I spent my childhood in Glazov, Russia. The minimum temperature was somewhere "-33" - "-35"°C. I want to note that how easily you can withstand the cold is influenced not only by the wind, but also by the humidity of the air. It's much easier when the air is dry.
@barryevans7916 ай бұрын
Not going to lie, this would be a retirement destination for me. Heat I cannot do, cold I am fine with.
@omega12316 ай бұрын
Cold is alot like heat in that way, except wind is much worse with cold than with heat. I live in a slightly cold, but wet and windy country. The wind factor alone, and winter being storm season, it easily feels like -30c to -40c even though the ambient temperature is like -6c. Not alot of snow just freezing rain, halfway between rain and hail almost. Freeze you to the bone regardless of clothing (almost).
@HyPnOsS19335 ай бұрын
@@Cougar4ik sea air makes it much colder Like 10 to 20 celcius Bud it’s sooo much colder when it’s -70 celcius No sea or land inward compares That’s cold on a whole another level
@proetcontra60796 ай бұрын
В Амурской области попал в -54, думал это жесть, но на Ямале, в Ноябрьске попал под -64, так что это нормальная температура для этого региона.
@charlesrimmer12466 ай бұрын
The young woman he was talking with has a channel "LIFE IN YAKUTIA". I think its still going, its worth a watch.
@nukiesduke68686 ай бұрын
As a born and raised Floridian who thinks 50 degrees is freezing that's a whole lot of NOPES on the NOPE train to F that ville.
@Luredreier6 ай бұрын
+50°F? That's comfortable. Down to -4°F is comfortable to me, below that it's getting genuinely cold. I've experienced about -58°F, it was almost the cold record of my country, we failed to reach it with less then 1 degree C. We got cold vacation from school from -40°F and down. But only in elementary school, older kids still had to go.
@antonironstag50856 ай бұрын
I live in Ireland. Worked with a Floridian for 3 years. As crazy as us Irish can be, she took it to a new level. Even after the years she's left, her influence is still felt. I swear, Florida is the one place in the USA I want to visit. Then you come here, you will feel the coldest rain and the wind is blowing it into your face for half the year.
@viikmaqic6 ай бұрын
jesus, 50 degress is 10c. Thats literally when we start to use t-shirts in the spring in sweden. With the minus degrees in mind the sun and 50f is like a dream But ive had -1c feel colder than -20c tho. It all depends on the moisture of the air. You feel the difference if you are up north in the polar circle. Its cold but you can walk to the mailbox in your underwear. But -1c in Stockholm city can feel like -30c becuse its a island capital with water all around it, so the humidity is higher. It goes right through the clothes.
@dustindiaz94936 ай бұрын
@@viikmaqic I want that -10C of Stockholm again...was there last year...miss it soo much.....I am Panamanian sometimes ...like last week...we have 38 C at 5 Am thx to humidity...I am melting down here
@viikmaqic6 ай бұрын
@@dustindiaz9493 Yeah, I cant handle that kind of heat. Went to cyprys many years ago. Last day on the island was 50c. Melted, I could not even leave the pool for more than 5 minutes
@acidcrow40516 ай бұрын
Around -35c feels ok during winter in northern Norway and Sweden. What can make it feel worse is the wind.
@NoProtocol6 ай бұрын
Cold wind whipping the face is not ideal
@billhacks6 ай бұрын
I agree. The windchill factor is not something to be underestimated. Cheers from Canada.
@ravenward6266 ай бұрын
Clear skies and still air can make the best of a dry cold. I know folks who prefer the cold of the inland parries to the slightly warmer but wetter places where the air gets better at conducting heat away.
@willsonj6 ай бұрын
Wind is what makes Antarctica so brutal
@PyromaN936 ай бұрын
Lol. -30°C and wind around 30km/h in St-Petersburg is absolutely worst what I felt.
@1977sardo6 ай бұрын
In permafrost area you build your houses on the stilts and tubes with hot water and gas above ground so they wont melt the permafrost which would cause the ground to move destroying any constraction.
@hesketh19656 ай бұрын
Remarkable people. I’ve been to really cold places in the north of Europe and Russia, but I'm sure it’s one thing to spend a few days in such places and another thing to actually live through the long, dark, cold winters. Thanks for the video.
@vanfredykt86f2fco36 ай бұрын
Да после зимы появляется какая то радость в душе весной .
@zephyrbean6 ай бұрын
The sound of the snow when he's walking at 11:37... anyone that has been in serious cold knows that sound. I was taught when you hear that, it's time to stop playing and come back inside.
@gogaonzhezhora86406 ай бұрын
It's the sound of fun to me. That's the winter to enjoy as a kid.
@adsr-sx6ck6 ай бұрын
As a native Russian, the lowest temperature I've ever tasted in Russia was -44C with no wind (Tobolsk city, western Siberia).
@АлександровичКубРусс6 ай бұрын
Проезжал на поезде Ебург, ночью вышел покурить, ветра не было и мороз был -47... что ты тут рассказываешь!
