HomeNewsLocal newsPhoto Focus: East End Marine Park Gets a Jump Start on Halloween

Photo Focus: East End Marine Park Gets a Jump Start on Halloween

The St. Croix East End Marine Park brought together witches, Spider-Men, astronauts, princesses and more Saturday night for an early Halloween celebration and “Trunk or Treat” on the island’s south shore.

Trunk-or-treaters travel back in time to the Jurassic period with a visit to the dinosaur-themed display curated by Franky Stankiewicz Saturday night at the St. Croix East End Marine Park. (Source photo by Kit MacAvoy)

For the fifth year, a dozen or so entrants transformed the backs of their cars into spooky, interactive tableaus for kids to experience while getting an early start on their candy collecting. Kelcie Troutman, the park’s environmental outreach coordinator, said the event was one of several events meant to familiarize the St. Croix community with the park and its mission of environmental stewardship.

“I’m hoping that then they go into the visitor center and they get to learn a little bit more,” said Troutman, sporting a pair of large, sparkly wings on Saturday night. The marine park is a protected area with strict restrictions on most forms of fishing. Troutman said only hook-and-line fishing is permitted within 100 feet of the shore.

Kids make their way from one spooky car to the next during a trunk or treat night on Saturday at the East End Marine Park. (Source photo by Kit MacAvoy)

“And the reason for that is that the East End Marine Park is a really important nursery for a lot of commercially important fish,” she said. “So if you leave them alone here, then it’s just spillover effects — they kind of go elsewhere, and they … keep our population fed here in the V.I.”

Karson Matthews, 9, ponders a candy selection during the East End Marine Park’s fifth annual Trunk or Treat Saturday on St. Croix. (Source photo by Kit MacAvoy)

Some of the entrants on Saturday said they spent weeks or more putting together their Trunk or Treat displays. Brian Lofton, dressed as a blood-spattered carny, said he spent two days on a hand-built “Wheel of Fate” at his and Sarah Thompson’s “Carnevil” display.

Brian Lofton spins the “Wheel of Fate” for trunk-or-treaters during his third year participating in the event at the East End Marine Park on St. Croix. (Source photo by Kit MacAvoy)

“This is just an awesome event,” Thompson said. “We love it.”

“The kids just have so much fun,” Lofton added. “We just think this is such a cool version of Halloween, versus going house-to-house.”

Annalise Quinones, 6, shows off her Cleopatra costume during a trunk or treat hosted by the East End Marine Park Saturday night on St. Croix. (Source photo by Kit MacAvoy)

While the East End Marine Park may be done with costumes and candy until next year, Troutman said there are still opportunities to get involved with the park’s work. The park is currently seeking a natural resource management and outreach intern and looking to fill a two-year coral fellowship funded by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. For this year’s Coral Reef Week, Troutman advised that people hang on to their Carnival costumes.

Astronaut Alden Lewis, 6, prepares to go fishing for candy on Saturday night at the East End Marine Park on St. Croix. (Source photo by Kit MacAvoy)

“The theme is going to be ‘repurposing.’ We are going to have a fashion show, and we want people to make their costumes from repurposed items or recycled items,” she said.

Some entrants took decorative inspiration from their daily lives at the East End Marine Park’s fifth annual Trunk or Treat Saturday night on St. Croix. (Source photo by Kit MacAvoy)
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