The African Jungle sfx library in numbers
This past weekend I finished working on my most ambitious sound effects library to date. From planning to delivery, this mammoth of a project took more than a year of on-and-off work. I will soon write a blog post about the field recording trip (there’s also a vlog in the works), but until then here’s some figures relative to the project itself:
1 - year from planning to delivery
1 - month spent in the Congo Basin rainforests
2 - ticks found and removed
3 - National Parks and many other remote locations visited
3 - times I’ve been stung by African bees
3 - recorders I used on the trip (633, M10, D100)
3 - Gorilla encounters, of which one charged at us
3 - consecutive days without electricity at a time
4 - cars, one train, one ferry and one boat used
5 - cameras I used on the trip
6 - times we crossed the Equator
7 - turtles we saved from poachers
8 - river crossings on narrow logs (on foot)
13 - mics I brought (only used 5 of them: DMS, DPA 4061HD)
13 - awesome guides and rangers we hired for various durations
30 - Kilos (66lb) of gear I lugged on a 5-mile hike in the forest
36 - batteries of various sizes and makes used on the trip
60 - size of the library in GB
73 - species identified in the library (many more mysteries)
80 - recordings available in both Stereo and Surround
1400 - GB total media haul including recordings, photos and videos
1800 - ~ miles on the road
8000 - bees encountered in the rainforest
More important than any figure, the process and the trip itself was an unforgettable experience that’s going to be hard to beat. It resulted in hundreds of hours of recordings that I painstakingly went through so I could select the most important bits. Less than 0.5% of the total content made into into the library, but that’s the absolute best.
You can fund out more and purchase the library here. Feel free to spread the word about it. I’m off to the Americas for now and I’ll be back in a month or so with new stories and recordings.