@adsr-sx6ck6 ай бұрын
@@АлександровичКубРусс я в Е-бурге жил 2 года
@MatveyGordeev6636 ай бұрын
Мариинск 2002 год январь -62
@АлександровичКубРусс6 ай бұрын
@@adsr-sx6ck и это значит что там не было -47? 🤣🤣
@rediggan6 ай бұрын
@@АлександровичКубРусс вроде это значит, что тут опытом делятся, а не письками мерятся
@Борода-ф9ъ6 ай бұрын
Зимой холодно -70С а вот летом как в Африке +50С (Такой уж климат в этом регионе России) Но в России есть регионы где нет холода, снега и круглый год жарко
@raystewart36486 ай бұрын
Lowest temp I have felt was minus 32'C in Canada, in the Yukon territory, back in 1998. Only there for a day and a half. Coldest temp on average here in the UK South is about minus 3'C but it has gotten to minus 7'C. when I was a wee boy. It use to snow every winter down here, but we have not had snow in our local area for over 6 winters. Global temp is rising to fast for snow to reach us down here as often as it once did. Its a shame as when I was a teenager I enjoyed sledging and building snow men. Kids down here today will never be able to do that and soon the whole of the UK will not get snow, inc Scotland. Some say this may happen within the next 10 to 15 years.
@helenab73903 ай бұрын
Song the video is excellent too...Circuits by Klangkarrusell
@Salzbuckel6 ай бұрын
1995 is was skiing in Norway, coldest Temperature indicated on ski lift -53 Celsius,
@MsMelkus6 ай бұрын
As a man from Siberia, I would say that there is no big difference for your body between -20C and -40C, but your face starts freezing somewhere after -30 even without the wind. With modern synthetic materials you could be completely ok in -40, except your face, so you need to cover it. And if there is a wind, even -20 becomes a nightmare. I have 10y old Arcteryx atom jacket, its weight is less than 1kg and it can keep your warm in -40 if you add a sweater. Or in -20 celcium you will be ok with a T-Shirt and this jacket. But it is short, so you need a warm pants too. Or maybe just buy a long version of Arcteryx jacket - but it is very expensive and I do not like how long version fits me. Fresh fruits and vegetable prices in Yakutsk and other cold cities could be 2-3 times more than in other parts of Siberia, so they have to suggest bigger salaries to attract people. in Novosibirsk, for example, we have regular prices, because we can grow a lot on our own during summer or in the glasshouse during winter or import from Uzbekistan which is quite close and have much hotter temperature. On the video, there are several cars covered with special clothes - it is how you can turn off your car and do not let it freeze. You just need a timer to turn on your car every 4-8 hours to warm up. For Novosibirsk in -35, it is enough to turn on your car engine and let it run for about 15-20 minutes every 4 hours without any additional clothes on your car - personal experience. The bigger problem are tyres - I heard that it froze after -50 and can break if you don't warm it up before driving. You can search on youtube for a video how truck drivers burn some liquids over tyres to warm it up.
@MsMelkus6 ай бұрын
kzbin.infolEqnIeiEsGI
@amalexey6 ай бұрын
Я живу в Мурманске, рядом с Норвегией, крайний север. Интенсивность нашей природы я ни на что не променяю. Здесь дух Земли в Природе виден невооруженным взглядом.
@raythevagabond37246 ай бұрын
When I watched this documentary the first time, it reminded me on "Michael Strogoff: The Courier of the Czar". A story from Jules Verne from 1875. Some critics consider it as one of Jules Verne's best books. I got that as a kid or very young teenager as one of my first "audio books" as vinyl record. The courier in this story travels about 3,200 miles or 5.200 km from Moscow, through Siberia to Irkutsk, which sounds similar to Yakutsk but is more south, close to Mongolia. The coldest winter I ever encounterd was the winter 1978/79 in the north of Germany. I think it got -20"C or -4"F, maybe even less. But since I was a child back then, I havent been aware of the danger but was fascinated by the amount of snow. I bet every soldier who was stationed there does remember that winter.
@bellantwain216 ай бұрын
I remember watching this one is so crazy how cold it is there OMG 🥶🥶love the video protocol stay motivated dream big 1 mill on the way
@PhasersAndArrows6 ай бұрын
Fascinating video, thanks for sharing. Definitely down for more from his channel. 👍
@Бојан-з9д6 ай бұрын
19:06 I wonder why they want to break Russia. It's not only diamonds btw.
@arcepasm6 ай бұрын
Please more content like this! I love Yakutsk, how they exercise, how the practice ice bathing to boost inmmune system, how Nomade Native Yakursk Tribe do their daily bussines, How you bathe there xD, all incredible.
@EpicHashTime6 ай бұрын
Russian "republics" are not actually independent countries, they are just states of the Russian federation
@Andrey-vy9bb6 ай бұрын
Which is very close to the US states, they were an examples for building new Russia.
@sergragnar94526 ай бұрын
@@Andrey-vy9bb no, not very close to the us states, and they absolutly not example for bilding new Russia.
