on a little hike in the winter once in the mountains and all the little tree branches were covered with ice. It was windy, and deserted, and the branches covered with ice sounded like dry tinkly wind chimes. That along with the sound of the wind itself was so so beautiful and magical. I'll never forget that.
@josephg.1.130
Жыл бұрын
And then when they explode 💀
@CearoT
Жыл бұрын
This is one of my all time favorite sounds. Or sitting on a lake and hearing the ice expand and crack, not dangerous cracking, the long twonk sound.
@jacquelinej143
Жыл бұрын
I'm from Vermont, and I love those sounds
@donnaknudson7296
Жыл бұрын
@@jacquelinej143 This was in Pennsylvania, on the Appalachian trail. Hawk Mountain. It was totally deserted that day which made it even more peaceful.
@donnaknudson7296
Жыл бұрын
@@josephg.1.130 You nut! 🙃
Crickets chirping is INDEED an oddly relaxing sound. It's the one insect sound that I can think of which can actually lull a person to sleep. Try that with a bee buzzing around. Or a chorus of cicadas blasting across the neighborhood. But man, a cacophony of trilling crickets and tree frogs at the right time of year, the occasional owl. .. What a relaxing set of noises to nod off to at night.
@ZlothZloth
Жыл бұрын
Unless ONE cricket gets in your room....
@TheAechBomb
Жыл бұрын
@@ZlothZloth had one in my bathtub of all places, it amplified it by quite a bit
@Great_Wall_of_Text
Жыл бұрын
Crickets and spring peepers make my tinnitus issues melt away. It's the only time I get any peace from the noise in own ears. Chirpy animals, gotta love em...except when there's just one in the house. I hate that guy.
@Caseytify
Жыл бұрын
Mostly the 17 year cicadas here. They're annoying in that they'll fly into _anything,_ but they're not that loud. Usually you'll hear one chorus go for a few minutes, then fade out, after which another chorus answers, then fades out.
@TheRyelandfamily
Жыл бұрын
Crickets are ok. A singular cricket is obnoxious 😉
I grew up in a relatively hot area next to a river, so every summer I fell asleep listening to frogs. But I think the most prominent background noise that featured heavily in this video (and in everyone's lives) that wasn't mentioned: cars rushing by. So many cars just whizzing by, engines pumping, tires crunching over bits of loose gravel, wind whooshing... no mention of it. It's such a background noise you didn't even think to mention it.
Probably not common in many parts of the states, but there are some places that have a lot of trains due to industrial cities/states. I lived very close to trains for the better part of my life and loved hearing them chugging on by.
@stephaniecruvant9130
8 ай бұрын
Yes, soothing sounds of childhood.
Hey Laurence, fellow Chicagoan here, and I'm surprised you didn't mention the loud-as-hell cicadas. I checked online, and apparently there's only one kind of cicada in England and it's pretty localized. In contrast, around here they pretty much take over the joint and scream their lungs out. (Yes entomologists, I know they're not literally screaming, it's some kind of muscle attached to a membrane, but you get the gist.)
@AnnieWarbux
Жыл бұрын
I thought for sure that would be on the list. I really do enjoy hearing them, most of the time. The Sounds of Summer!🤗
@Bedwyr7
Жыл бұрын
Oklahoma childhood for sure.
@mb-fs1yo
Жыл бұрын
Kansas as well
@pamelah6431
Жыл бұрын
From the Rockford/Janesville strip. The cicadas are screamers!
@SarahRenz59
Жыл бұрын
@StellaMayfair7 Ah yes, cicadas! Especially the years when the 17-year variety hatch. There are so many of them that the sound is otherworldly, like an alien spaceship hovering in the sky.
I love the ambiance of summer in my state so much. There's nothing like sitting outside at dusk, listening to crickets and cicadas, and watching lightning bugs flash.
@ObiWanShinobi67
Жыл бұрын
Yes! Lighting bugs. Not fireflies.
@hugh8090
Жыл бұрын
I always loved that about florida when travelling to the states. Falling asleep to the singing of thousands of cricket's by the pool. Bliss
@rwill156
Жыл бұрын
It's kind of amazing how much insect noise there is in the summer, it's just there so you don't really give it much mind. But then you go out on a winter's night and realize just how quite it is. At least in the northern county side.
@kadinzaofelune
Жыл бұрын
I had not seen the littel buggers flash for years unti I started driving cross country again. Missed that.
@SaltyCracker402
Жыл бұрын
You just described what it's like living here in Eastern nebraska
Grew up in Arkansas and I sleep the absolute deepest with the background noise of an intense thunderstorm. Living in Colorado now and it’s one of the things I miss most about the South
@MsSkipperkim
11 ай бұрын
Drive on over to Kansas. It will sound like home.
I live in Alberta, Canada and I grew up falling asleep to the sound of Boreal Chorus frogs (like a LOT of them) in the summer, and coyotes the rest of the year. When I moved to the city for school, I found that (surprisingly) I missed hearing the coyotes screaming at 3am. But then, when I moved back closer to where I grew up, I was ecstatic when I could hear the coyotes yipping on my first night there. It helped me settle right in to my new home 🐺😊
When I came back from Iraq, the silence was deafening. I immediately noticed the lack of noise in my barracks room, and realized just how accustomed I had become to the constant sounds of helicopters and airplanes and rockets flying overhead. It was a very surreal experience, as I had simply expected to sleep well with the newfound quiet.
