Book Your Adventure 1-800-346-8747
Book Your Adventure 1-800-346-8747

Waterfowl Slam – North Dakota’s Tundra Swan. The Journey Within, A Bird Hunters Diary

Mark Peterson
|  
Location: North Dakota

In addition to Greater Scaup and Cackling Geese, the Tundra Swan is another difficult bird to harvest. You cannot purchase an over-the-counter Tundra Swan permit, and many states don’t even have a season for them. States that do have a Tundra Swan season require an application process that gets the hunter entered into a drawing. This presented a major challenge as we planned the hunts for the forty-three species required for the Waterfowl Slam. We had to consider planning hunts that I may or may not have the license for. There was no assurance that I’d be able to even hunt the Tundra Swan in order to complete the Slam.

Click the banner above to watch the Waterfowl Slam unfold on YouTube

To guarantee I had the best opportunity to draw a permit, I applied in every state that offered a Tundra Swan season. Luckily, numerous states notified me that I had successfully drawn. “The Duck Factory,” North Dakota, was the first of those states to open their season. On November 1, 2020, my cameraman Justin and I traveled from Michigan to North America’s Central Flyway in North Dakota.

A good friend and associate at WTA, Jason Berger, was born and raised in North Dakota. Jason is a twenty-seven-year veteran hunting consultant and director at WTA. His knowledge provided us with a definite advantage for this hunt. Jason’s brother Ryan and his family still operates the family farm in Barnes County, located in the east-central portion of the state. They’ve recently supplemented the farm with Baldhill Creek Adventures, a high-quality hunting operation offering whitetail, pheasant, Sharp-tailed Grouse, and waterfowl hunts. Baldhill Creek Adventures accepts a very limited number of hunters each year. The long-term conservation and preservation of the property and the animals that call it home is a pillar of the Bergers’ business.

The week before our arrival in North Dakota was perfect duck weather. It was cold and windy, and waterfowl were moving through by the thousands heading south down the Central Flyway for warmer temps. It would be my luck—in the days leading up our trip, bitter cold hit the area. When we arrived, the weather had taken yet another turn. The sun was shining, temps were in the sixties and there was very little wind—definitely not good duck hunting weather. To add to the unfortunate situation we were in, the smaller ponds where waterfowl normally land remained frozen. Even with the moderate temps, it was hard to believe that the ponds weren’t thawing and opening up more. This really was a testament to how severe the freeze was prior to our arrival. So far, the theme of my Waterfowl Slam was something I’m sure every hunter has heard: “Shoulda been here last week.”

Our first morning in North Dakota, we traveled about an hour from the lodge and hunted a larger lake with open water. When we arrived, we had to break a thin sheet of ice along the shore and push it out, giving us a small open area to put out a few decoys. We found pretty good cover sitting in cattails along the shore. There were hardly any ducks in the air, but I did drop two passing Common Mergansers to add to my Waterfowl Slam tally. I didn’t know it at the time, but these were the only shots I would get at a Common Merganser during the course of the season. With no other ducks flying, we decided to pack up. Before leaving, I saw a small group of Ruddy Ducks on the lake about four hundred yards away. Ruddy Ducks are often hard to get off the water and rarely land in decoys. We made a quick plan and I quietly moved up the shore to try and jump shoot them. I snuck four hundred yards along the lake’s bank near where we’d seen the ducks. When the Ruddy Ducks saw me, the flock flew and I dropped a drake. Considering the poor hunting conditions, two ducks—bringing my Waterfowl Slam total to ten—made our first morning in North Dakota a definite success.

I assumed before I arrived that finding open water was going to be a problem following the storm and extreme cold conditions the week before. Ryan and our guide, Ken, had put an aerator in a small pond located near the lodge. The aerator prevented the pond from freezing over so ducks could land on it. After lunch, Ryan and Ken went to remove the aerator so I could hunt the pond later that day. While they were doing that, Justin and I each had to take a self-administered COVID test and deliver the tests to a nearby town so they could be processed. We needed negative results back before we’d be allowed to fly to Kodiak, Alaska, a couple days later. On our way back to the lodge, I spotted a smaller lake with two hundred to three hundred Tundra Swans on it. It looked like a great spot to successfully hunt a swan. I pulled up as close to the pond as I could and found the pond on my HuntWise app. I took a screenshot of the location and sent it on to Ryan. As luck would have it, the property owner’s daughter took dance classes with Ryan’s daughter. Ryan made a phone call and obtained permission to hunt the pond the next morning.

