Cox Farms is a 116-acre family-run farm and business in a rare, undeveloped corner of Fairfax County.

“They’ll be good stewards for this thing,” Cline said in a phone interview. “They have the resources and the land and the wherewithal to take it to the next level for it to survive.”

Cline said Foamhenge will be stacked on trailers today and moved up the road 1.5 miles to his Enchanted Castle Studios, where he will store the pieces until Cox Farms can move them to Northern Virginia after its busy fall season is over. Cox Farms hosts a popular fall festival each year that runs from September into November. Lucas Cox, who said his title is “co-farmer-in-chief” at Cox Farms, said the operation is “the definition of agri-tainment” when it comes to its fall festival. He said Foamhenge will fit in well as part of the festival.

“It has a cult following,” Cox said in a phone interview about Foamhenge. “We feel like we’ve got a nice little cult following, and we thought the two would mingle well.”