@sbrazenor2
Жыл бұрын
I got used to fireworks and explosions during the riots in 2020, because my neighborhood had large commercial fireworks exploding from just before sunset to just before sunrise for about 70 nights. Generally civilians aren't surrounded by loud explosions for months straight, so it was definitely a new experience. Besides being annoying, it never felt dangerous. I had to wear earbuds and shooting ear protection to get to a point of being able to sleep. The worst part wasn't how loud it was, so much as how it was never consistent, so it was hard to adjust to. (Different timing, locations from night to night, etc.)
@virginiarobbins7539
Жыл бұрын
When my daughter came back for her first visit after moving to Saipan.. the noises here bothered her.. to busy. She was use to quite even during the day compared to usa.
@BeckyValkyrie
Жыл бұрын
Thank you for your service 🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻
@stephanie22345
Жыл бұрын
Idk why, but for a split second I read that as rockettes. And I just accepted that jazz kicklines were common in Iraq.
@patriciaotoole6508
Жыл бұрын
Thank you.
I'm staggered to learn that UK is bereft of crickets! It really is a lovely sound; wonderful to go to sleep to. They are seasonal where I am (Melbourne, Australia), singing through the warmer half of the year. Currently Spring here, and I'm yet to hear the first cricket for the Summer. As for all those other noises...well, our birds are pretty noisy!! I ADORE them!😍
@darkautumnleaves
Жыл бұрын
They don't have lightening bugs (fireflies) either. I think they have glow worms in extreme southern parts, but they are little worms and don't fly.
@marshawargo7238
Жыл бұрын
Made me realize whenever in a movie or TV show when they want to indicate that a joke or innuendo didn't go over well, they might look around surprised & say "crickets", meaning silence/over their heads. I didn't know crickets & cicada weren't universal! Being So Predominate Here. In the USA
@paull3466
Жыл бұрын
We’re not bereft of crickets. You can hear them quite prominently in the countryside at certain times of the year. If you live in the countryside you’ll hear them at night too. Lawrence is from a town in the UK though, so that would explain his not being familiar with the sound of crickets at night.
these kinds of videos are so interesting to me. i’m from the burbs probably 35-40 minutes out from Chicago so it’s cool seeing things that have been so normal my whole life being so alien to someone else!
I live in a rural area of Kentucky and I hear coyotes quite a bit in the evenings. Then in the Spring the wild turkey hens start yelping and the toms start gobbling during mating season. I love where I live!
It totally blew my mind when I learned that the British didn't have crickets. It's just an ever-present part of the soundscape here during certain parts of the year.
@jasonlescalleet5611
Жыл бұрын
Yeah. In the UK, they have cricket, but not crickets. Here in the US we have crickets, but not cricket.
@janicem9225
Жыл бұрын
I didn't know they don't have them, either. I don't know what I would do without the sounds of crickets and katydids at night.
@StuffandThings_
Жыл бұрын
West coast doesn't have 'em either. Must be the wet and overcast weather that they just can't thrive in. Going from no crickets to crickets is a very weird experience.
@jgw5491
Жыл бұрын
When Americans started using the word "crickets" to describe quiet or no response ex. like "Anyone home?". Crickets. Sort of like "radio silence" 😶, a lot of people in the world must have gone "huh?"
@cirrustate8674
Жыл бұрын
@@StuffandThings_ Yes, we do have crickets. Not in the same abundance as other parts of the country, to be sure, but we do have them.
You're not Midwestern yet. You'll know you're Midwestern when you stand outside and listen to the tornado siren, watching the storms roll by.
@vanessazorro6297
Жыл бұрын
Oh I did that, even when there was one spotted and down in the next town over, boy the sky was daaarrrk.
@catgirl6803
Жыл бұрын
Yea I didn’t know anyone actually went to the basement. I thought they watched until the tornado was heading toward them.
@Ryarios
Жыл бұрын
I was about 40 years old when I moved to the Midwest from the west. I still remember the first time I heard the sirens and saw the sky turn green. I was awed that the sky really can turn green like that…
@scrumpelart9406
Жыл бұрын
One time when I was about 10 or 11, I was staying with my grandparents and it was probably about 9 pm when my grandpa heard on his storm radio that a tornado was spotted nearby. My grandpa loaded me, my grandma and the two dogs into the van, and my grandma assumed he was driving us to a nearby friend of the family who had a basement. He was actually DRIVING US TO SEE THE TORNADO. He went out to where it was spotted and we couldn't see anything. My grandma was laying into him because I was with them and he needed to drop us off first off he wanted to go storm chasing. We were parked next to a billboard that was rocking back and forth and my grandma put down her foot and told him to take us back now (she called him 'son John' which was his mom's way of saying his full name... his name is Lowell so idk wtf that's about). He took us home. We never went to the friend's basement. Don't ask me to explain because I have no idea, I was just given pie and my grandma and I watched Golden Girls like nothing was happening outside... My grandparents are interesting people.
@katie7748
Жыл бұрын
@@Ryarios it doesn't always do that but it's cool when it does!
I moved to Georgia from California years ago, I didn’t know how loud summer nights were in the south; frogs, crickets, and katydids, is what you hear. I love it a find it to be rather comforting.
from australia and i lived in madison WI. the sound that got me the most was no birds. once the temps got cooler they all left and it was silent. i am used to hearing birds when i wake up in the morning all year round. but for months there i woke up to silence. it seemed strange.
@vortexathletic
Жыл бұрын
I grew up in Madison. The robins are plentiful, but I don’t remember them making many sounds.
