GOOGLE Maps sleuths have spotted a VERY embarrassing moment immortalised by the search giant’s cameras.
Photographs available on the digital tool capture the moment a clumsy young lad drops a bag of apples as he crosses the street in Estonia.
The hilarious mishap was spotted by Google’s Street View cameras as they drove through the eastern European country.
Street View is a tool on Google Maps that provides interactive panoramas from positions along many streets in the world.
Snaps of the gaffe have gone viral before but resurfaced on TikTok earlier this month.
User @thegoogleearthguy shared their own take on what happened to the “poor guy” with their 1.2million followers.
The clip posted March 11 has racked up 60,000 views.
In it, a young man can be seen on Street View holding a bag as he strolls across the street in the Estonian city of Tartu.
As Google’s vehicle slips past him, the camera’s view jumps and the butter-fingered boy is seen standing in an awkward position.
He appears to be scooping up what look like half a dozen apples that have dropped from the carrier bag he had a hold of moments ago.
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TikTok fans expressed their sympathy for the unfortunate fellow.
One user commented under the video: “Rip him when he gets home…mother’s gonna be mad.”
Another said: “That be me with the eggs that my mom sent me to get.”
And a third wrote: “Poor guy just wanted his apples.”
It’s far from the first bizarre discovery made on Google’s digital map service.
In December, users spotted a $2billion B-2 stealth bomber as it soared over farmland in the United States.
Satellite imagery available on the digital map service has provided a rare birds-eye view of one of the angular aircraft above rural Missouri.
Eagle-eyed Reddit user “Hippowned” unearthed the once-in-a-lifetime shot and shared it to the site’s popular r/Damnthatsinteresting forum.
The image is slightly blurry, but viewers can clearly make out the bomber’s W-shaped wing design and famous “hawk’s beak” nose.
That shape means there are very few leading edges for radar to reflect from, helping it to fly incognito in enemy airspace.
The aircraft’s twin-engine exhaust channels are also visible towards the rear, as well as its jet-black windscreen.
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This post first appeared on Thesun.co.uk