When I returned to the lodge, I waded into the cattails in the pond where the aerator had been. I began getting discouraged as the sun started to set on the horizon and I hadn’t seen any ducks. Just before the end of shooting light, a single drake Redhead came swooping in. I was able to drop him for my third species of the day.

The next morning’s plan was to hunt the small lake holding the swans that I scouted after my COVID test. We wanted to put out a spread of decoys before sunrise. It was a good plan, but unfortunately there was a thin layer of ice hidden in the cattails. There was no way of knowing this when we scouted the lake the day before. We made a lot of noise getting through the cattails—we broke through the ice with every step we took and watched swan after swan leave the lake. Eventually our decoys got out and we hoped that some swans would fly back to the lake later in the day. When it was finally shooting light, we were able to see that four Tundra Swans remained on the lake. About fifteen minutes later, they took off. I momentarily thought my best opportunity had passed. Then, the largest of the four broke off from the other three and circled back, flying right over me. I hit him three times and he went down in the field behind us. Of the six North Dakota Tundra Swans I have shot, this one was by far the largest. Ryan estimated him at seven years old. I was now at twelve of the forty-three, and my primary target for this trip was a success.

During lunch, Henry stopped by and said that he had seen a bunch of Gadwalls near a field he was farming. They were landing on a small pond in one of the Bergers’ best pheasant hunting fields. I hadn’t checked Gadwall off the Waterfowl Slam list yet, so that became our goal for the rest of the day. We waded out into the small pond using the tall grass for cover. The birds didn’t have a clue we were sneaking in there and we got some great footage of ducks coming in and out. By the end of the afternoon, I was able to check Gadwall off my list. It was a great afternoon hunt and I actually ended up with four Gadwalls.

Our final day in North Dakota was definitely not a good duck day. It was too hot and there wasn’t any breeze, so very few ducks were moving. We spent the morning at the large lake we hunted the first day. From a distance, we saw a Canvasback, Goldeneye, and Lesser Scaup, but no shots were taken. After lunch, we returned to the pond that the aerator had kept open. There were no birds there, and no shots were taken there either. It was a disappointing final day of hunting due to the weather, but that’s the way it goes sometimes. It’s one of those things that’s impossible to account for.

So far on my Waterfowl Slam journey, the weather hadn’t cooperated. Prior to going to Cold Bay, a storm the previous week had sent much of the waterfowl south. The same thing happened in North Dakota. We checked eight species off the list in Cold Bay and added five more to our count in North Dakota, bringing our total to thirteen. I had planned on having more than twenty species checked off the list before going to Kodiak. With normal hunting conditions, I’m confident we would have been in the mid-twenties. Although we had taken some difficult species, this was not the start I had hoped for. Like I said earlier, “Shoulda been here last week” continued to be the theme for my Waterfowl Slam. I had a lot of making up to do, but at least I had passed the COVID test and could travel to Kodiak.

In the middle of the night, Justin and I left the lodge and headed for Fargo. Early the next morning, we met Dad and our cameraman, Jesse, at the airport and were on our way to our next Waterfowl Slam destination in Kodiak, Alaska.

North Dakota - Episode #3

Recent Articles

Top North Dakota Hunting Trips

Outfitter Special
Pheasant   ·
North Dakota
From 
$3,000
$2,000
Outfitter #162
SAVE $1,000 | September 21-23 or 25-27, 2026 ONLY
Northern Pike, Walleye   ·
North Dakota
From 
$1,600
Outfitter #162

Related Articles

New Zealand: A Spring Paradise

New Zealand: A Spring Paradise

The end of winter in the Northern Hemisphere gives me the itch to travel. I often visit Uganda to chase buffalo, before coming home for Spring turkey season. But this year, I switched it up. My wife, Alka, and I headed south to New Zealand for the last few days of February. We hosted two groups of hunters at two of WTA’s top outfitters and we all enjoyed a wonderful trip.

New Zealand offers endless opportunities for non-hunting companions while delivering a world-class hunting experience. Both lodges where we stayed had dedicated hosts who organized daily activities for the non-hunting guests. Shopping, visiting wineries, sightseeing in Mount Cook, jet boating, and many other activities filled the schedule. Once our hunts wrapped up, the guys joined the ladies on several of these excursions. I especially enjoyed spending a day exploring Mount Cook and an afternoon on the jet boat.

After flying to New Zealand and clearing customs, we caught a short flight to Queenstown. Queenstown is beautiful, situated on a lakeshore with steep mountains dropping straight to the water, making for postcard views. The local food scene is excellent. Alka and I tried multiple restaurants, checked out local shops, and rode the skylift to the top of the mountain. It was nice to have a day or two to acclimate to the 13-hour time difference.