I grew up in the southeast US where there are cicadas in the summer, and I had never known life without them; they were just one of those things. Apparently, when people move here, it can be terrifying if they don’t already know about cicadas because they make a very loud, not very pretty sound and it seems all around you. One way I heard someone put it once was, “The trees are screaming.” 😆
@rebbyberard8150
Жыл бұрын
shocked and appalled you described it as not very pretty--I love the sound of cicadas
@gwenjackson8583
Жыл бұрын
We have cicadas here in Pennsylvania so I’m not sure it’s just a southeast US thing to hear cicadas in summer. I love the sound of cicadas singing high in the trees.
@JeantheSecond
Жыл бұрын
The cicadas in my area are in a 17-year cycle. I remember previous cycles where I used to live and it was funny how you’d pretty much forget about that sound until it came back and then it would feel like it’d always been there.
@NYx3
Жыл бұрын
I just posted about the cicadas up north. The ones we have are on a 7 year cycle. So once every 7 years for several days it is defining from sunrise to sunset. Then as the cicadas start to go quiet the crickets kick in until sunrise. It is exhausting to my ears. My brother has a place in the Bue Ridge Mountains in VA. In the summer there always was a constant sound of insects but never that loud and nothing close to the cicadas up north.
@thatguydownthestreet8036
Жыл бұрын
I grew up around cicadas and they still scare me. It seems like sometimes they all startup when I’m walking past a section of trees, like a jumpscare.
Strange to say, but living out in the country as I do, gunshots are heard quite regularly. Either just target shooting or one of the many hunting seasons, mainly deer season. Also living here the sounds of jets flying over and occasionally they break the sound barrier and the sonic boom can really startle you and 2am.
@smurphy5033
Жыл бұрын
I was going to comment on gunshots as well. I live in a rural area, surrounded by woods. The sound is especially common during deer season.
@bonniechance2357
Жыл бұрын
I used to live under the approach path for helicopters to the local hospital. They would shake the whole house as they flew overhead.
@justinkase1360
Жыл бұрын
Strange to say, but living out in the city as I do, gunshots are heard quite regularly. Either just shooting into the air or ground or, more rarely, other things. Also, the sounds of neighborhood dogs, loud car exhausts or car audio systems. Oh, and Mexican music.
I can't imagine living without those birds. Wow. And crickets. These are such a peaceful sound. It resonates in your soul.
I about died when you said the bit with the heater and fan being a catch-22... that's my life's struggle right there.
It’s a bit late for them now, but in a lot of the USA, cicadas are a common summer sound source. They are sort of a cross between crickets and tornado (or air raid) sirens. Usually you get sporadic cicadas, and you may hear one to a few at a time, but depending on both where you live and what year in a cicada brood’s prime numbered emergence cycle it is, you may hear hundreds or thousands at once. Thousands of rather large bugs advertising loudly for mates all at once make quite the racket.
@pfcampos7041
Жыл бұрын
"They are sort of a cross between crickets and tornado (or air raid) sirens" The best description I have ever heard! 😂
@Gingerbred_Hed
Жыл бұрын
In my area, that sound indicated that it is too hot oustide
@scottcantdance804
Жыл бұрын
If it's during one of the superbrood years, that sound can get intensely loud. I miss it; where I live now doesn't have anywhere near the amount of cicadas that we had growing up in southern Virginia.
@SteelJM1
Жыл бұрын
And when they stop, the silence is deafening.
@michritch3493
Жыл бұрын
As well as crickets, I also love cicadas. And the exact sound varies in different parts of the country, which is interesting.
Katydids in late summer, great-horned owls in midwinter, spring peepers in early spring, cicadas in midsummer. Comforting sounds of the seasons that mark the passage of time.
@Violet316
Жыл бұрын
You could write poetry.
Where I am from in the south you learn to just ignore the sirens and start listening for the freight train noise outside.
Funny, I’m just 85 miles north of you in Wisconsin and our cross walks are silent. I regularly Journey down to Rush University in Chicago, and have never noticed the noise at crosswalks. Next appointment I’m going to have to try them out!!!
Back in 1986 my mother’s oldest sister was visiting from W. Germany. They grew up in Bavaria through WWII. Unfortunately, a tornado warning siren went off and my aunt screamed and ran for the basement but not because of a twister but because of PTSD from air raid sirens. Very sad indeed.
@uncletiggermclaren7592
Жыл бұрын
Sad? She and her family would have been content with their "farm in the East" and never given a thought to the screams of the bombed and murdered tens of millions that the farm cost.
@lenab5266
Жыл бұрын
@@uncletiggermclaren7592 what?
@andrewhohenthaner444
Жыл бұрын
@@uncletiggermclaren7592 yep, there always that one idiot who blames children who survived in a war zone hiding a Jewish couple in there sub basement. Well, moron, not every German saluted the fatherland and it’s dreadful despot. You miss the point of the anecdote.
@Myrcella_Rykker
Жыл бұрын
@@uncletiggermclaren7592 go back under your bridge Troll
@marcusdamberger
Жыл бұрын
My parents are also from Germany, and my mother did not like the monthly tornado sirens they would test precisely because it reminded her of the bombers as a child and having to go to their air raid shelter. I never thought of it as trigger for PTSD until now.
