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

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Asked to differentiate between the honks and quacks that emanate from his duck call, Spivey shrugs.

“It’s complicated. It’s hard to explain if you don’t understand it,” Spivey said. “If they’re really far away, you’re really loud. When they get close, you sound like a real duck.”

If there’s anything that has changed, Spivey concedes that he feels a bit of pressure to perform his duck calls successfully when he is paid to guide a hunt.

“Yeah, I feel like I’ve got to kill ducks,” he said. “Just as if I would take them out fishing, I wouldn’t want to go out there and not catch a fish.”

Even before his championship in Arkansas, where he was one of the few non-Arkansans to take home a title, Spivey had a pretty impressive resume. It included a long list of victories — he claims four straight Maryland junior duck-calling titles among “18 or 19” total — that date to shortly after Spivey began calling around age 11 at the Eastern Sports winter outdoors show in Harrisburg, Pa.

“Him and a bunch of guys went up there to look at all the stuff and he just got into the contest,” Buddy Spivey recalled.

The younger Spivey, who has been hunting with his father and uncle, Michael Spivey, since he was 3 (there’s that Tiger analogy again) was hooked. His parents say he would practice day and night, learning by watching videos as well as clips of other duck callers on the Internet and mimicking what they did.

He hid away in the basement, even in the bathroom, trying to perfect the three basic duck calls — hailing, greeting and feeding — so that he and his buddies would have more success attracting ducks to where they were hunting off the mouth of the Patapsco. Given the kind of cacophony needed to imitate a flock of ducks flying overhead, Spivey’s parents celebrated the day he got his driver’s license.

“He now does the calls in his truck. It saves the household,” Buddy Spivey said.

Spivey said he also learned by watching some of his older friends, like Travis Shanahan, a 22-year-old from the Eastern Shore who has won his share of prestigious titles and is now trying to put together his own deer hunting reality television show with an Internet-only series called “Brotherhood Migrations.”

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