@АндрэМарик6 ай бұрын
No @@Andrey-vy9bb
@e11235813213455891445 ай бұрын
@@Andrey-vy9bb no, Russia's weird. They have more type of sub divisions, each with different degrees of autonomy. I the USA, the states are pretty much the same, except for Guam and Puerto Rico, but Russia's got republics, obasts, krays and autonomous oblasts. Might not last for long though, the war could cause the whole thing to brake apart.
@zahrans5 ай бұрын
@@e1123581321345589144 The as you describe it, 'war' is only bringing Russians closer, which is the biggest disappointment for the govs of the collective west.
@TheTraktorarne6 ай бұрын
We regularly get down to -30c in winter here, sometimes -40(C or F don't matter here). The boiling water trick start working already at about -25C.
@SimonJM6 ай бұрын
I knew about Yakutsk, but only in the most surface/peripheral fashion, so this realy opened my eyes to mainly the culture of the region. Books: Ice Station Zebra by Alistair McLean Music: considering the number of diamonds, As Cold as Ice by Foreigner. For 'Russian' and 'snowy', I'd have to go for Troika from the Lieutenant Kije suite by Prokofiev
@VirusSI6 ай бұрын
I think I've seen a show about Oymyakon where they said that summers are worse than winters because of humidity and clouds of mosquitoes.
@Yarenoglu6 ай бұрын
Wow you found Ruhi Cenet's channel?! I'd never thought. He is really good at making these types of documentaries, I really hope you react to more of his stuff!
@pistonburner64486 ай бұрын
Yeah, I didn't know Borat still made documentaries.
@patm55946 ай бұрын
I live in Southern Minnesota. The coldest air temp I have seen is -30F
@rowanjun6 ай бұрын
All i can say is DO NOT USE warm water to rush warming up!!!!
@NoProtocol6 ай бұрын
This is noted!
@Lifter9996 ай бұрын
I´m pretty sure I have nerve damage from riding my bike in winter without gloves as a kid. Put hands under warm water and now even mild temperatures hurt. 15°C + wind and rain feels like freezing tempertures now.
@viikmaqic6 ай бұрын
@@Lifter999 Dont put your numb almost frostbitten feet in a scolding hottub, ive learned that lesson as a kid
@Lifter9996 ай бұрын
@@viikmaqic Did you suffer any damage or was it just extremely painful?
@fidorover6 ай бұрын
I lived in Minneapolis from 1993 to 2004. There was one day in the winter of 1993/1994 where the outside temp was 41 below zero, and the wind chill was 71 below zero. The biggest thing I remember about that day was how hard it was to get air into my lungs and how stiff my body was, even while walking briskly. Then I got home and realized that since the wind chill was 71 below zero and the temp inside my home was 70 degrees, that meant there was a 141 degree difference between inside and outside. Crazy.
@TheFriendlyTroll6 ай бұрын
that's too dang cold bro
@gio-oz8gf6 ай бұрын
I'd have left, immediately.
@74Bat6 ай бұрын
I actually went through bootcamp that same winter. We had the same temps at Great Lakes Naval Base during my time there. Imagine doing pushups and learning to march on the ice.
@ЛилиГригорьва6 ай бұрын
Да, у нас в Сибири и на севере очень холодная зима, но люди здесь закалённые! Не смотря на холода мы очень любим свою землю и свою страну! Поэтому не советуем никому претендовать на нашу страну!
@ravenward6266 ай бұрын
Diamonds are most common in Kimberlite pipes, or the surrounding erosion. K pipes are the hardened leftovers of iron rich magma being pushed through the earth's crust; volcano leftovers. Carbon can migrate through and crystalize in molten iron given sufficient pressure. The technique used to make gem sized synthetic diamonds was developed in Russia too I think. I'm surprised Canada didn't make the list for diamond reserves. There's a whole trail of Kimberlite pipes running north to south through the parries. Although, with the exception of those in the far north most are too deep under sediment and water tables to make digging them up economical.
@MrAtillka6 ай бұрын
В основном -50) В школу кстати)) Мы не ходили при -40) А -35 типо норм) Зато помню -40) нельзя в школу к вечеру -37) И гулять))))) Главный прикол это с кипятком) Если его выплескнуть) Он сразу превращается в ПАР)
@gogaonzhezhora86406 ай бұрын
Родственники из Якутска писали смешные письма. Я завидовал в детстве. "У нас -57, дети не ходят в школу, но ходят в кино и играют на улице."
@mickback9999996 ай бұрын
I have traveled quite a lot in my private life and at work, both to warmer places max +39 degrees celsius and cold places min -35 degrees celsius. The life people live is different, people adapt, it is impossible to believe that you can continue with the usual. It is fascinating to live among the local people and see and learn.
@NoProtocol6 ай бұрын
If this video taught me anything it’s that people can be adaptable. Living amongst locals when traveling gives such a better idea about the life there, I agree
@ravenward6266 ай бұрын
@@NoProtocol A question you might find interesting is how people living in the north learned to deal with polar bears before firearms were adopted.