We moved to Texas in 1974. My Dad was in the Air Force and we had lived all over the world but never in tornado country. My Mother is English and her childhood was WW2 so she had never dealt with Tornados either. The very first time the warning sirens went off she had a panic attack because they sound just like air raid sirens. Mom is 92 now and still feels panicky when the sirens go. 5 years of war and it still affects her all these years later.
@tammywehner3269
Жыл бұрын
that is because it was so visceral for her. ( probably for me too) . total fear of being bombed to death and the drone of the planes or the buzz bombs just before your neighborhood blew t/f up can get indelible impression in anyone's mind.
@fjb4932
Жыл бұрын
Once burnt, twice shy . . .
@annham4136
Жыл бұрын
Yes. I thought about answering his comment about it. I'm old enough to remember being told that the original sirens used for tornado sirens had been WWII surplus. So, that IS what they are. We just didn't have many bombs dropped here.
I live in LA. So hearing helicopters 24/7 is the norm. We call them ghetto birds because they are constantly multiple helicopters in the sky at any given time
tinnitus is growing everywhere in the US & most ppl don't even know they have it. the white noise etc... is a must for this condition imo
The terrifying buzz of a rattlesnake is drilled into my head as an Arizona resident. Another distinctive sound is the pounding rain and rolling thunder we get in the monsoon season. Seriously we'll get 2 inches of rain in an hour and it will sound like sheets of water are clapping your ceiling.
@alsolark3029
Жыл бұрын
Those storms get intense. I’m glad I haven’t heard any rattlesnakes.
@lackeyreader
Жыл бұрын
The rattlesnake sound is so distinctive, and is totally freaky. My daughter says I break tje snakes ear drums, because I always scream, "Snake, back, back, back." and start pushing everyone behind me back to safety.
@shawnadams1460
Жыл бұрын
Grew up in Tucson AZ and let me tell you.....that sound of a rattle will haunt me forever!! I was six and went to jump in the pool with my little floaties on and as soon as I come up I hear the rattle....a Sidewinder had curled up on the water under the diving board!! My grandfather told me I turned into one of those little wind up toys that you see that swim around, our dog jumped in the pool and killed it but to this day I still check under the diving board before jumping in!
@azdbuk
Жыл бұрын
Where are there so many rattlers? In 47 years here having lived in desert, high desert, and pine forest, I have seen one.
@padenlisk2447
Жыл бұрын
@@azdbuk Around my place in Central Arizona I find them 2-3 times a year in my yard. Up in the pines they are much more rare as they usually aren't active year round so the window to stumble into one is smaller.
Where I live (Midwest) the tornado sirens are tested the first Wednesday of every month. So 99% of the time, I will hear an ominous siren in the distance and think “oh, it’s Wednesday”.
@msamour
Жыл бұрын
What happens if a tornado decided to show up during the test?
@adriannahelstad799
Жыл бұрын
Isn’t it the first Tuesday of every month?
@lukasuhlenkamp9850
Жыл бұрын
@@adriannahelstad799 in MN it goes off first Wednesday of each month at 1pm, but it can vary from county to county, as they control when it sounds. from a brief internet search it is the first Tuesday in the quad cities area
@geoffpriestley7001
Жыл бұрын
The local chemical works tests is sirens on Mondays at 10 am. The first time my partner heard it she thought it was an air raid
@debVan1363
Жыл бұрын
In North St. Paul, MN they blast theirs at noon each day. I think just from M-F, but now I can't be sure because I tune it out so often. It's just to let residents know it's noon as far as I can tell.
I live in Pennsylvania, and our crosswalk sound is meant to mimic the sound of a bird chirping. Also, they actually do sell bird books for various parts of the US! I highly recommend setting up a bird feeder near a window if you can, while keeping the book nearby to identify them.
@LisaKnobel
Жыл бұрын
The Merlin app is incredible. With your GPS on you can record and it will identify every bird it hears.
When I was young and had no AC, we would leave the window open at night and I loved the sound of the crickets chirping as I went to sleep.
The childhood nostalgia sound I always defer to is frogs. I grew up with a freshwater bog 100 feet off the back of our property with a drainage creek between it and a pond across the street. So running water, spring peep frogs, bull frogs, green frogs, and leopard frogs, cicada, and crickets was the soundtrack to my springs and summers. Occasionally I'll come across some media that has the soundscape and I'll time travel back 20 years.
@VeretenoVids
Жыл бұрын
That's what I came to put down--spring peepers! So much a sound of spring in my childhood. 😃
@peacefulpossum2438
Жыл бұрын
I love the tree frogs too!
@TJ-vh2ps
Жыл бұрын
We used to have lots of frogs in the creek near where I live, but I rarely hear them at all anymore. I miss them! Fortunately, crickets are still around, but still fewer than before and not as often. The creek has grown very dry. ☹
@NotBenCoultry
Жыл бұрын
Sounds like Summer in NY
@patriciaotoole6508
Жыл бұрын
Tree frogs.🤗
I'm surprised cicadas weren't mentioned. It's _the_ sound of summer here in Texas, and I know for a fact that you get them in the upper mid-west too. Cicadas in the afternoon transition into katydids in the evening - when the lightning bugs come out. It's magical. Crickets can be relaxing, until you get one that finds a cup or empty plant pot laying on its side which makes for a very effective resonating chamber to amplify its chirping. I've had a few like that that forced me to track it down outside in the middle of the night because the noise was literally painful.
@dacisky
Жыл бұрын
It's the katydids and frogs that I enjoy most.
