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Mark Strassmann reports on competitive bird-watching in Texas, where more than 200 "birders" vie to spot and identify the greatest variety of birds.
The Second Fastest Growing Hobby is... Birding?
Bird Watching Can Bring Fierce Competition Among America's 48 Million Amatuer Audubons
This is no casual activity, reports CBS News correspondent Mark Strassmann , in fact it's one of the most popular competitions in America.
For every backyard birder out there, the sound of birds is music to the ears.
Greg Mason's one of 48 million American birders - amateur Audubons. They know a scarlet tanager from a rose-breasted grosbeak.
Or in this case, a "little green heron," as Mason points out. He gets jazzed up about birdwatching. "You start doing this, and you go to kookytown."
The annual Great Texas Birding Classic is a spirited competition for more than 200 birders. Teams keep score on the honor system. Spot the greatest variety of birds, you win.
Competitors can identify different species by sight or by sounds. It's called "ear birding." If you're in it to win it, if you "bird" to win, the birder to beat is Bill Baker.
Baker is the five-time defending champion of the Great Texas Birding Classic. His three-man team will cover 2,000 miles in five days.
"It's a quick pace," Baker said. "We don't sit in one spot very long."
Baker scouts out the entire course before the competition begins. "Every team is going to find the bird you would expect to find," he said. "So you have to go beyond what's expected in order to win."
Mention Baker's name and many birders like Susan Knock lose their bravado.
"You're going to have to beat him," Strassmann said.
"I am," Knock replied.
"Is it possible?"
"Yes,"
"This year?"
"No."
Knock was right. Baker won again, spotting 308 different species. Proving once again that with both birds and birders, there is a pecking order.