The year was 2009. The world was at the height of a financial crisis. Iceland wasn’t immune—the country’s banks had already collapsed, tanking its bustling economy. But, most tragically, it was the year that the last McDonald’s was forced to shut its doors in Iceland. The country cried that day.

It had simply become too costly for the franchise to operate in the country. “For a kilo of onion, imported from Germany, I’m paying the equivalent of a bottle of good whiskey,” franchise owner Jon Gardar Ogmundsson told the BBC in 2009.

Before McDonald’s shut its door forever, though, a man Hjörtur Smárason purchased a cheeseburger. He had no intention of eating it—rather, he had bigger plans for this burger. He kept it. For three years. In his garage. Why? It’s still a mystery.

In 2012, he revisited the burger. Perhaps to relive his memories eating at McDonald’s, to cherish what once was the greatest of all burger joints (puke).

As a surprise to absolutely nobody, he noticed that it didn’t deteriorate. He donated it to a museum and it eventually made its way to the Bus Hostel in Reykjavik, where it sits in a display for all to worship to this day.

That’s where Reddit user shaanxiprovince captured the photo of the last cheeseburger sold in Iceland over six years ago, sharing it with Reddit’s Mildly Interesting community.

According to the hostel’s website:

“For many that was symbolic for the way Icelanders shun the capitalistic powers in Iceland following the crisis. Besides, the McDonalds menu didn’t really fit the diet of skyr, blueberries and rotten shark that had given Icelanders one of the longest life expectancy in the world.”

The lack of McDonalds explains a lot about Iceland’s populace, as one redditor eloquently points out:

But this could also put the country at risk for retribution from the almighty United States:

If you won’t be going to Iceland anytime soon, you can still enjoy the burger by watching this live stream—yes live stream—of the cheeseburger, um, not rotting?

“Chances are that this is the most boring, uneventful web cam on the planet,” describes the Bus Hostel.

You can even ask staff members to place notes near the burger during the live stream, according to Reddit user Homebytheseaa, an alleged employee of the hostel.

“A man asked us to put up a welcome to Iceland sign for him one day. We did it because he, in turn, shared with us an online album of over 700 pictures he had collected of this burger. He would use his lunch hour at work to take screenshots of people who walked by it. The staff thought it was odd, but the office thought it was interesting. Well.”

But if you ever do make it to Iceland and you’re craving a fix—you’ll have to settle for this McDonalds knock-off.