@nauscakes1868
Жыл бұрын
I've lived in America for 40 years, and never would have thought I've heard anything called "cicades." Maybe a lot of Ameriacns mistake that sound for crickets, and the video guy just lumped them together. I know I would have, and I'm an American, lol... But I've never lived in a place, where I heard either sound near the houses I lived in at the time. Random American suburbs.
@HermanVonPetri
Жыл бұрын
@@nauscakes1868 It may be that they are called "locusts" in your area. When I was a kid all of my family called them locusts. It was only later that I found out that they are actually called cicadas. Locusts are actually a type of grasshopper and are a completely different thing. Or maybe you just don't have them where you live. If you did, you would recognize them. Their rattling buzz comes in waves of call-and-response that seems to pulse back and forth from tree to tree all around you.
@laurie7689
Жыл бұрын
@@nauscakes1868 I live in the suburbs in Alabama. I'll hear crickets, cave crickets, cicadas, and tree frogs. My basement/garage has cave crickets. They are long jumping and extremely noisy. We have the regular black and brown crickets around here, too. A couple of months ago, we had cicadas being noisy. I almost stepped on one going out my backdoor. The tree frogs are noisiest after it rains. I'll sometimes see them clinging to the trees. Most of the suburbs in Alabama have lots of trees - and I mean lots. Many of the homes, including mine, are surrounded by trees. We get to see lots of insects and birds, spiders, lizards and snakes, etc. I've even had a copperhead snake make its way into my basement/garage (probably looking for crickets) which bit my big dog on the nose a few years back. Those snakes are venomous, but my dog managed to pull through. Thank goodness he's a large breed. My small dog probably would not have made it.
@sct4040
Жыл бұрын
We have both crickets and cicadas in NYC. Love the sounds. Also, male pigeons calling in the spring.
I live in MA near a river and a swamp. Every year I love hearing the spring peepers, the bullfrogs and crickets.
I moved from the city to a rural area 1400m above the sea, I love the silence I have here. Nowadays I dread the times I have to go to the center of the city again, I can't believe I could live for decades there.
Bats rushing out of a cave at dusk. Such an indescribable sound. It's awe inspiring and chilling all at once
@josecampos7157
Жыл бұрын
A lone bat squeaking at night is a common white noise in rural areas. Especially when it's too cool for crickets(below ~60 degrees).
@angieemm
Жыл бұрын
I used to go hunting in central Texas and the ranch we leased had caves all over it. One of my favorite memories is sitting in the truck with my dad and getting completely enveloped by bats flying out of the cave behind us. We cranked the windows down just a little and it was magical.
@inquirewue2
Жыл бұрын
Omg yes! Not many have experienced it. Such a cool sound! We would hike up the hill and sit in the mouth of the cave. Never got hit by a bat, they are insanely good at avoiding objects.
@billsargent3407
Жыл бұрын
In New Hampshire we have a white nose disease.. I used to have a colony on the bellfrey of my barn
@xxTheMouseThatRoaredxx
Жыл бұрын
@@billsargent3407 yes, here in Kentucky we have the same problem. Mammoth Cave's bats are at extreme risk. It's heartbreaking because they truly are awe inspiring creatures
I can't believe you didn't mention the sound of cicadas! I love that sound and wait to hear the first buzz of a cicada every summer. I know many areas of the country either don't have them or only get the 17-year-cycle species, but we have them every summer in Indiana.
@Violet316
Жыл бұрын
Here in Virginia, we get cicadas about every 17 years, but in some areas not as bad, we now live in eastern Va. but we used to live near the Blue Ridge Mountains where they were everywhere, they were so disgusting looking, totally grossed me out.
@SKK329
Жыл бұрын
In NE Ohio we get both of them, the every year and 17 year ones. I hate them when they're close but distant ones are tolerable. During our last 17 year cycle they were DEAFENING.
@georgeb.wolffsohn30
Жыл бұрын
The sound of cicadas and lawnmowers is the sound of summers on Long Island, New York from my youth in the '60's and early '70's.
@violetdusk1968
Жыл бұрын
Minnesota and Illinois definitely hear that buzzing in the summer time.
@docinparadise
Жыл бұрын
Oh I hate that buzzing! I’m so glad to have left it behind me!
Your wood pigeon absolutely captivated my cat. So did your English road-crossing tone. I can play it back over and over and it still grabs her undivided attention. It even distracts her from food, which a real tornado siren doesn't. Thank you.
Here, where my wife and I live (about 150 miles northeast of your adopted neighborhood), we hear the sound of Spring Peepers. It is a certain type of frog that permeates the rural countryside ponds (the little ones), marshes, and puddles. They "sing" a cheerful call every spring as, of course, a mating call. They, along with the appearance of Robin's, are a sign of impending warmer weather which accompanies springtime. 🙂
@marshallsweatherhiking1820
8 ай бұрын
In Michigan we have red winged black birds that make a very loud trill in the evenings and then very noisy peepers just after dark. Always a very distinctive sound on the first warm day in April.
Whippoorwills, hoot owls, cicadas, the splash of a bass jumping out of the water, and the occasional bobcat were all sounds of my childhood while camping at our place in the Appalachian foothills of Eastern Kentucky on the banks of the Little Sandy River. Thank you, Lawrence, for giving me reason to pause and remember!
@thegreatgali1739
Жыл бұрын
Oh man... you just reminded me about whippoorwills. They hang out in the fields at my parents, but I don't live in a place with meadows now. I miss that sound :/
@cristenclonts6797
Жыл бұрын
I came to mention the whippoorwills and cicadas of western North Carolina! 😊
@Vanbooskie
Жыл бұрын
Lance, I was born in Eastern KY. Harlan County to be exact. Deep deep southeast Appalachians.
