Most of the world has been cooped up indoors for months, and for many city dwellers who already have more limited access to green, quiet, remote spaces, this forced hiatus from nature has been challenging. However, a UK-based arts organisation has created a new interactive map where users around the world can submit sounds of nearby forests and upload them for all to hear.
The arts organisation that created the map, called Wild Rumpus, collaborates with the National Forest in the UK for the annual Timber Festival in July, which was called off this year due to coronavirus concerns.
‘Once we realized that we wouldn’t be able to meet in person this year due to the COVID-19 pandemic, we set about trying to come up with a sensory project that was as democratic and open to as many people as possible, something that could create visceral, emotional connections for people to nature’, Sarah Bird, the co-director of Wild Rumpus, shared.
So far, more than 600 sounds from over 60 countries across six continents have been submitted to the audio library, and this collection continues to grow. Bird mentioned that more than 30,000 people a day are logging on to experience these forest sounds, which range from the slow breathing of a three-toed sloth crawling through the rainforest in Honduras to a grove of redwoods in California that was recorded in May but has since been severely impacted by summer wildfires.
‘The map also serves as an archive of ecosystems rapidly transformed by climate change’, Bird explained. ‘It’s widely documented that time spent in nature can help lower heart rates and enhance wellbeing. If we can’t be in the woods, this feels like the next best thing.’
The next Timber Festival is already scheduled for July 2021, and as part of this event, artists will draw inspiration from the forest recordings for their work. The festival has engaged musicians Erland Cooper, Hinako Omori, and Jason Singh to use the sound map as a muse for their live performances in 2021.