@ruk2023--6 ай бұрын
5:44 it's an antipattern though. While it might appear to work meat frozen at -50c is going to defrost badly.
@wrldonwill6 ай бұрын
Storing the food outside is a next level hack! Of course you have to worry about the threat of freezer burn when you go to retrieve your food. lol
@dquanissavage62876 ай бұрын
No Protocol Awesome Video Today!!🔥🐐🐐💎
@emmanuelmartin12385 ай бұрын
I'm from the east of England so it rarely gets very cold, we had 'the beast from the east' a few years back , I think the low was -14 c. Cambridge looked like Russia . I recall in the Higher parts of Scotland one can feel the cold coming from the ground which I'd never felt before. I like a warm Autumn if I'm outside, but generally love the cold much more... absolutely dread hot humid summers. I'd love to experience what the video and some of the other commenters have lived through.
@barrystrachan63406 ай бұрын
Where I live it is typically -30 to -40C for several weeks in January/February. Many communities rely on this to construct winter roads for the transportation of non-perishable food items and building materials.
@gogaonzhezhora86406 ай бұрын
Yep, same in Russia. The winter roads in the North are to bring in as much supplies as possible for the season.
@nickoldy39805 ай бұрын
I have lived in Yakutia (Neryungri) for 15 years ! You'd love it there!
@polyanagula6 ай бұрын
the language the woman was talking in the video was Russian. the region I grew up in Russia has an average temperature -30°C in winter, the lowest I have experienced was -55°C. I remember the schools were closed when it was around -25 and children went playing outside instead of going to school LOL. the difference between -20°C and -40°C feels like a big difference and I can hardly imagine -60 or -70°C. now I live in a warmer place and just occasionally go to the city I grew up in. well, accommodating to low temperatures is a question of habit. now I need around 1 week to get used to -30°C for example for my eyes to stop crying as a reaction to cold temperature, and it was never a problem when I lived in that area the whole year long. I would say there are other things which might bother people even more than cold. first, if you live in a northern region then you barely see any sun in winter. it wasn't a problem for me, actually I was more annoyed by the sun never going down in summer (I didn't have dark curtains in my room), but I am sure many people would suffer from the lack of sun. in addition, the climate in the most part of Siberia (and Russia in general) is very continental leading to huge temperature changes in a short period of time. it might be -20°C in the morning and a few hours later drop to -40°C. apart from being annoying (as you have to check the weather forecast every day), people with blood pressure problems might suffer a lot.
@tanyagogoleva34666 ай бұрын
Вначале норм, к весне хруст снега бесит! Именно ХРУСТ!!! Когда даже шаг не можешь сделать без звука!
@polyanagula6 ай бұрын
@@tanyagogoleva3466 я всегда уставала от холода. месяца 2 - прикольно, низкие температуры - прикольно. но когда это "удовольствие" затягивается на полгода, то хочется поскорее тепла. хруст мне всегда нравился. а еще выскажу непопулярное мнение: я фанат полуснежной грязной жижи, в которую превращается снег весной, когда все тает. обожаю ступать по такой консистенции снега :) но, конечно, для этого периода у меня была специальная обувь, которую не жалко.
@deucedaprodeuca6 ай бұрын
This is one of my favorite videos from your channel. Almost all of them are good, but I enjoy learning new things, and I learned a lot of simple things. I'm from Buffalo New York, and I know cold, but I don't know "Cold as Hell." Lol
@NoProtocol6 ай бұрын
I’m so glad! I liked this one a lot too. “Cold as hell” is a whole new level unlocked 😂
@earthwormandruw6 ай бұрын
Here in NorCal we would say, "Hella cold".
@deucedaprodeuca6 ай бұрын
@@earthwormandruw I live in Norcal...Bay Area. I first came to visit in 1991 and I brought the word "hella" back to Buffalo. Now they all say it. I honestly think I singlehandedly brought that one word there.
@giggling_boatswain6 ай бұрын
The most interesting thing is that many students from Africa study at the Yakut State University; there is a video on the Internet. Вlisters from frostbite are the same as from a burn.
@rediggan6 ай бұрын
Here's some russian song recommendations: Земфира - Искала Аффинаж - Котик Shortparis - Стыд Shortparis - Яблонный Сад Валерий Гаврилин - Перезвоны - 1. Весело на душе I tried to pick something that could be engaging to listen to from musical standpoint, since a large percentage of our music is valuable mostly due to their lyrics, and melodies themselves could be quite boring.
@MrTech2266 ай бұрын
Currently, it is 70 degrees F at Yakutsk at 9am on 6/21/2024. Yakutsk do have summers not like it here in the USA. There were few times that Yakutsk had temperatures 90 degrees F+.
@dirtyjamster6 ай бұрын
Northern Finland at -42C. Was shopping at -32C! It's great when you wrap up and get used to it. Damp cold feels much worse than the dry cold at these temperatures. Also been to the middle east at over 50C which is far worse.
