I was in St. Paul this morning and decided to stop at Acacia Park Cemetary in 
Mendota Heights on my way back home. I was on the road along the southern edge 
of the cemetary, and stopped by the old metal electrical tower, and started 
pishing loudly to see if any sparrows would come out of the weeds there. I 
turned to look west along the road at a couple chickadees, and noticed a fairly 
good sized woodpecker flying towards me, approximately Hairy Woodpecker size. 
It was silent as it went by and flew up into a walnut tree that had lost nearly 
all of its leaves, about 100 feet away. Deciding to have a look at it, I got it 
in my binoculars and was looking at a back view of the bird. I was surprised to 
see there was no white on the back anywhere! It appeared solid black. Holy 
s--t!!! (The reality sunk in very quickly!) The bird turned to the left and 
gave me a profile view of its right side, and I saw its barred flanks, all 
black head, white moustache stripe, black malar stripe and white throat. It 
continued to work its way up the limb, and then flew off to the east southeast 
towards Pilot Knob Road and the couple houses there. I got in my car and drove 
back in that direction, and searched that corner of the cemetary for another 
5-10 minutes without locating it again. I decided I needed to get home and get 
the word out on the net.



As I didn't see any indication of color on the forehead, I"m going to say I 
believe the bird is a female. As my observation was very short, I might be 
wrong.




There is only one previous record of this species for Dakota County, from 
January 1930.




Drew Smith

Eagan, Dakota County
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