We went to our first lodge, got settled in, visited the rifle range, and then had an incredible dinner.

Alka isn’t really a hunter. She has taken a few animals, and somehow I talked her into hunting a red stag. We got out at daylight with our excellent guide, Victor, when the stags were roaring. We looked at a couple of groups and crept over a ridge to glass into a creek bottom. We found stags roaring, fighting, feeding, and moving all over.

We finally decided on a beautiful red stag with a tank of a body, heavy mass, great crowns. And you could tell he was old. He was also dominant. The others gave way whenever he came near.

After a couple of hours, our stag bedded with another away from the others, and we decided to make a move. Victor expertly maneuvered us down into the thick creek bottom with the wind in our faces. Eventually, we moved within 100 yards of where we thought the stags were. After a while, the other stag stood up and repositioned. When he bedded again, Victor wanted to shift for a better angle. We ended up at 65 yards and could see our stag’s antler tips.

We waited 3 hours for the big guy to get up. We roared, threw rocks, raked brush, but he was tucked in and didn’t budge. Finally, in the early afternoon, Victor raked some brush, roared loudly, and the stag stood. Alka quickly got on the .30-06 and with a couple of shots an inch apart to the shoulder, the big stag dropped. Celebration time!

Alka got a super experience with lots of stag action, a great stalk in close, and then the nerve-racking wait for the 525″ stag to stand up and offer a shot.

Over the next few days, our group of hunters took some incredible stags and fallow deer. Toward the end, a few of us wanted to hunt tahr in the southern Alps.

I cannot describe how beautiful and rugged those mountains are, and seeing them from a helicopter is an experience not to be missed. My hunting partner and I both scored on nice bull tahr the morning we went out, and then the chopper pilot took the ladies up for a quick ride to show them the beauty and majesty of the southern Alps. It was a morning none of us will ever forget.

Learn More about this Hunt

Alka and I then packed up and transferred to our next lodge, where we met four other couples, including our good friends Russell and Cindy. Russell and I were going to hunt together, as we have all over the globe, and again, the ladies had a full palette of fun excursions planned.

During the first afternoon, we saw a number of great stags and some incredible fallow. What really excited me was seeing and hearing bugling elk. We returned for a 5-star meal (Be ready to gain weight in New Zealand!) and prepared for the next day. 

Just after daylight, we were on stags and moving around the hills and canyons, glassing and enjoying the views and the number of animals. One of the hardest parts of hunting there is choosing the stag you want to pursue. There are so many, and they are all so different, it’s sensory overload. There are wide, heavy, drop tines, typical frames, and every other antler configuration imaginable.

While glassing some stags in a wallow across a canyon, I spotted a big bull elk up on a ridge. He was so regal standing on the skyline, I kept coming back to him with my binos. I must have talked about him non-stop, because my outfitter and guide Shaun finally said, “We can go after him if you want, but he is about a mile away, and it’s all uphill.” I told Shaun I was ready to go if he was, so off we went, trekking up the mountain.

When we got to the top, we couldn’t find the bull. Huge rock formations blocked us from seeing a number of areas, so we slowly moved from rock to rock, carefully glassing, until we found the big bull on the third set of rocks.

I quickly set up and Shaun ranged the bull at a bit under 300 yards, moving away. Shaun has suppressed Gunwerks rifles available for his clients to use. I knew with that setup, the shot should be easy if the bull presented a good angle.

After watching him for a few minutes, the bull swung around, giving me a quartering away shot, and I tucked one in behind the shoulder. The big guy was done. When we got to him, he was way bigger than I thought, with 54″ beams and a huge frame, the 7×7 stretched the tape to 397″. I was ecstatic!

That afternoon, I went along with Russell on an exciting stag hunt where we got in on two great bulls. After a lot of maneuvering, they stepped out of a bedding area at 70 yards, and Russell hammered a beautiful stag with great crowns and kicker tines off both sides. Getting in close on these huge stags is an absolute blast.

The other guys in camp were laying down some great animals as well. On our second-to-last day, we all decided to go with the ladies for a jet boat ride up a glacial river, a short hike, and then a winery stop for apps and drinks. It was a fantastic day of seeing incredible scenery and relaxing with old and new friends.

On our last morning, Russell decided to find a good elk. An hour or so later, we found a big bull working a wallow. Russell and his guide made a stalk, Russ got on the sticks, and the next thing Shaun and I saw through our binos was the big heavy bull tipping over. What a great way to end our superb hunt!

We all headed back to Queenstown in the afternoon, had a great dinner at the Botswana Butchery restaurant, and then it was one sleep and a long flight home.

