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Teen finds his calling – it’s ‘quack quack quack’

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(MCT) — BALTIMORE — Bobby Spivey can walk through the halls of Sparrows Point High School without drawing much attention from anyone aside from his group of close friends. But put the 16-year-old in the small Southern hamlet of Stuttgart, Ark. — the self-proclaimed “Rice and Duck Capital of the World” — and Spivey is something of a celebrity.

Given his age and achievements to date, Spivey might become to duck calling what a teenage prodigy named Tiger Woods became to golf.

The teen from suburban Baltimore had been to Stuttgart for the International Duck Calling Championship before last year’s event in late November, finishing near the bottom the first time he tried in 2009 and coming in third in 2010. Spivey skipped 2011, but went from being a promising young talent to winning the intermediate title (for ages 13 through 16) in late November.

That’s a big deal in Stuttgart, where kids start to learn how to duck-call at around the same age kids in Baltimore first pick up lacrosse sticks or basketballs.

“They start at 3 or 4 years old and even have schools for them,” said Buddy Spivey, Bobby’s father.

Not that Bobby Spivey seems all that excited about being a big-time duck-caller in a small Southern town.

“It’s not being better than everyone else — it’s being lucky,” he said one night earlier this month at his family’s home.

While Spivey downplays his accomplishment — that’s not unusual, said his mother, Pam — he has been hounded since he was 11 by duck-call manufacturers looking to get the blond-haired kid from Baltimore to represent their product. Duck hunters around Maryland also started calling, asking Spivey if he wanted to guide one of their outings.

Spivey’s nonchalant personality disappears when he is competing, when he seems to attack his calls the way a classical pianist pounds out a concerto. Spivey said that it’s like playing a musical instrument — think of a clarinet that fits in the palm of your hand — with a rather jarring sound that varies based on the reed size, how the reed and cork are cut, and the skill of the caller.

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