@QTGetomov6 ай бұрын
"Celestial Wives Of The Meadow Mari" is an amazing movie about Russian folklore, mysticism and a European people who were never converted to Christianity. It's an anthology of the folk tales of the Meadow Mari (as opposed to the Mountain Mari) retold in a modern setting. Their belief in animism is similar to that of the Yakutsk people, but with witchcraft and shamen. I think I'm just going to watch it again now!
@ROBOTRIX_eu6 ай бұрын
I have VK, and go there once per day..They have great msic there.. The only artist i know by name, is Polina Gagarina.. maybe some people are familiar with Kukushka [ ( Полина Гагарина - Кукушка (OST Битва за Севастополь) ] , or Lullaby [ Polina Gagarina - Lullaby (Полина Гагарина - Колыбельная) ) ]
@Valentin_I6 ай бұрын
In Moscow (capital, central european region of Russia) this winter was -28С. In general, throughout Russia the summer is short and the winter is cold. The warmest places in Russia are the "Southern regions" which are near the Black Sea - there is an average temperature like in the cold states of America.
@фийкё6 ай бұрын
Я только сейчас поняла, что Сочи находится на той же широте, что и Нью-Йорк… И ведь в Америке Нью-Йорк считается северным🤯
@Valentin_I6 ай бұрын
@@фийкё вот, да, об и этом и написал
@Cassxowary5 ай бұрын
winters here (montreal, quebec area) are in the -20s or -10s when it’s “nicer” out so yah lol I try to stay inside as much as I can in winter, that’s a no for me dawg 😂 I’m gonna be going back to the southern hemisphere (home) asap! I’m NOT a cold temperature person! I feel fine in any heat though as long as it’s at least somewhat humid
@Death0Row6 ай бұрын
I live almost smack on the artic circle and the best weather is rain,storms and ice cold winters,i don't work well when tempratures hit over 25 celcius.
@ThomasSchmid6 ай бұрын
Living in Canada, the lowest temperature ive ever experiences was -48C. With the climate changing yearly ive never experienced cold like that since. -20 feels fine for me if I wear a thick hoodie while outside shoveling snow. Everything below -30 is cold, at -40 extremely cold. That sort of temperature takes your breath away. If I ever had the opportunity given to me, I'd probably visit a place like this for the experience, but I definitely couldn't live there.
@ronaldtucker12626 ай бұрын
I moved from the south to Montana for 5 years. Cold weather is tough on the bones. I do not like the heat down south either, but I will take it over the freezing cold.
@fr_jel4 ай бұрын
The coldest region in Yakutia is Oymyakon where the record degree reached -71.2, and yes, we don’t study only when the degree drops to -54, we study remotely for 3 months due to the cold
@Nick9Three6 ай бұрын
I watched this video a couple months ago. It regular gets to -15°f where I live in the dead of winter and I must say anything below -10°f all feels the same to me. It’s just bone chilling cold that even with the layers and the warmest clothes, you still feel it. Cuts through you like a hot knife through butter.
@deucedaprodeuca6 ай бұрын
EXCELLENT BOOK RECOMMENDATION!
@ravenward6266 ай бұрын
Diamond mining in the north is aided by the cold. The soviets developed a technique where they drilled wells along the circumference of an open pit mine. The pipes filled with refrigerant, and topped with radiators. The cold norther air is enough to keep the ice around the wells frozen. It creates a dyke surrounding the mine that can prevents ground water from infiltrating the pit, making it more economical to go deeper.
@jmena61576 ай бұрын
“Surprisingly, the residents of Yakutsk encounter temperatures as high as 80 degrees during the summer.” 🌞
@СашаМанаев-щ9э6 ай бұрын
Зимой. Летом до +36°С.
@thanksmr.obvious64276 ай бұрын
you should react to Visiting the Closest Town to Space (Life with 50% less oxygen) by Ruhi Çenet .. really good video
@kamron_thurmond6 ай бұрын
I live in a part of Texas where their High temp in summer is an normal high for a winter day here. The most interesting thing is if I were to magically swap places with one of them during the summer I would be able to survive just fine, but they would pretty much die from the 105°F weather if they went outside, but if we where to swap during the winter. I would likely die in their winter, and they would be fine during my rather tame (comparatively) Winters here. Heck my coldest day here was 16°F they could probably go outside in shorts and a tank top.
@LynxLord19916 ай бұрын
In many cold regions of the world it used to be a practice when people were starving that the old or broken who could no longer help would leave home so they didnt take up food. Obvious not really a common thing anymore but when you mentioned the ever sleeping on mt Everest it made me think of it. The coldest its been here -23 or so and the coldest I ever been is -30ish
@CarlosRenfroe6 ай бұрын
I used to work at a bomber base in the Air Force. We used to TDY to Minot ND in November. As a Southern boy, it was miserable. Well into the negatives on a flightline with big ugly planes is no fun.
