Because of a huge iceberg, kilometer-long traffic jams are gathering in a Canadian village
By Pictolic https://pictolic.com/article/because-of-a-huge-iceberg-kilometer-long-traffic-jams-are-gathering-in-a-canadian-village.htmlA tiny fishing village on the east coast of Canada can barely cope with the sudden influx of tourists. The fact is that on Easter weekend, a huge iceberg more than 45 meters in height became visible from the shore. Residents will now have to get used to this situation for a while.
(6 photos in total)
Source: Bored Panda
The ice block sailed to the shores of Ferryland, a remote settlement in Newfoundland, known as the alley of icebergs — coastal waters, where Arctic visitors often come.
The height of the iceberg is more than 45 meters, and it is even larger than the iceberg that the Titanic collided with in 1912.
Crowds of tourists who came to look at the iceberg in Ferryland flooded all the entrances to the settlement and created huge traffic jams.
The iceberg has reached shallow water and is now standing still. It is unlikely that he will go anywhere in the near future.
This could be a golden hour for local entrepreneurs, although the two restaurants available here will not open until the start of the season on May 24.
It remains only to guess how the residents of Ferryland will monetize the appearance of an unexpected iceberg.
Keywords: Iceberg | Spectacle | Canada | Sea | Coast | Traffic jams | Tourists
Post News ArticleRecent articles
Almost everyone who sees the Xiko Crater for the first time thinks that it is an ancient man-made structure. How could it be ...
With the advent of gadgets in our lives, a lot has changed, including the load on the body. After all, sitting in front of a ...
Related articles
If you're reading this as summer slowly approaches, we have something to cool you down. Thanks to photographers like Richard ...
In the first half of the XX century, the Canadian city of Montreal was known as the capital of sex tourism in North America. ...
In the Canadian town of Dawson, every dog knows this legend. In the winter of 1920, local bootlegger Lou Linken and his brother ...
What entrepreneurs do not do to attract tourists. Hotels made of ice and snow, located under water and on the tops of trees, are no ...