This iceberg could freeze the Titanic.
Ken Pretty, a photographer from the Canadian city of Dildo, became famous for capturing a piece of ice that appears like a giant erect penis.
This formidable phallus, which measures an impressive 30 feet (30 feet) and has a pair of giant gonads, has not shrunk in any way.
Pretty spotted the boner berg as he flew his drone off the coast of Newfoundland in an area often called Conception Bay, reported the Toronto Star.
“Only in Newfoundland,” he said with a laugh.
“The resemblance is… , it’s good, right? It’s unreal how much he looked like a part of the male anatomy,” Pretty said.
Objectivist he told the Guardian: “From land, it wasn’t quite clear. But after I pulled the drone on the market, it was unreal how much it looked like – …
And that was just the tip of the iceberg.
As expected, the well-equipped monolith turned out to be quite an icebreaker on social media, where one woman dubbed it a “dickie berg.”
“That name definitely stuck,” she told the Pretty Guardian.
“Frozen stiff,” commented one person online.
“I believed the cold water was shrinking them,” said one other.
Unfortunately, the massive dick didn’t last long – it collapsed the day after Pretty snapped a picture that made waves around the globe.
Within the spring, icebergs roll down from the north into the waters of Newfoundland and Labrador, where tourists and locals eagerly await their arrival, based on Star.
The government of Newfoundland and Labrador has also arrange the Iceberg Finder website, which allows aficionados to upload photos and placement data of ice visitors.
In response to the Canadian Ice Service, greater than 200 icebergs were spotted off the coast of Newfoundland last week.
“Onshore winds have brought each ice and mountains,” Diane Davis, who runs a Facebook group for iceberg hunters within the province, he told the CBC.
“If the trend continues, we must always see them in May and June as well. Mother Nature only gave us a handful last yr,” she added.
Pretty noticed that the name of his hometown added to the hilarity.
“It’s all about having fun. Everyone seems to be apprehensive about the associated fee of living as of late,” he told the Guardian. “But when this mountain can put a smile on people’s faces, it’s all value it.”