Chalk up another one for Joseph Hautman

One of my favorite scenes in the movie “Fargo” is when the wildlife artist husband of Marge Gunderson, the fictional Brainerd police chief, laments finishing behind one of the Hautman brothers in a postage stamp contest.

Norm Gunderson’s second-place mallard painting was relegated to the 3-cent stamp instead of the 29-cent stamp.

“Hautman’s blue-winged teal got the 29 cent,” Norm says to Marge. “People don’t much use the 3 cent.”

“Oh, for Pete’s sake,” Marge replies. “Of course they do. Whenever they raise the postage, people need the little stamps.”

Well, chalk up another one for the Hautmans.

Joseph Hautman's winning entry in the 2011 Federal Duck Stamp Contest.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service on Saturday announced that Joseph Hautman of Plymouth, Minn., is the winner of the 2011 Federal Duck Stamp Contest. Hautman’s painting of a wood duck marks the fourth time he’s won the federal duck stamp competition.

His brother, Jim Hautman, won last year’s Duck Stamp Contest.

As for Norm Gunderson … he was nowhere among the finalists.

DNR acquires land for new La Salle Lake State Recreation Area

The Minnesota Department of Natural Resources announced this morning that it has acquired a 1,000-acre parcel of land in Hubbard County that now will be known as the La Salle Lake State Recreation Area.

La Salle Lake covers 221 acres and is the second-deepest lake in Minnesota. It supports populations of walleyes, northern pike, crappies and bluegills.

The DNR completed the purchase Thursday. The site, which will be a tremendous addition to the state park system, includes one of Minnesota’s deepest lakes, a coldwater stream, high-quality forest and wetlands, and more than one-half mile of Mississippi River Headwaters shoreline.

The new SRA will be managed as a satellite unit of Itasca State Park, which is eight miles to the southwest.

One of the cabins that will be available for rent at the new La Salle Lake State Recreation Area in Hubbard County. The Minnesota Department of Natural Resources completed purchase of the 1,000-acre site Thursday.

The land will provide excellent recreational opportunities for hunting, fishing and wildlife observation. It connects a number of parcels already in public ownership. A small area of the property contains improvements that will offer additional recreational opportunities. They include 40 full hook-up campsites, several year-round cabins,and an indoor recreation facility with a pool and kitchen. The developed facilities will not be opened immediately, but a water access, which has limited parking, is open.

The 221-acre lake has walleyes, bluegills, northern pike and crappies.

In a news release, the DNR said the majority of the $8.49 million in funding came from the 2008 Clean Water, Land and Legacy Amendment Act — specifically the Outdoor Heritage Fund through a grant from the Lessard-Sams Outdoor Heritage Council. Additional funding was provided by the Parks and Trails Fund and the Environment and Natural Resources Trust Fund as recommended by the Legislative Citizen Commission on Minnesota Resources (LCCMR).

N.D. Game and Fish to issue replacement deer tags in GF

Can’t find your North Dakota deer tag? Marty Egeland and Gary Rankin of the North Dakota Game and Fish Department will be issuing replacement licenses from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Thursday at the state Highway Patrol office, located at 1100 N. 47th St., Suite 200, in Grand Forks. North Dakota’s deer gun season opens at noon Friday. To read more about deer hunting prospects in North Dakota and Minnesota, check out Sunday’s Grand Forks Herald outdoors pages.