@charlesjohnson8262
Жыл бұрын
I hear cicadas all the time, when I grew up in Kansas in the 50's they were all around. Now it is just how my brain interperts the ringing sound in my ears.
I live in CO. When we have the windows open in spring and fall, you can sometimes hear dozens if not hundreds of coyote voices raising from the open spaces howling and yipping. We live in the suburbs, but they get around here and sometimes in fairly large packs. It’s so haunting and beautiful at the same time. Best background noise to scary movies at Halloween time ever.
@kitgodsey
Жыл бұрын
My favorite thing I learned about coyote howls is that they can make it sound like there's more coyotes in their pack than are actually there. Still, they have so many kids I believe you when you say hundreds.
@JaRule6
Жыл бұрын
I love hearing coyotes from the safety of my home. It's scary fun 💕🤘 😂
@dacrosber
Жыл бұрын
I’m up in the north woods of Wisconsin right now and I hear the coyotes almost every night around my dads house
@HeidiSue60
Жыл бұрын
@@kitgodsey they can sound like they are surrounding you. Like “What direction is it coming from!?!”
@black_hand78
Жыл бұрын
@@JaRule6 oh coyotes aren’t scary lol. They’re more scared of you then you are of them. Hell sometimes they’re so ignorant of you even being there they’ll come right up to you and smell you when you’re trying to hunt them lol.
3:45 in Utah, the walk sign is a cuckoo for one direction and beeping for the other. So that blind people can hear which way to cross the street.
Went on a school trip to the UK. The hotel we stayed at apparently used an old air raid siren for the fire alarm. Someone pulled it in the middle of the night, and one of my classmates apparently had been watching too many WWII movies as they literally shot awake screaming "Air raid! The Germans are coming!" and tried to bolt for the door, much to their roommates' amusement. The roommates then reenacted the moment for everyone else repeatedly for the rest of the trip (and the next few years!)
After moving to Texas, I discovered where the birds fly to in winter. My supermarket's parking lot. Specifically, the bird I am referring to is the Grackle, a large black bird with an even larger call. And then to hear that amplified by several hundred birds is almost deafening.
@Caroline15390
Жыл бұрын
There's a lot of native grackles in Texas too, they have a good year long population in supermarket parking lots. I don't go to the city very often but I've seen them roosting in the power lines at night, it's impressive seeing those things just absolutely covered by hundreds of birds.
@tendiesoffmyplate9085
Жыл бұрын
The flying j at Hope Arkansas is my favorite stop. Infested with grackles
@borttorbbq2556
Жыл бұрын
If I remember correctly a lot of the migratory Birds here in Washington a lot of them will go down to Texas and then they'll make their cute little feathery butts further south and then they'll migrate back up and then eventually make their way back into Canada
@80sGamerLady
Жыл бұрын
😆
@EricHunt
Жыл бұрын
Texas grackles sound like a sci-fi alien language.
I live out in the country, and one fall a friend of ours who lived in a city came up to visit us. It happened to be deer season. I'll never forget his reaction to hearing the sound of a rifle shot echoing through our valley just after dawn. He was so used to the sound of gunshots being followed by sirens, but up here it's just background noise we tune out when that time of year rolls around.
@ptmmatssc13
Жыл бұрын
I have to laugh. Have had friends over that were from the city and freaked out when they heard gunshots in my area. I simply listened and told them " yeah, that's Bob down the road. Just his weekly target practice" Hard to explain to people that in my area we don't freak out. Instead we listen to see who it is in case we want to go over and do some shooting with them.
@PhilowenAster
Жыл бұрын
A family member--either my mom or my sister, I don't immediately recall--had to take a safety course for a teaching job. The instructor mentioned that country people are often the slowest to react to a weapon emergency...because we're so used to hearing guns in ordinary situations that it takes us a minute to remember, "Oh, crap, that's not just someone target shooting!"
@scottjs5207
Жыл бұрын
@@PhilowenAster Sounds about right. If you don't train yourself to distinguish between the two types of gunfire that is.
@zero9112
Жыл бұрын
@@ptmmatssc13 I'm from a particularly high crime neighborhood in a major US city and we hear gunshots so often that we just ignore it. A drive by happens about every three days just down the block at the local drug dealer house.
@0xymoRonZzZ
Жыл бұрын
Around here your neighbors respond If you target practice Someone shoots theirs once...then someone will empty a mag escalating on until someone goes full auto then it gets quite 🤣
The small town in Texas where I live, on Wednesday at noon the tornado sirens are tested. It's like a clock really one day a week.
How about cicadas? I never gave them much thought until an out-of-towner asked "WHY ARE THE TREES SCREAMING?"
I love this guy. His humor is fantastic and the looks he gives are perfect.
@CrankyOtter
Жыл бұрын
“This is just my face” 🤣
@LiverpoolGarden
Жыл бұрын
Growing up in England I used to watch American TV shows such as Wagon Train and always wondered what the sound was in the background as they sat around the camp eating beans. I never dreamt that I would end up living in the USA and be able to see and hear those creatures that make that crazy noise.
@LiverpoolGarden
Жыл бұрын
To be clear, I was talking about the crickets! After reading my previous post about the guys in Wagon Train sitting around the camp fire eating beans, someone may have thought that I was talking about something else!
