Here in South Florida, you pay a price for perpetual warm
weather. Half the year you’re on the lookout for hurricanes. The rest of the
time you are trying not to murder an invasive species known as French Canadians,
who still drive like there are a couple feet of snow on the road.
There are also non-human invasive nuisances. Cockroaches the
size of Montana and stinging caterpillars, for example. I have friends from the
north who come visit and scream when they see a lizard in my garage. You’d
think that by now the Geico spokesreptile would have done something to
eliminate their fears, but no.
The same northerners whose hair stands on end when seeing a
lizard will practically snuggle up to all the “cute squirrels” in my back yard.
I hate squirrels. Shave a squirrel’s tail, and you’ve got a rat. My beef with
squirrels is that they eat the avocadoes off my tree when the fruit is the size
of a grape. All of them. Every. Single. Avocado. And what is guacamole without
avocadoes? Peppered onion lemonade. Enjoy a Dorito with that sometime.
These days, it’s the iguanas that are getting under my skin.
Don’t get me wrong; iguanas are fascinating to watch. Some idiots even keep
them as pets. They are sort of a link to prehistoric times, but they eat
plants, usually the plants you’ve slaved over to keep alive. Far be it for them to munch on a few weeds or French Canadians and gain my respect.
This year we have had one iguana that has been particularly
annoying. He is a fat five footer with a long striped tail. Every day this
monster will climb a tree, jump on the roof and wander over to the top of the
screen enclosure that covers our pool. He will then relieve himself of both
number 1 and number 2 and then return to its tree. Such a hostile move,
especially since we have been feeding him hibiscus flowers and bougainvillea leaves
all of his slithering life.
We have cut down every tree that is close to the house. We
have wrapped sheet metal at the base of palm trees to keep the invaders from
climbing up them. We have actually studied the diets of iguanas and purchased
Purina Iguana Chow to set in a humane trap that this guy, and all other iguanas
ignore.
So on New Year’s Day as I was fruitlessly attempting to
transfer data from an old phone to a new one, I heard the THUMP on the roof
that is all too familiar. I went outside and looked up, and there he was,
looking down on me with scorn and superiority. Apparently iguanas are capable
of flying from treetops onto roofs.
I’d had enough. I had chased Iggy off the roof before, but
it was a new year, and it was time to mobilize. Other Bill grabbed an empty
trash can, and I grabbed the push broom and the ladder and ascended to the
roof. Bill remained on the ground, posing as a giant basketball hoop, and I
intended to brush Iggy down off the roof and score two points into the
Rubbermaid. Iggy had other ideas. Iggy sprouted his wings and flew onto a
nearby palm tree and started climbing up. I smacked him with the broom, sending
him sailing downward, nowhere even close to the Rubbermaid goal. The minute he
hit the ground he ran, and Other Bill gave chase. As a quick side note, what do
you think of when you hear “Rubber Maid”? It sounds like a latex-themed
straight porn movie to me.
Anyway, with the iguana on the run, I figured it was yet
another loss. They run too fast for our old knees, so I proceeded to use the
push broom to brush some of the shmutz off the roof tiles, because everyone
knows I hate to waste an opportunity to do a little cleaning.
But then Bill called victoriously to me from the other side
of the house, “I got him!” I found this a little suspicious, because Other Bill
is reluctant even to cut up a fryer, and touching a live amphibian is above his
pay grade.
I made my way down from the roof, and Other Bill was
standing there proudly with the can over the giant wrinkled thing. I got the
lid of the can and slid it underneath, and we flipped the can upright, and I
folded up the tail and dropped it into the can. Score! High fives all around.
Then we had to figure out what to do with it. It’s illegal
to kill them, and besides, the only gun I have is a BB gun (see squirrels,
above). When confronted with a BB gun, an iguana will just sit back, light up a
Marlboro and bark out a grizzly-throated, Suzanne Pleshette-style laugh.
Someone suggested I put it in the freezer to kill it “humanely,” but a) I don’t
consider freezing to death a comfortable way to die. That’s why we live in
South Florida, and b) I figured if I did that, I’d be cleaning iguana poop off
of a frozen pizza or two. Or a chicken that Other Bill wouldn’t touch with his
bare hands.
So we loaded Iggy into the car and drove a few miles west
where there is a park with a nice canal and dozens of other of his kind to befriend.
I popped the lid, and off he ran at lightning speed for about twenty feet, and
then he just stood there, still as a frozen iguana. Other Bill walked up to
him, and they just looked at each other.
“I’m worried about him. Why isn’t he moving?” Other Bill
asked.
“It’s moving,” I said, “he’s watching every move you make.”
Bill walked around it, and the lizard’s head followed.
“I don’t know,” he said. “Something’s wrong with him.”
“Well what do you want to do, take him home, put him to bed
and nurse him back to health?”
Other Bill said, “Well, I don’t understand why he’s not
moving.”
“He’s just getting his bearings,” I said. “And probably
wondering where he’s going to take a shit now that he can’t do it in our pool.”
Reluctantly, Other Bill returned to the car with me, and we
went home.
I’m not convinced this will be our last dealings with roof
iguanas, but at least now we have a system.
And maybe next time I’ll aim better and make a basket in the
Rubbermaid.
Now if I can just find a Rubbermaid big enough for a French
Canadian. The trash can, not the movie. Get your mind out of the gutter.