Faraway Thunderheads Over Prairie Grass : Distant Rolling Thunder and Wind Across Wide Open Grassland

On the open prairie, thunderstorms are visible from fifty miles away — massive anvil-shaped clouds building on the horizon while the immediate sky remains clear. The thunder from these distant cells arrives as a low, sustained rumble that takes several seconds to build and even longer to fade, filtered and softened by the miles of atmosphere between you and the storm.

Meanwhile, the prairie wind moves through tall grass at ground level, creating a constant, sibilant rushing that rises and falls like breathing. This recording captures that particular juxtaposition: the immediate, intimate sound of wind in grass layered with the far-off, bass-heavy rumble of a storm system that never arrives.

The storms remain on the horizon throughout — close enough to hear, far enough to never threaten. The combination of low-frequency distant thunder and mid-frequency grass wind covers a remarkably wide acoustic range, making it one of the most effective natural masking sounds available.

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