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2022 Birding Cup Welcomes Competition, Support for Aviary Upgrades at Shaver’s Creek

State College - Klingsberg Aviary

The Klingsberg Aviary at Shaver’s Creek Environmental Center. Photo courtesy Shaver’s Creek Environmental Center

Matt Caracappa, Penn State Outreach

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Bird watchers of all levels can help support the Klingsberg Aviary at Shaver’s Creek Environmental Center and compete for bragging rights during the center’s annual fundraiser on Friday and Saturday.

The 2022 Birding Cup will bring birders together to identify as many species as possible in 24 hours. Birders can participate from anywhere — as local as central Pennsylvania or across the world — as part of the global birding community. The competition will run for 24 consecutive hours beginning at 7 p.m. on Friday.

This year, all funds raised will go toward improving the Klingsberg Aviary at Shaver’s Creek. Hopeful improvements include adding native landscaping, visitor seating, accessible pathways, educational program space and visual screening for the comfort of smaller raptors.

“These enhancements will improve the experience for visitors and the animals that call the aviary home,” Joshua Potter, Shaver’s Creek’s associate director of operations said. “Already a site enjoyed by tens of thousands of annual visitors and renowned in the animal care field, these modifications will further entrench the Klingsberg Aviary’s reputation as a national model.”

Birders from seven central Pennsylvania counties can compete in several categories, including most bird species identified in one county, most bird species identified by a team of birders with fewer than two years of birding experience, most bird species identified without the use of motorized transportation, and most bird species identified by a two-member team in a single one-mile diameter circle.

Birders outside of Pennsylvania will participate in the noncompetitive global community, with a focus on a collaborative approach for all skill sets.

Visit the Shaver’s Creek Birding Cup webpage for information on how to register, participate and donate.

A great egret was found in New York’s Central Park — one of more than 42,500 bird species identified during the annual, virtual, 2020 Shaver’s Creek Birding Cup. Photo by Justin Raymond | Penn State