@chrisbasarab24466 ай бұрын
Always checking both the air temp and windchill factor in Canada. Coldest months are January and February. Sometimes, my breath freezes. It's not as bad as in this video, but it's no joke (lowest temp where I am was -34⁰C back in 1994, before windchill, but that is rare; lowest in more recent decades was -27⁰C to -29⁰C). However, going out at -10⁰C in just a t-shirt is not unusual, albeit not for long, just 10 - 15 minutes. Having days or even weeks of -20⁰C to -25⁰C before windchill is normal. As we say here, it matters more how well you're dressed than how cold it is. (there are homeless found dead outside every year as I recall). There is snow all winter long. Winter starts in October/November and ends in March/April. In the north, it even snows in May or June. But, spring and fall are short and summer is hot and humid (at times, you sweat just by standing still and breathing in the middle of summer). The worst in winter, after the cold, is the amount of daylight. As you know, the farther from the equator, the sooner the sunset in winter (sometimes even at 4PM or earlier - depressing)
@DenUitvreter6 ай бұрын
Don't remember the mark and model but there were these Russian cars that came with a small hatch in the floor, so you could parkt it over a hole in the ice and fish in the comfort of your car. Makes sense. I don't really mind -20C with the right clothes on, but this is basically the death zone concept, you are in the process of dying unless you get out of it soon enough. That scares me a little.
@twistau55286 ай бұрын
I spent a week in Yakutsk during summer in 2007, incredible place with incredible people, traditional method of bathing is to take a bucket of water and a cloth into the sauna.
@khaustovaleksey56756 ай бұрын
Как она красива, я заворожен. Этот голос так же очень манящий❤❤❤
@charlesf28046 ай бұрын
I remember waking up one winter morning while at college in New Hampshire (Dartmouth), turning on the radio, and the first thing I heard was "Good morning. It's 27 degrees below zero at 8 AM." I turned over for a few minutes. Got up, got myself together, then headed to the dining hall. The cold wasn't as bad as I thought it would be. Fortunately, it wasn't windy or particularly humid. What this guy's describing, however, is on another level. On drinking alcohol in the cold: alcohol isn't something to consume thinking you'll stay warm; the opposite is true, you lose body heat.
@ciberzombiegaming82076 ай бұрын
well, i went to school once at -36C. tho atndence was not requared from -35C and below. where do i live? Lithuania, Batlics. in old days we had real winters (well, not that long ago, like 20-30 years ago) now its nice if we even have snow on christmas.
@Megatronix.6 ай бұрын
His video about La Rinconada in Peru is also very interesting. It is the highest inhabited place on earth.
@terryhughes73496 ай бұрын
interesting episode.
@MarkSunshine4 ай бұрын
Just discovered your channel - subscribed - will be back #hello - love the intellivibe
@haacka_ykt6 ай бұрын
Привет, а теперь осталось сделать обзор на летнюю Якутию
@Competitive_Antagonist6 ай бұрын
I saw a news video about one of the world's coldest countries that I think was between India and China. They did the instant snow thing with microwaved water and said that in the summer it gets unbearably hot. I can't remember the country, but they had an East Asian appearance.
@ravenward6266 ай бұрын
I met someone who worked in Clear Alaska during the winter. They said that they had to put a cardboard baffle in front of their radiator to reduce the cold air wicking away heat from the engine at highway speeds during the winter. Otherwise their engine would stall on the road while commuting to work.
@billhacks6 ай бұрын
Yeah I am from Alberta, Canada and can confirm this. I found that painting the cardboard with rattle can before installing would make it more durable and look less tacky. They also used to sell "winterfronts". It was like a car bra that would cover the grill.
@gogaonzhezhora86406 ай бұрын
Yes, cardboards was the usual thing on cars back in the day in Russia too. Nowadays theer are all kinds of better looking gimmicks.
@fightforaglobalfirstamendm56176 ай бұрын
-15°C in England is the coldest I've ever experienced, but it's rare to have snow in England, its been 2 years since we had snow that lasted on the ground for more than a few hours.
@БорисБорисов-п3щ6 ай бұрын
Про Сталина и СССР этот человек пересказал западную пропаганду,это понятно,зачем изучать факты когда так проще
@Valentin_I6 ай бұрын
Интересно, кулаков и жуликов он бизнесменами назвал
@DimonZ-z8s6 ай бұрын
@@Valentin_I Тоже похохотал😁😁😁 Вот бы мой прапрадед удивился бы что он оказывается бизнесмен😂😂😂
@Valentin_I6 ай бұрын
@@DimonZ-z8s вот, что ещё странно. Как у кого ни спросишь - у всех прапрадед кулаком был. Если всех кулаков репрессировали, то как же мы с вами получились?
@ashocck80656 ай бұрын
Please, save this for those who are actually clueless about history. That is the truth, plain and simple. This is exactly what the USSR did, especially from the 1920s to the late 30s, that is to those who were not executed on the spot. You are either ignorant or you want others to be so. See, just because we live in the West, does not mean that we are all ignorant, especially those of us who's roots are from that part of the world. Have yourself a nice red day, comrade. Oh and btw, when you eventually leave Ukraine with your tail between your legs, don't let the door hit you on the way out. Or do.
@Aloisio7996 ай бұрын
Он пересказал на понятном языке, чтобы его поняли сограждане. А насчёт кулаков, это советская как раз пропаганда сделала их "плохими".
