The Day

Nature’s Art in Montville planning new ways to have fun

Kids’ mini-golf, cave, train among attraction­s to mark 20th anniversar­y

- By ERICA MOSER Day Staff Writer

Montville — The owners and employees of Nature’s Art Village have been keeping busy, between organizing a new Halloween event that launched this weekend and planning a six-hole, putt-putt course for young kids that is slated to open next year.

In addition to the mini-golf, a trackless train and a cave built into the hillside are planned for the 20th anniversar­y of The Dinosaur Place.

On Wednesday, marketing director Joey Plude gave a preview tour of The Pumpkin Place, winding from a candy corn family set up in front of pumpkins placed across the sloping grass to a giant dinosaur with a mummy in its mouth.

“It’s really a family-friendly Halloween, not a chase-you-around-with-chainsaws” event, Plude said. But he added that the goal is also for teenagers to come with their families and have a good time.

The center’s manmade lake, Raptor Bay, features a skeleton atop one rock and a bat atop another, with a giant illuminate­d pumpkin across the water.

Along a path are 7-foot-tall fiberglass dinosaur ribs, dressed-up dinosaurs, speakers emanating eerie sounds, a raptor cave, and a “pet the raptor” box, in which putting your hand in the hole results in spitting water and hissing noises.

And there are 6,000 pounds of pumpkins throughout the grounds.

The trail ends with a gathering

area featuring a 1,400-squarefoot inflatable corn maze, bounce houses, inflatable slide, and inflatable ax-throwing that involves Velcro.

Every night there will be a magic show and fire spinning; Plude said Fire ‘n Flow is doing a custom routine for this event.

Mini-golf, train planned for 20th anniversar­y expansion

Part of the trail at The Dinosaur Place is blocked off for constructi­on of the new 2020 exhibits.

Plude said that when Copper Creek Mini Golf opened at Nature’s Art in 2017, the goal was to have something for the older kids, but the new course is geared toward younger kids.

While Copper Creek has a separate fee, the six-hole course — to be called Lapilli Landing, named for rock fragments that come from a volcano — will be part of admission to The Dinosaur Place, Plude said. It won’t be manned by anyone, so kids can just pick up a ball and go, and the holes will be short and themed.

Plude said a “gigantic” cave is being built into the hillside, adding coyly, “There may be an animatroni­c in there.”

Co-owner Roger Phillips said the expansion will also involve a road train, which will look like an old locomotive and operate on the trails.

Roger and Linda Phillips’ site plan applicatio­n to the town listed constructi­on of a 1,100-foot stone dust path, six-hole mini golf course, and a 530-foot pedal track. The Montville Planning & Zoning Commission approved the applicatio­n in August.

Plude said Nature’s Art is looking to open the expansions next June as it enters its peak season.

 ?? SARAH GORDON/THE DAY ?? Brooke Praskievic­z carries her nephew Thomas, 2, as they follow her father, Tom, out of the inflatable corn maze at the Pumpkin Palace at The Dinosaur Place at Nature’s Art Village.
SARAH GORDON/THE DAY Brooke Praskievic­z carries her nephew Thomas, 2, as they follow her father, Tom, out of the inflatable corn maze at the Pumpkin Palace at The Dinosaur Place at Nature’s Art Village.
 ?? SARAH GORDON/THE DAY ?? From left, Amy Kittelsen, with her granddaugh­ter Jessica Gomez, 2, and girlfriend Mandy Mabe, all of Winsted, walk along the path at the Pumpkin Palace.
SARAH GORDON/THE DAY From left, Amy Kittelsen, with her granddaugh­ter Jessica Gomez, 2, and girlfriend Mandy Mabe, all of Winsted, walk along the path at the Pumpkin Palace.

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