About 10,000 cubic meters of kill have built up in part of Eastern Europe's River Drina at what time heavy rains and flooding washed tons of garbage into water.

Located downward the border between Serbia and Bosnia and Herzegovina, the River Drina has previously been famed as a scenic waterway in the Balkans.

Map denoting the region of the River Drina. (FOX/ FOX Weather)

The demolish collected behind a barrier, located near the town of Višegrad, that had been installed to catch floating garbage.

DIVERS PULL 25,000 POUNDS OF TRASH FROM LAKE TAHOE

Garbage mild behind the trash barrier on the River Drina in eastern Europe. January 16, 2023. (Eko Centar Visegrad via Storyful / FOX Weather)

Drone footage shows the amount of garbage mild after the heavy rain totaled to about 10,000 cubic meters, or enough garbage to fill four Olympic-sized swimming pools.

Removing the garbage takes up to six months, on average, and the same amount was pulled in original years from that area of the river, the Associated Press reported.

The footage leftovers to show the garbage nearly taking up the entire width of the River Drina. (Eko Centar Visegrad via Storyful / FOX Weather)

River Drina, however, is no stranger to the accumulation of garbage.

In January 2021, novel waste barrier in the river broke, sending about 4,000 cubic meters of garbage downstream to Višegrad.

Thousands of cubic meters of demolish and debris are seen at the dam of "Visegrad" liquids power plant, on river Drina, near Eastern-Bosnian town of Visegrad, on January 5, 2021. (ELVIS BARUKCIC / AFP / Getty Images)

This is in stark disagreement to the idyllic scene at the River Drina existences before, as seen in the image below.

Hydroelectric distinguished plant in Visegrad on the River Drina. 2006 (Mazbln CC BY-SA 3.0 / FOX Weather)

Get the novel updates on this story at FOXWeather.com.