Oh, yeah—and they have FUCKING VELOCIRAPTORS AS SERVANTS.
I can’t recall all the details (it’s been 10 years since I read this novel) but Poole is in some kind of garden, and what walks casually around the corner? A RAPTOR! Poole hilariously freaks out (the author reminds us that Poole saw JURASSIC PARK as a young child) but everyone else is calm.
“Why are you freaking out, Frank? It’s just the gardener.”
Indeed. If only we lived in a world of such exotic pets—though of course, we do. I know people with pet snakes, rats, birds, turtles, frogs, dogs, and cats. Those last two might not sound very exotic, but people keep all sorts of rare/unusual breeds of both canines and felines. My wife and I participated in a community walk when the Department of Transportation re-opened Interstate Highway-64 out here in Saint Louis. The most memorable part of this walk? Was it walking a brand-new-never-driven-upon stretch of highway?
No. It was seeing the massive Irish Wolf-hound that someone had with them.
This animal was a massive beast, truly a sight to behold. Hardly a normal little “puppy.” Last month, my wife and I took our dog Rusty downtown to participate in the annual Marti Gras Pet Parade (sponsored by Purina Pet Food). Since it was a “pet” parade there were more than just the usual dogs/cats—one lady had a miniature horse with her! Growing up, my family had a revolving door of pets—gerbils, cats, dogs, even a turtle. But the strangest pet I ever had was our duck, Daffy.
I remember waking up and it was dark outside, when we first got Daffy. I think that it was late at night, but perhaps it was just very early in the morning. Either way, it was pitch-black in our house…when there was a knock at our door. My Dad’s cousin was at the door, with her boyfriend/husband (I can’t recall which he was at the time). They had a large, wicker picnic basket with them. Apparently they’d been out (as one does) and caught a duck (again, as one does). So far all very much on the up and up, wouldn’t you agree? But rather than keep this duck for themselves, they had come to give it to my family.
I should stop for a moment and explain that, while most of my father’s family lived in what I would consider to be the “country,” my family lived in a modest ranch-house in the middle of Raytown, Missouri—a dismal (even then, in the 1980’s) suburb of Kansas City. We had a large backyard (though I suspect not as large as I remember) but not enough land to keep “barnyard animals” like a duck.
I remember waking up and it was dark outside, when we first got Daffy. I think that it was late at night, but perhaps it was just very early in the morning. Either way, it was pitch-black in our house…when there was a knock at our door. My Dad’s cousin was at the door, with her boyfriend/husband (I can’t recall which he was at the time). They had a large, wicker picnic basket with them. Apparently they’d been out (as one does) and caught a duck (again, as one does). So far all very much on the up and up, wouldn’t you agree? But rather than keep this duck for themselves, they had come to give it to my family.
I should stop for a moment and explain that, while most of my father’s family lived in what I would consider to be the “country,” my family lived in a modest ranch-house in the middle of Raytown, Missouri—a dismal (even then, in the 1980’s) suburb of Kansas City. We had a large backyard (though I suspect not as large as I remember) but not enough land to keep “barnyard animals” like a duck.
Still, my sister Amber and I DID have one of those floppy-sided plastic kiddie pools you see at Wal-Mart during the long dog-days of summer.
My parents, being the progressive/animal-loving-types that they are, accepted this gift and became the proud pet parents of one Mr. Daffy Duck. Daffy was pretty small in body, but large in feet. I remember thinking his feet looked like those flippers scuba divers often wear. The first thing we did was put Daffy in the pool in our backyard. He happily quacked and swam endless circles around the edgesl. Our family cat, Kitty-Witty, was a bit of a worry. We did our best to keep her away from Daffy during his time with us, but this proved difficult (natural predatory urges being what they are).
I can distinctly recall one day when I was outside, watching Daffy swim—when off in the distance I spotted Kitty-Witty slinking through the grass with her head low. Once the cat was chased off, I decided to get some bread and toss it at Daffy, which was fun for both of us.
It seemed that Daffy was going to be a part of our family, when a neighbor informed us that keeping ducks as a pet was illegal in the city. Worse, he told my parents that it wasn’t good for Daffy.
I’m not sure if they’d known this all along and were just giving my sister and I an interesting pet for a few days—or if they truly thought we could keep him. Either way, my parents decided to take Daffy and re-introduce him to the wild. We drove to Lake Jacomo where my family sadly deposited him back into the natural world. From then on, my family would periodically gaze skyward and ask “I wonder where Daffy is?”
Sadly, I now know that human beings can’t take a wild animal “in” and then put it back “out” into the wider-world. Doing so nearly always equals death—so Daffy probably died, either of starvation (no one was there to throw bread at him) or someone killed him (because he wasn’t afraid of people).
We as a species are approaching a dangerous point in which, through science, we will be able to engineer Velociraptor gardeners…though we really shouldn’t. People shouldn’t do anything to nature but leave it the hell alone. I mean, what if someday we DO get our VELOCIRAPTORS GARDENDERS? And say something terrible happens (like a nosy neighbor) and we have to go put them back in the wild—who will be there to throw bread at them?
My parents, being the progressive/animal-loving-types that they are, accepted this gift and became the proud pet parents of one Mr. Daffy Duck. Daffy was pretty small in body, but large in feet. I remember thinking his feet looked like those flippers scuba divers often wear. The first thing we did was put Daffy in the pool in our backyard. He happily quacked and swam endless circles around the edgesl. Our family cat, Kitty-Witty, was a bit of a worry. We did our best to keep her away from Daffy during his time with us, but this proved difficult (natural predatory urges being what they are).
I can distinctly recall one day when I was outside, watching Daffy swim—when off in the distance I spotted Kitty-Witty slinking through the grass with her head low. Once the cat was chased off, I decided to get some bread and toss it at Daffy, which was fun for both of us.
It seemed that Daffy was going to be a part of our family, when a neighbor informed us that keeping ducks as a pet was illegal in the city. Worse, he told my parents that it wasn’t good for Daffy.
I’m not sure if they’d known this all along and were just giving my sister and I an interesting pet for a few days—or if they truly thought we could keep him. Either way, my parents decided to take Daffy and re-introduce him to the wild. We drove to Lake Jacomo where my family sadly deposited him back into the natural world. From then on, my family would periodically gaze skyward and ask “I wonder where Daffy is?”
Sadly, I now know that human beings can’t take a wild animal “in” and then put it back “out” into the wider-world. Doing so nearly always equals death—so Daffy probably died, either of starvation (no one was there to throw bread at him) or someone killed him (because he wasn’t afraid of people).
We as a species are approaching a dangerous point in which, through science, we will be able to engineer Velociraptor gardeners…though we really shouldn’t. People shouldn’t do anything to nature but leave it the hell alone. I mean, what if someday we DO get our VELOCIRAPTORS GARDENDERS? And say something terrible happens (like a nosy neighbor) and we have to go put them back in the wild—who will be there to throw bread at them?

