A few short years ago, Daniel D'Arco looked out the window of his home in south Minneapolis and saw a tyrannosaurus rex.
The carnivore rolled down the 3300 block of Portland Avenue, where D'Arco has lived since buying his home in November 2011. He watched as the towering T. rex statue — built to actual size with its visage fixed into a permanent snarl and its foot smashing the cab of a vintage black sedan — was backed by a crane into his neighbor's front yard.
"I walked over there and talked to the neighbor," D'Arco said. "And I just kind of loosely said, 'Hey, if you have a line on any more dinosaurs, I'm interested.'"
It took a few years before he heard anything. In May 2021, the neighbor called D'Arco to say that there were no dinosaurs available. But on the bright side, there was a shark that needed a home. D'Arco excitedly ran the idea past his wife, Kerry Schmidt.
"She said, 'Absolutely not — no. No shark in the front yard.'"
D'Arco was persistent.
"I literally got down on my hands and knees and put my hands up to her," he said. "'Please, please, I really want the shark. I'll do anything to get the shark.'"
Schmidt named her price: one favor from D'Arco, still to be determined, that can be redeemed sometime in the future. A few days later, a truck showed up with a crane attached and dropped a 20-foot-long great white shark statue in D'Arco's front yard.