Gunwerks Long Range University | WTA Team Experience

Gunwerks Long Range University | WTA Team Experience

There’s a major difference between simply shooting a rifle and building a repeatable process that works under pressure in real hunting situations.

That was the biggest takeaway when the Worldwide Trophy Adventures team attended the Gunwerks Long Range University L1 and L2 courses in Cody, Wyoming. What started as an opportunity to sharpen our shooting skills quickly became something much bigger: a deep dive into confidence, communication, ethics, and the complete shooting system.

At WTA, we spend our lives helping hunters prepare for meaningful hunts around the world. We talk constantly about tags, gear, outfitters, strategy, and opportunity. But eventually, every hunt comes down to a single moment behind the rifle. That’s where Long Range University changes the conversation.

More than Just “Long Range Shooting”

A lot of hunters hear “long range shooting” and immediately think about distance. The course focused far more on consistency, process, and decision making than simply stretching the range.

The Gunwerks instructors repeatedly emphasized that successful shooting is about understanding the entire system:

  • Rifle
  • Optics
  • Ballistics
  • Environment
  • Wind
  • Shooter fundamentals
  • Mental process

That holistic approach was eye-opening, even for experienced hunters and shooters.

Several members of the WTA team came into the class with years of hunting experience and a solid understanding of rifles and optics. But one theme surfaced almost immediately: many of us had developed bad habits over time, simply because we’d never received formal instruction.
By lunchtime on the first day, most of us were already identifying flaws in our setup, body position, and shot process.

Honestly, that was one of the best parts of the experience.

Building Confidence through Process

Confidence is one of the most important elements in hunting. When doubt creeps into your mind during a critical moment, things tend to unravel quickly. Long Range University focuses heavily on eliminating uncertainty by building a repeatable process.

The course blended classroom instruction with live-fire range sessions, translating concepts immediately into practical applications.

Topics included:

  • Rifle setup and maintenance
  • Zeroing procedures
  • Ballistic profiles
  • Wind reading
  • Spotter/shooter communication
  • Prone shooting fundamentals
  • Shooting from improvised positions
  • Tripod and support techniques
  • Real-world hunting scenarios
  • Ethical shot evaluation

One of the most valuable lessons was learning to manage instability instead of fearing it. In the field, hunting shots rarely happen from a perfect, benchrest position. Hunters must adapt to terrain, weather, awkward angles, and time pressure.

The instructors did an exceptional job of simplifying complex concepts into practical, understandable instructions. Nothing felt overly tactical or intimidating. The focus remained on building ethical, capable hunters.

Real…
Arizona’s Deer/Sheep Deadline: That’s a Wrap on the Draw Season!

Arizona’s Deer/Sheep Deadline: That’s a Wrap on the Draw Season!

The Arizona deer and sheep deadline on June 2 marks the end of another application season. There are a few minor draws and point-only periods coming up, but the major deadlines have passed and the draw results have been posted. I hope this is your year to draw an awesome tag! If not, you’ve built another valuable bonus point for your future. That’s the name of the game!

If you successfully drew a tag, you received a call from your dedicated WTA TAGS consultant informing you of your good fortune. If you drew a tag and haven’t booked with an outfitter, this needs immediate attention. WTA’s owner Mark Peterson said it best: “After finally drawing a great tag…don’t screw it up at the end…hire a reputable outfitter!”

Arizona Deadlines

Arizona has a staggered deadline for its limited-entry big game tags. June 2 marks the deadline to apply for deer and sheep tags. For deer, we’re talking about mule deer and coues deer. And for sheep, desert bighorn and Rocky Mountain bighorn are both available.

Mule Deer vs. Coues Deer

Applicants in Arizona are restricted to one deer application. The state considers two choices on the application. You can utilize two mule deer choices, or two coues deer choices, or one choice for each. For example, first choice mule deer, second choice coues deer.

Consider this quick, low-level consultation when deciding how to apply for deer in Arizona. Arizona boasts the best mule deer hunting in North America. It is truly the land of 200″. However, these deer reside in a handful of units with VERY limited non-resident tags. This is a tag you may never draw in your lifetime.

Arizona also boasts the best coues deer hunting in the West. Early hunts in October and November can easily be drawn with 0–3 bonus points and we offer highly successful adventures with our TAGS-endorsed outfitters. The more sought-after late coues hunts in December are more difficult to draw, but the tag can be drawn within 8 years, hopefully sooner.

Desert Bighorn vs. Rocky…

Find the outdoor adventure of a lifetime.

SEARCH
Try ‘Elk’, ‘Colorado’ or ‘Waterfowl’