Jason Blundell and his two teenage children sculpted a lifelike Ford Mustang out of snow.

Nebraska State Patrol Sgt. Mick Downing appeared at the family's home and left a fake tow-away notice on the "windshield."

A video posted to the Nebraska State Patrol's Facebook page of the trooper giving the family a "ticket" has racked up thousands of views.

The official start of spring is March 20, but for the folks in the Omaha area, it still looks a whole lot like winter. A snowstorm left Jason Blundell and his two teenage children shoveling driveways in their neighborhood over the weekend. And while they clearly had quite a bit of work on their hands, they still managed to make the activity fun.

Instead of leaving the discarded snow in a heaping mound, they decided to gather their tools and spend hours sculpting the snow. They carved the snow mound into the shape of a Ford Mustang, and boy, oh boy, did they do an incredible job of making it look realistic.

Of course, they couldn't leave an accomplishment like this undocumented, so they posted a photo of their snow-mobile to Facebook. A friend of the family, Nebraska State Patrol Sgt. Mick Downing, apparently saw the posting and decided to have some fun with the Blundells.

He appeared onsite, patrol car and all, and wrote a fake tow-away notice. He then left it on the car's "windshield." He posted a video of the moment he spotted the "illegally parked car" to the Nebraska State Patrol's Facebook page, where it has received hundreds of thousands of views:

Read more: A couple in Canada built the world's largest snow maze and it's open for visitors

Blundell and his kids reportedly used a skid loader, concrete wood floats, shovels, ice scrapers, and a squirt bottle to create the extremely lifelike vehicle. And despite their hard work, they never expected the car to become a viral sensation nor did the officer who posted the video.

"Holy cow, this thing blew up," Downing told the Omaha World-Herald. "One of my friends in Gretna said the BBC picked this up, (as did) some news organization in Australia."

Here's a better look at the masterpiece.

—NSP Trooper Horak (@NSPTrooperHorak) March 10, 2019

And believe it or not, this isn't the first time someone has built a replica of a car out of snow. In fact, in Canada, Simon Laprise built a car that looked so realistic, it actually had cops stumped at first.