@antonm18346 ай бұрын
9:54 this is Russian langauge if you are curious - i am a native speaker.
@dangrigore.6 ай бұрын
Do you ever listened Dimash from Kasahstan? Best voice in the world
@baddayoverdosed6 ай бұрын
While visiting Fairbanks Alaska in February I learned that Celsius and Fahrenheit convergence point is -40
@Valentin_I6 ай бұрын
Alaska was once a region of Russia. Probably, the Russian Tsar-Emperor decided that cold Siberia was enough for him and sold Alaska to the americans for $ 7.2 million 🙃 (joke, the reasons for the sale are more serious)
@_uncredited6 ай бұрын
As a Northerner, it is my duty to say "It's a bit nippy oot," and then refuse to wear a coat.
@Stogie21126 ай бұрын
"Looks like snow, eh?" "Yah, it should be a 12-incher!"
@Shoomer19886 ай бұрын
Me too. I once got beaten up for wearing gloves...and to be fair I did have it coming.
@syx3s6 ай бұрын
there are many great suits that you can wear that make those temperatures bearable. it's all about layers. a thick impermeable outer layer with a couple thick fleecy layers and then a couple moisture wicking layers and you're in pretty good shape with good enough gloves, boots and layers of face protection under your hood. the biggest thing for your face is to make sure that only minimal skin is exposed so that your blood can keep what is exposed from freezing.
@syx3s6 ай бұрын
it's very normal to go out ice fishing in semi northern canada in -30c where you stand out on the ice all day with the wind blowing the snow horizontally across the lake. my family uses "survival suits" that the oil rig and ship crews use on the oceans for emergencies. they're essentially one piece full body life jackets that more or less seal around your hands, feet, and neck, and have tons of space underneath for as many layers as you'd like. the wind can't pass through the outer "floater" layer and if for some insane reason you end up through some thin ice (which only exists over fast moving water when it's that cold) you float.
@srottfaen6 ай бұрын
As we say in Norway; "Finnes ikke dårlig vær, bare dårlig klær". Or as something understandable to most others; "There's no such thing as bad weather, only bad clothing". Doesn't have the same flair in English :/ This Jazz tune from the USSR is pretty awesome. Дустар - идет дождь. I've only found it on youtube and it wont let me link it for some reason.
@NoProtocol6 ай бұрын
It fits well in English too. Sometimes KZbin is weird about links (I’m not exactly sure why some are excepted & others are not). I’ll copy/paste right now!
@NoProtocol6 ай бұрын
Update: something about this song sounds “jolly”, one of the only ways I can explain it. Also funky
@srottfaen6 ай бұрын
@@NoProtocol It is indeed. I have a hard time sitting still when I hear it. I have to dance :D I found the song on this great YT site called My Analog Journal. They invite people to make playlists with their old vinyl in all kinds of genres. Lots of it is really obscure. This playlist is called "CBS: Jazz From USSR Vinyl Set" Really diggin that Alyans album btw!
@earthwormandruw6 ай бұрын
@@srottfaenВИА "Дустар" - Йэштэр йырлай / Молодые Голоса found the full album, very cool 😎
@richardhowlett73986 ай бұрын
I don’t understand how it’s possible to live in those temperatures, the coldest I have known is around -40 centigrade in the freezers at work . The time you can spend in there is strictly controlled to 20 mins at a time.
@Volenzar6 ай бұрын
Nobody caught when he said, "As the air conditioner heats up the inside of the car...". I mean, it kinda makes sense given how bitterly cold it is outside but still wild to think about.
@RobbEsspisi6 ай бұрын
I'm from Northern Norway, and the coldest I've experienced was -42°C when snowsledding with my Siberian Husky pack across Finnmarksvidda, and that was absolutely grusome...! Just FYI : -39°C is the temperature Mercury freezes, so I got my data from weather stations using pure Spirit thermometers 😅 I never want to feel below 70°C 🥶 That's just a whole lot of nopes from me
@Gazer756 ай бұрын
I'm in the southwest and we had down around -30C many years ago. Painful to breathe outside. Think it was 2 weeks with temps not going above -25C which is pretty unusual here. Normally we get a couple of weeks around -15C to -20C during winter.
@Stogie21126 ай бұрын
Early July 1995: La Crosse, WI was 108° F. Early February 1996: La Crosse, WI was -42° F. I helped a guy move his house that morning. 😱😱 Here in Wisconsin, we are "extremists" whether we like it or not! In a past job, I was once on the roof of a 7-story grain elevator building, cleaning out a jammed dust collector when it was -17° F and WINDY. I don't recommend it.
@ispbrotherwolf6 ай бұрын
When it is this cold, you shower in the evening, never in the morning, that is to keep the oil in your skin. Here in Sweden I have been out in -41C (-41,8), that was not fun at all.
