Waves Breaking on a Rocky Shoreline : The Rhythmic Crash and Retreat of Ocean Waves on Coastal Rocks

Waves breaking on rock produce a fundamentally different sound than waves on sand. The impact is sharper and more percussive, the water rushing back through channels and crevices creates a complex, variable drainage sound, and the spray hitting surrounding rock adds a high-frequency sizzle that sandy beaches lack.

This recording captures moderate ocean waves breaking on a basalt shoreline — not a storm surf but a steady, rhythmic succession of swells arriving at seven to twelve second intervals. Each wave follows the same pattern: the building hiss of approach, the full-bodied crash of impact, and the long, textured retreat as water drains back through the rocks.

Despite the higher energy of rocky surf compared to sandy beach sounds, the regularity of the wave rhythm makes it deeply soporific. The brain quickly learns the timing and relaxes into the predictable cycle, while the variable details of each individual wave prevent the monotony that can make loop-based recordings feel artificial.

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