@ManyLegions88
Жыл бұрын
You must live a very dull life.
@Dusk1962
Жыл бұрын
He is a blithering fool with zero common sense
I didn't realize how much I'd miss the sound of planes flying overhead at all times of day until I moved out of the Chicago suburbs. Even 30 miles away from O'Hare you can still hear them quietly in the background. I went to a small college town and suddenly the planes were gone and the silence was deafening to me. Still makes me happy to hear them when I visit Chicago.
@everythingthathinders6922
Жыл бұрын
I can relate! I lived in the Chicago 'burbs for most of my life. When 9/11 stopped air traffic for awhile, we were all feeling the eeriness. Never realized how comforting the sounds were until then. We even lived over an hour from the city -NW burbs. We left the area 9 years ago and no place feels like home anymore. Laurence's videos have quite a few reminders for me. 😊
@flygirlfly
Жыл бұрын
Oh yes, lived under the O'Hare flightpath [Rosemont]. The eerie silence during Covid when most airlines canceled flts for weeks.
@lillianward2810
Жыл бұрын
Yeah, I live in the Philly suburbs and that is a 9/11 memory for sure. It genuinely took me a bit to put my finger on what I wasn’t hearing. And COVID too.
@everythingthathinders6922
Жыл бұрын
We aren't in a significant flight path anymore so we didn't notice that with covid! I hadn't thought about it. Must have been so eerie. I'm sure so much is different there now.
I got back from Central Europe last week and one of the things I noticed almost immediately was how nice and quiet it was. The cacophony of noise we live with is incredible. Take me back to the quiet!!
@TheBLGL
8 ай бұрын
As an American who lived in Istanbul, Hanoi, and Saigon, y’all are crazy, it is not noisy here. Try getting woke up by the call to prayer or drunks from the bar street (Istanbul), or your neighbor’s fighting cock and loudspeakers blasting off propaganda (I think it was lost anti-Chinese propaganda) at 6 am in Hanoi, or the Buddhist temple next to your house having a funeral, or the Catholic Church on the other side of your house’s bells, or just karaoke being sung (Saigon). I got used to sleeping with TV shows or movies playing. Now that I’m back in Albuquerque, it’s so d*mn quiet at night, I still have to sleep with the TV on to cut the lack of noise. Y’all are crazy. We have birds here in New Mexico btw, so it’s not that I’m in the desert, it is literally just quiet compared to where people actually still LIVE and don’t isolate in their houses watching Netflix all the time.
I know a guy who races sprint cars and travels since he participates in the USCS (United Sprint Car Series) so he has an RV. The first one reminded me of him. He said that he couldn't sleep, so he went and turned on the generator.
Only a week ago, after watching a famous military person on a show, I realized that my habit of going to bed with a fan on was not just to keep cool but to cover up my tinnitus. It never occurred to me that was the reason for always having some white noise to sleep by.
@angieemm
Жыл бұрын
I have horrible tinnitus as well and I can't sleep without some form of white noise. You'd think the ringing in my ears would suffice but nope.
@whoopsydaisy6389
Жыл бұрын
I sleep with s fan for the same reason. Some nights I have to play something boring on my phone and pop in my ear buds. The one regret I have in life is not wearing ear protection at car races and concerts.
I grew up on the north coast of California, and the sound of the surf was constant--it sounded like a VERY long train going by. When we moved inland it took me some time to adjust to its absence.
@alphagt62
Жыл бұрын
I used to rent a beach front house in Nags Head, NC for a week each year. The sound of the ocean is very hypnotizing. Even though I only heard it for a week out of a year, i got used to it instantly, and I’m sure it lowers my blood pressure.
@mickeywhite2563
Жыл бұрын
OMG, yes. A few years back my boyfriend(at the time) and I moved into a house near the train tracks and had two wildly different reactions to night trains. He was not able to sleep through it, but I would wake up to him trying to cover his ears and listen to the familiar horns and clanking and fall right bak to sleep. Lol. it's a good thing we both moved to night shifts after that, because I loved to hear them while I was awake, and he loved that they didn't wake him up.
@thethegreenmachine
Жыл бұрын
I used to live there, but not close enough to hear the beach.
@JAM-rp6fi
Жыл бұрын
I thought of the Outer Banks when I read your comment, and it literally sent chills down my spine. Crashing waves in the distance is one of the most wonderful sounds I can think of.
OMG!!! Lawrence, please be careful!!! Weather is something you should never underestimate!! God bless you and your wife and your listeners!!
I moved from NYC to West Virginia about 18yrs ago. It took me nearly a year to get used to it. A calmness, driving is different, interacting is different, People walk around in camo with rifles, I live in the woods and literally I see more deer in a day than the number of people I see in a week. I take yearly trips out of state for 'civilization' and it is rather odd now!
As a kid in New England) I was used to silence. Once I was in the military and in Texas, the heat was insane so I got a small fan to keep me from sweating to death. Over the years I have grown to depend on that white noise. Now with Tinnitus, without the fan not only blowing cool air on me all year around, but it blocks out the ringing in my ears, and the sound of listening to myself breathing.
@natebalcerak1659
Жыл бұрын
Yep. I've got tinnitus too. My fan runs every day of the year.
@thatcatpuma7224
Жыл бұрын
So glad other people with tinnitus use white noise to block out the ringing, too lol
@TheHonestPeanut
Жыл бұрын
Tinnitus is brutal.
