He crafted a series of creepy scenes. Among them, a gang of raptors surrounding an unsuspecting cow, a dinosaur bursting out of the ground with its jaws open wide and a T-rex on the prowl of a trembling soldier.

He fashioned each fiberglass dino to look as authentic as possible, named the attraction Escape From Dinosaur Kingdom and constructed it just down the road from Foamhenge.

“I’m just following a dream,” Cline said in a rambling fashion. “One dream just leads to another dream.”

A Childhood Fantasy

Cline, 46, sits in a small desk chair in his office. Behind him is a black and white picture of himself as a young boy working on a drawing.

Cline points to the picture and admits he didn’t do well in school and had no intentions of attending college. Art was his greatest enjoyment.

Cline grew up in a conservative Mennonite family. Cline wears a white fedora when he's busy working, but when he goes to his family reunions in Dayton, Va., he wears the more traditional brown wool hat.