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Giant snow squid takes Corner Brook man 20 hours to sculpt

It took Kirk Wiseman 20 hours to carve, sculpt and paint a snow sculpture of a squid on the front lawn of his home Philip Drive in Corner Brook.

"You've got to get out and keep busy," Kirk Wiseman tells CBC's Corner Brook Morning Show

Kirk Wiseman proudly stands in front of his snow sculpture that took him 20 hours to create. (submitted photo/Kirk Wiseman)

It took Kirk Wiseman 20 hours to carve, sculpt and paint a massive snow sculpture of a squid on the front lawn of his home Philip Drive in Corner Brook.

 "The detail takes some work," Wiseman told the Corner Brook Morning Show.

A 12-meter high snow sculpture of a squid in Corner Brook. (submitted photo/Kirk Wiseman)

To get the giant eye ball accurate, he spent some time looking at different pictures of squid.

Sometimes he would have to stand at the end of his driveway and look back at the thing to make sure it was to scale.

Wiseman stole a Tupperware container from the kitchen and used it to mold the hundreds of suction cups that he stuck on the seven enormous tentacles that swallowed the snow bank.

Kirk Wiseman says his family love his snow sculptures. (submitted photo/kirk wiseman)

"Winter can be a six-month affair in Corner Brook," he said. "We have had snow early since November. You've got to get out and keep busy."

Wiseman learned to design the perfect snow sculpture when he was a kid, when his family would compete in the local carnival contest.

Kirk Wiseman made this giant snow sculpture for the Corner Brook Winter Carnival snow sculpture contest. (submitted photo/kirk wiseman )

Now, a dad of two young children, he keeps the tradition alive by building a snow sculpture every year during the Corner Brook Winter Carnival. 

WIth files from Corner Brook Morning Show