@oROBBIEo
Жыл бұрын
@@thatcatpuma7224 You're pretending to be stupid or actually are. I can't tell. It's very well known people with tinnitus use white noise.
@therocinante3443
Жыл бұрын
I've got that exact problem, I wish there was something that could be done about it.
Cicadas and crickets are the two sounds that really make me feel relaxed. On another note, Chicago sirens sound like aliens are coming. My local sirens sound like death singing you a lullaby before you get wiped off the map.
@Thequietone974
Жыл бұрын
That sound is what it sounds like on my dads front porch ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
@mrspeace2u907
Жыл бұрын
Were you around when the cicadas invaded the Ohio Valley in 2007 (I think it was ‘07)? They were quite literally everywhere. And sooo loud. You could not hear the person talking next to you.
@AllUserNamesAreUsed
Жыл бұрын
Haha that sound is one reason I left the country. It's amazing how different everyone's experiences are. I love how everyone's different
@alexapuerta
Жыл бұрын
I love cicadas, katydids, and crickets in the summer! Katydids are my favorite.
Up here in New England, we also get spring peepers in addition to crickets - teeny little frogs that make a cricket-like chorus in every little puddle, every spring.
Ahhh the ambiance, AC running in the summer, heater in winter, fan for fall and spring. Throw in cicadas, crickets, traffic noise and the damn wind. Then get marching bands coming from the High School doing their morning practice. Have an aircraft once or twice an hour, careflite going to the hospital across the way and hot rodders using the highway entry ramp by our house like it's a quarter mile drag strip. Yep, going to go deft, mad or bat shit crazy. Next one that make a noise is going down.
Since we're talking about the sounds we grew up with... I grew up in coastal Central California and one sound that I grew up with was the sea lions barking down on the beach and by the wharf, especially in the early morning. They weren't a year-round presence but when they were out in force you could hear them from quite a distance.
@Viraus2
Жыл бұрын
Santa Cruz? I lived there and got used to the combination of waves, sea lions, and that deep buoy signal
@aclark217
Жыл бұрын
@@Viraus2 Close! Monterey
@dlittlester
Жыл бұрын
And smell them, no doubt. We've got tons of them here too.
@tonymarselle8812
Жыл бұрын
I know that sound.
@occheermommy
Жыл бұрын
They are loud too. When I have gone to the coast and seen them they get really loud. We never had a bunch of them in SoCal although they are at the harbors sometimes. We were in the coast outside SF once and there was a beach full of them. It was loud.
In some parts of the US the air raid sirens were not repurposed to tornado sirens (because some parts of the US don't get tornados often enough for there to be a regular system), but the sirens were instead repurposed to summon volunteer firefighters. Young Indiana nieces absolutely panicked when they heard the sirens on a beautiful, clear, sunny day in the Finger Lakes!
@thesearedaydreams6854
Жыл бұрын
Oh, yes! The borough I used to live in used the air raid siren for the fire department. It was slightly terrifying at first.
@nessavee2205
Жыл бұрын
The town I live in, in Oregon uses one if those sirens for the volunteer firefighters and EMT's.
@black_hand78
Жыл бұрын
My town did that, at least I think they did because our fire/tornado siren sounds just like an air raid siren.
@paperip1996
Жыл бұрын
We had a little refrigerator magnet distributed by the county. While it's been almost 10 years since I've moved out of there, I remember it was something like: Alternating High-Low - Calling emergency responders, no civilian action required Continuous High - Danger requiring evacuation Continuous Low - Danger requiring shelter-in-place Along with the AM and FM emergency broadcast frequencies, the short-range local walkie-talkie frequency for reporting flash floods/forest fires/impassable roads, and (in case of a severe earthquake) the address & GPS coordinates of designated safe gathering areas away from power & gas lines or tall trees.
@960kathy
Жыл бұрын
We use air raid sirens to summon volunteer firefighters here in New Zealand as well. In rural areas.
Jetliners and train horns. Here, in many localities, locos are required to blow 4 blasts for level crossings.
I love you channel! You have a new subscriber. Sending love from South Carolina (Virginia native).
I love the sound of wind in the trees, sort-of a soft, roaring sigh (I realize those adjectives aren't normally used together). But my favorite tree to listen to is the quaking aspen, a beautiful tree prevalent in the Rocky Mountains. The leaves brush together and make a soft clicking noise, very distinctive.
@davesnothere2782
Жыл бұрын
huh, that description gave me chills.
@orangelocked
Жыл бұрын
Moved from the Michigan/Indiana boarder to southish Florida and I didn't quite realize how much of the wind was the trees moving because most of the trees around here don't make the same sounds
@0Akigahara0
Жыл бұрын
I love that sound, but through pine trees. A "roaring sigh" is a good description. ^__^)v
I moved to Fairbanks, Alaska for four years and missed hearing crickets. My first summer back in the lower 48, I was so excited to hear them again!
@Mustangmom2k
Жыл бұрын
My sister in CO lives at 6,000 ft. elevation. She also doesn't have crickets, but when we speak by phone, she always comments that she can hear our crickets here in VA and she loves them!
I’ve seen a tornado touch down out the back door of my house, and seen churning clouds many times more. We don’t have sirens in all the areas here in Colorado, but we absolutely get tornados.
The tram crossing at Hillsborough used to have the message "caution: two way traffic, look both ways" on repeat when pedestrians could cross. Lovely. Recorded by Maureen from Parson Cross. "Caution, two weh traffic, look both wehs"