@diabolic116 ай бұрын
lololol that document is interesting Im from Seoul and Seoul gets about -20°C in winter but my father's father(grandfather) is from North Pyongahn province which is now North Korea. And he told that in 1940's his hometown gets below -40°C and even now, North Korea Ryanggang Province, Samjiyeon city gets -52°C in winter. It is ridiculous that the latitude of Samjiyeon is about the same as Greece!
@guycore54786 ай бұрын
I couldn't even stand trying to put the key in an exterior motel door without a glove to unlock it in 28 degrees in Flagstaff in January.
@ruk2023--6 ай бұрын
Coldest I have even been to was Krakow, Poland in the winter of 1996. -20c (-4f) without windchill. Way too cold for me so this is bonkers to see.
@2000blackstang6 ай бұрын
In Minnesota winters I store meat on my back deck
@thejoelrooganexplosion24006 ай бұрын
Tendrils on point
@geodude2056 ай бұрын
Around where I live in Russia ,the winter temperature is around -20 to -30. Not that cold compared to Sakha
@wilgarcia16 ай бұрын
Finally a place I can have a good nights sleep =P
@sliceofheaven30266 ай бұрын
Hmm how did they build the stuff if 15 mins is the recommend time to spend outside?
@dimasryr30276 ай бұрын
I'm from Yakutsk and our living conditions are not as savage as if it was a village it's just cold outside and that's it the houses are very warm in the winter so question "how do they shower?" or smth like that is weird to me like we shower in the bathroom shower? Like most people in the world lol. Mostly in the videos they show villages and stuff not the cities. Also the summer is usually very hot at average up to 35 degree celsius
@hrafnatyr97946 ай бұрын
Hello, Swedish guy here 🇸🇪. We also have quite low temperatures in places and from time to time. The Swedish cold record (-63 ˚F) was measured at a weather station in Vuoggatjålme, a small community in northern Sweden in 1966. Vuoggatjålme is actually located about 300 miles further north than Yakutsk (Scandinavia's northernmost city Hammerfest is, by comparison, located further north than Russia's northernmost city Norilsk 😜). Otherwise, the weather here is considerably milder than in Siberia and in the north of the USA and in Canada despite the northern latitude. Compared to the USA / Canada, Sweden's geographical center is roughly at the northern tip of Newfoundland or about 70 miles north of Anchorage in Alaska. Sweden's southernmost point is more than 400 miles north of Vancouver and Chicago at about the same latitude as Rome in Italy 🫢. The fact that Europe in general and Scandinavia in particular has such a mild climate is due to the relative proximity to the Atlantic and the Mediterranean, and here in Scandinavia the Atlantic Gulf Stream is of course of great importance.
@gogaonzhezhora86406 ай бұрын
Dude Hammerfest has 11 thousand people. Norilsk has 174. Calling Hammerfest a city is bold. And Hammerfaset is only 1 degree further north than Norilsk. Another one degree south is Murmansk with 266 thousand people. It is barely comparable. 11 thousand is btw below the offcial cutoff for a settlement to get a city status in Russia while come would hold the title historically, but being an exception from the rule. While the biggest village in Russia has over 40 thousand people. All that said Sabetta in Russia has 22 thousand people is further north than Hammerfest. It is just too small to be called a city in Russia.
@hrafnatyr97946 ай бұрын
Well, the gist of the comment was not to compare population numbers. I am fully aware that both Murmansk and Norilsk are significantly larger than Hammerfest 😎. Instead, the intention was to point out how far north Scandinavia and Europe actually are, something that most Americans have no clue about, and to give a (very) brief explanation as to why the climate here despite this is so mild. I apologize 1000 times if I unintentionally hurt your (Russian?) feelings 😉🙄
@gogaonzhezhora86406 ай бұрын
@@hrafnatyr9794 Why do you always think you can hurt any russian feelings? It was just about numbers and facts. More like I see some of strange misconceptions about Americans added. Why do you think Americans have no clue about where Europe is(except for the ones who don't know where their own country is)? Alaska and Canada have pretty much the same climate attributes as northern parts of Eurasia. As well as both humid and dry zones. The Gulf Stream is just adding a bit to the variety of it. You can easily turn it the other way. When some show falls in Central Europe and everything seems to collapse Canadians would laugh and be puzzled by why a bit of snowfall means the end of normal operation of airports, public transportation and city services.
@leonardleonard37696 ай бұрын
Зима - абстрактное время года... и щедрое на императивы холода и короткого светового дня. Эти вещи настраивают глаз на внешний мир с энергией большей, чем у электрической лапочки, которая снабжает тебя по вечерам чертами лица. Если это время года и не всегда усмиряет нервы, но оно подчиняет их инстинктам: красота при низких температурах - настоящая красота
@sadrialsk418527 күн бұрын
Ruhi Çenet
@ZOMBIEHEADSHOTKILLER6 ай бұрын
if youre looking for Russian music.... check out "Leningrad" they have a tone of good songs, a good starting place is the one that has a tiger as its thumb nail ( i dont know its name)
@EskimoUlu6 ай бұрын
I've been in -60F here in Alaska.
@skipmaloney21266 ай бұрын
If I get out of the pool and have goose bumps, it's too cold.