24 hours with 3 teenage birders: Welcome to the World Series of Birding

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24 hours with 3 teenage birders: Welcome to the World Series of Birding

Otys Train, 16, (left) and teammate Jack Trojan, 17, search for different bird species while competing in the world series of birding at High Point State Park in New Jersey on May 9. …

Otys Train, 16, (left) and teammate Jack Trojan, 17, search for different bird species while competing in the world series of birding at High Point State Park in New Jersey on May 9. They competed in the 43rd annual World Series of Birding where they counted as many bird species within New Jersey as they could in 24 hours. Mohamed Sadek for NPR hide caption toggle caption Mohamed Sadek for NPR It's just after midnight in north New Jersey when a white SUV pulls up next to a deserted park, and three teenage boys leap out into the dark. They sprint across a field, vault a fence and peer through binoculars — up toward giant nests atop a pole — all in the hopes of catching a momentary flash of a sleeping parrot's tail. By the light of street lamps, they strain to get a look through the nests' dark holes. Then, after 10 minutes of waiting, 16-year-old Otys Train calls out: "I've I got it, I got it, I got it, I got it, I got it, I got the monk parakeet!" He and his friends, 17-year-old Jack Trojan and 16-year-old Zade Pacetti, have repeatedly come to this park late at night to try to find this bird. And tonight, the work has paid off. They've found their first bird of the 43rd annual World Series of Birding . The competition started at midnight on Saturday, and they have until the last seconds of the day to count as many bird species within New Jersey as they can — and claim victory. A snowy egret flies by a nesting area in Ocean City. …

Original source: NPR News

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