A local artist who spent months using
sticks and rope to create her own version of dinosaur skeletons at Allaire State Park in Wall Township
was upset to see most of those sculptures destroyed.
Robin
Ruggiero built most of the wooden skeletons during the pandemic and she says
they became a source of hope for many visitors.
“It was
just an inspiration that just came through after seeing one piece of wood, and
I said it looks like a dinosaur tail,” says Ruggiero.
A collection of twigs and rope – a simple idea
turned into a masterpiece.
“I put it on a stick, and I went around looking for the rest
of his body,” says Ruggiero.
In an
often-unnoticed corner of Allaire State Park, a small pine forest
transformed into a throwback to the Jurassic Period – until last week –
when Ruggiero noticed someone deliberately cut the ropes to many of her
sculptures -- turning the creative beauty into a pile of sticks.
“First, it was I felt like it was a personal
attack on me. Someone cut my lines. The people I am so
sad for - the children and then the adults. They came from
all over, and they are disappointed, there was supposed to be a
wedding shoot that day,” says Ruggiero.
The New
Jersey Department of Environmental Protection oversees Allaire State Park. A spokesperson said in a
statement that they share the sadness felt by Ruggiero and the
visitors at the damage, but that no
enforcement action can be taken because the project was
made by a private visitor.
Word spread
on social media -- messages of sympathy flooded Ruggiero’s Instagram account.
Her anger and sadness quickly faded.
“It pulled me out of a dark place from this, and I appreciate the
community so much,” says Ruggiero.
A recent traumatic head injury prevented Ruggiero from spending
the time it takes to rebuild the sculptures. She hopes visitors will cherish
and enjoy the ones still standing and remember those that are
not.
“I hope they look at the positive of what we looked
at together and get them on the map and be this big now, that’s something to be
proud of and that wouldn’t have happened without all of them,” says Ruggiero.