WEEKEND GET-AWAY: A visit to nearby Dinosaur Land is a retro trip through time
By Jill Devine
This article was republished with permission from FXBG Advance’s news partner InsideNoVa.com. Sign up for InsideNoVa.com’s free email subscription today.
If you saw a 35-foot Tyrannosaurus rex by the road, would you pull the car over for a better look? Back in 1963, Shenandoah Valley entrepreneur Joseph Geraci bet the answer would be yes – and his bet paid off.
Geraci planted five enormous fiberglass dinosaurs at the busy intersection of U.S. routes 340 and 522 in Clarke County. His goal: to lure tourists to a gift shop he owned on the property in the tiny community of White Post, just south of Winchester and about an hour west of Manassas.
Geraci’s strategy was an instant success. Working with noted fiberglass artist James Q. Sidwell, Geraci and his wife, Viola, commissioned several more life-size dinosaurs, which were assembled across the property’s 6 acres. After stuffing the gift shop’s shelves with dinosaur-themed memorabilia, Dinosaur Land opened in 1967.
Northern Virginia native Samantha Bourdelais remembers visiting Dinosaur Land as a child, and on a recent drive through the area, she visited again with her sons, Jackson, 3, and Walker, 1. “When I saw those dinosaurs, I had to stop,” she said.
Trip down memory lane
Bourdelais and her family entered the gift shop through doors framed by the wide, toothy jaws of a prehistoric beast. Inside, they took a cave-like tunnel into the park, where they spent the next hour wandering a forested maze of paths lined with giant dinosaur replicas and other prehistoric and fantastical creatures.
Exhibits display varying degrees of wear and tear, and experts might question some of the zoological accuracy – but there’s no denying it’s a lot of fun.
“This place is really not just Dinosaur Land – it’s more like ‘Big Creature Land,’” Bourdelais observed. She’s referring to the 60-foot shark, 70-foot octopus and giant praying mantis, king cobra, ground sloth and saber-toothed tiger sculptures that share space with a velociraptor, brachiosaurus, stegosaurus and other usual dinosaur suspects.
In fact, one of the park’s most quirky and popular structures isn’t a dinosaur at all – it’s a 20-foot tall, Cessna-gripping King Kong near the exit.
Nearby, a wooly mammoth, which long ago had a thick fur coat with moving ears and trunk, is now immobile and bald after 60 years of exposure to the elements and occasional vandalism by pranksters.
“You can tell Dinosaur Land is an older park as soon as you walk in, and that’s what’s endearing,” Bourdelais said. “The whole experience is a little cheesy, but in the best of ways, and it’s so fun to explore.”
Over the decades, dozens of subsequent fiberglass dinosaurs were hand-crafted by Rockbridge County artist Mark Cline. The newest additions were commercially manufactured, bringing the current number of dinosaurs and assorted fauna to more than 50 figures.
“People know a lot more about dinosaurs today than they did in 1963,” said Shelly Hamby, one of the Geracis’ now-grown grandchildren who works in the gift shop.
Family-owned and -operated
Viola Geraci died in 1981, and Joseph followed in 1987. Their four daughters, Gloria, Grace, Barbara and Joann, inherited the business. Three of the sisters have since passed away, with only Joann Leight remaining. Today, she’s 85 and still on the job, running the park with members of the family’s third generation.
A former kindergarten teacher, Leight believes children need access to attractions like Dinosaur Land that encourage imagination.
“I see so many 5-year-olds playing on cell phones today. Our dinosaurs don’t move or make sounds. Nothing here requires punching a keypad or looking at a screen,” she said. “Kids enjoy just walking around our dinosaurs, comparing how little they are next to these big creatures. There aren’t many places like this anymore.”

Indeed, attractions like this have a sort of retro, kitschy magnetism to them that seems to keep drawing visitors no matter how modern the rest of the world becomes.
Samantha Bourdelais knows she will definitely be back with her children.
“I hope the owners never give way to developers,” Bourdelais said. “Places like this are disappearing fast. It’s a little piece of America’s past that’s worth keeping.”
This article originally appeared in Ashburn Magazine, published by InsideNoVa.
Want to go?
What: Dinosaur Land
Where: 3848 Stonewall Jackson Highway, White Post
When: Summer hours, 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. daily. Last admission to see dinosaurs at 4:30 p.m.
More information: (540) 869-2222 or dinosaurlandva.com
Follow us on Facebook
Local Obituaries
To view local obituaries or to send a note to family and loved ones, please visit our website at the link that follows.
Support Award-winning, Locally Focused Journalism
The FXBG Advance cuts through the talking points to deliver both incisive and informative news about the issues, people, and organizations that daily affect your life. And we do it in a multi-partisan format that has no equal in this region. Over the past month, our reporting was:
First to report on a Spotsylvania School teacher arrested for bringing drugs onto campus.
First to report on new facility fees leveled by MWHC on patient bills.
First to detail controversial traffic numbers submitted by Stafford staff on the Buc-ee’s project
Provided extensive coverage of the cellphone bans that are sweeping local school districts.
And so much more, like Clay Jones, Drew Gallagher, Hank Silverberg, and more.
For just $8 a month, you can help support top-flight journalism that puts people over policies.
Your contributions 100% support our journalists.
Help us as we continue to grow!