Sue and Tom Runyan with their dog Rufus stand by the family’s decorative dinosaur, a velociraptor that they’ve had in front of their Dungeness’ home for more than seven years. (Matthew Nash/Olympic Peninsula News Group)

Sue and Tom Runyan with their dog Rufus stand by the family’s decorative dinosaur, a velociraptor that they’ve had in front of their Dungeness’ home for more than seven years. (Matthew Nash/Olympic Peninsula News Group)

Dungeness couple keeps dinosaur by front steps

SEQUIM — One Dungeness couple has bucked lawn fixtures like gnomes and flamingos for a prehistoric pal.

For more than seven years, Tom and Sue Runyan have hosted a decorative velociraptor by their front porch.

“We thought it’d be cool,” Tom said. “We don’t like trolls anyway.”

The couple said they’ve always wanted to have a dinosaur of their own but they wanted one that looked more realistic than others available online.

“There are all kinds of dinosaurs available but they tend to look silly and hokey or too expensive (like a scale version of a tyrannosaurus rex costing upwards of tens-of-thousands of dollars),” Tom said.

The Runyans found their dinosaur online through an importer in Texas who shipped it in from China to Texas and then to their home at Dungeness Heights.

“We tell visitors that they run wild in Texas and we got it stuffed,” Tom said.

One surprise, the Runyans said, is that it was sold to them anatomically correct, too.

Visitors still stop by years later slowing to a crawl in their cars to catch a second glimpse or come up to the door and ask to take a photo, the couple said.

Tom engineered a weather vane for the dinosaur to rotate on, but if any locals are considering a dinosaur as a scarecrow they may need to think again.

The couple said it doesn’t do a great job chasing away birds.

________

Matthew Nash is a reporter with the Olympic Peninsula News Group, which is composed of Sound Publishing newspapers Peninsula Daily News, Sequim Gazette and Forks Forum. Reach him at mnash@sequimgazette.com.

This model of a velociraptor stands on a weather vane that its owner, Tom Runyan, crafted for it to rotate on in front of their home in Dungeness Heights, north of Sequim. (Matthew Nash/Olympic Peninsula News Group)

This model of a velociraptor stands on a weather vane that its owner, Tom Runyan, crafted for it to rotate on in front of their home in Dungeness Heights, north of Sequim. (Matthew Nash/Olympic Peninsula News Group)

This model of a velociraptor stands on a weather vane that its owner, Tom Runyan, crafted for it to rotate on in front of their home in Dungeness Heights, north of Sequim. (Matthew Nash/Olympic Peninsula News Group)

This model of a velociraptor stands on a weather vane that its owner, Tom Runyan, crafted for it to rotate on in front of their home in Dungeness Heights, north of Sequim. (Matthew Nash/Olympic Peninsula News Group)

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