@@thePersson Most of the building were probably built by people with warm clothes. I am saying this due to how well the buildings look and if a cold person builds a building it wouldnt look good due to their shivering.
How you maintain sperm, sex and reproduction? After seeing 100 degree Celsius boiling water scene .. curiosity multiply by 100.. Is any chances of freezing of semen?
That is a legit thing, we used to keep food in freezer if we want to eat it that day and keep it out side if we want to keep it for ages because it takes forever to defrost
As an African living in the tropical regions of east Africa, i guess i'll never feel what its like for temperature to be below 21 Celsius. Sometimes we have to be thankful for what we have coz you never know what other people are going through... I enjoyed the show, take care guys!!
A traveller sees a resident of Yakutsk eating ice cream outside. -Dude why are you doing that? It’s -50C and you are eating ice cream?! -Ice cream is only -20C. I’m trying to warm myself up
Am in South Africa, Johannesburg. It's 21:21pm.Temperature right now is 11°c, feels like 10°. It's currently the beginning of winter and am in bed with a fleece blanket, a comforter and a sweater on, yet my feet are cold (just got into bed). I can't imagine living in a place like that. It's so satisfying to watch though, in the comfort of my bed. All that's missing is a cup of hot cocoa. Just finished watching the Lut Desert experience and the contrast is insane. Great content. Thanks
В России если температура на улице в течении недели держится ниже +8 в многоквартирных домах включается центральное отопление, а в частных домах у всех есть различное отопление - от камина до газового
@@TashMagesh once upon a time i went from Magadan to oymakon (the lowest degree in Russia) it was 68 degree for Celsius So, i said the same (are u crazy?))) By the way, I was in Johannesburg in last year U have incredible country, but the centre of the yohannesburg is so dangerous :c
@@flashblack1059 obviously you didn't watch the video or flat out didn't pay attention. Yes the people IN that city did that. The girl and people who she represented that said that DID NOT LIVE THAT WAY!!
Sorry for my english in advance* Me and my family once nearly died when our car broke down just as he said at 9:00. I was 8 back then. It was not in Yakutsk but it was a similar area, and it was about the same temperature, -47C or -58F. We stuck in a wilderness. And, worst of all, it was at night. My dad left the car to stop someone else on the road so they could transfer us to safety using a cable but there were no cars, maybe like one in 10 or 20 minutes, and no one stoped for us because it was actually illegal to drag another car in that area and people didn't want to get in trouble. So he stood there for more than an hour waiting and raising his hand when another car passed us by (i remember how he got into the car from time to time with little icicles on his mustache, and i'm not joking). Meanwhile my mom tried to warm me on the backseat, taking everything from the car like clothes and such, she even took off her upper clothes for me because i guess i was freezing to death, since soon i simply passed out. When i woke up i realised that we were saved by a passerby who was not afraid of the consequences and helped us to get to the hotel. I was lying under three blankets while my mom was lying under her clothes by my side, sacrificing herself for me once again. But my dad... Oh lord, that poor man spent the night in a cold garage fixing our car. He haven't slept one minute. When we woke up he was done and we hit the road again eager to get home. To this day, i think about how we could die out there, and how they both saved themselves and me through perseverance, cold (no pun intended) thinking and cooperation. edit: and i can't even imagine how frightened they were. But they freaking did it anyway. I love my parents.
Amazing story bro and I just read it on a spirit journey. I can't wait till we all become more aware that our fellow humans. Are more important than any law. And we should always care for eachother especially in life or death scenarios. 🙏🙌😇
That's crazy to live in such conditions. Thank you girl for helping bring this to us in the comfort of our homes. I pray you good fortunes and hope you have no finger issues moving forward in your life.
@@kalyankumarchattopadhyay7128 we lives in earth planet. Nothing can be exception as freezing, hot or other natural disasters. Actually, human is a kind of burden on the planet if we think of global warming or pollutions. Personally, I love this planet , solar system and the universe through Hubble and JWST telescope. U can live ur live in 50 celcious, as u wish dude.
I am russian and the coldest temperature I had was -33C. I have no idea how -60C or below feels like. Its unbelievable people can live in such conditions for entire life
Same for me, i live in Syktyvkar and the coldest for me was -40C. But i moved to Crimea for a year and the maximum was a -8C and it was really cold too, i dont know how does it work xD
@@nearinhumanspeed i think it has to do with air density. Idk what exactly happens, but you dont feel the difference between -20C and 0C as much as you feel the difference between 0C and 20C
@@razyi9183 Depends on geography too. In the UK, it's really dry cause we're surrounded by a river. Lived in Lithuania, it's really nice down there. -20°C in Lithuania feels like -5° in the UK. The thing that confuses me is that I've heard the temperatures in July are around +20°C in Yakutsk. Imagine going from +20 to -60, jezus
@@alibabapirce9782 did you not see in the video that cars are literally frozen over if they’re not turned on so even though he’d have a car it’s still probably a huge pain and driving in those weather conditions is probably even worse than walking around. So no actually I don’t think they’d just be “fine” considering the amount of risks there are
youre not the only one, i like it too, but this is an extreme that nobody should enjoy, even the most hardcore of cold lovers, i want no part in this place lol, ill stick with like…alaska, thats somewhere i wanna go
I lived my first 15 years of my life in Yakutia. I am very glad that this place is of interest to bloggers. In fact, these places look very forgotten and most of the young people are eager to leave there, as I did 7 years ago. The climate for a visiting person seems terrible, but for a local resident it is familiar. Moreover, when I moved to a warmer place, I even missed the cold and snowy winters. Come to these places in the summer and you will be very surprised! The untouched nature of inexplicable beauty. In Yakutia, you can spend a short, but unforgettable summer vacation
When I lived in Alaska, they said it's illegal to pass by a hitch hiker on the highway away from civilization from December to April if the temp is below 0. I didn't fact check it, but I found it interesting
Seriously. I don't even like changing a wiper blade if it's cold out. Imagine trying to diagnose and repair your vehicle on the side of the road while you're literally freezing to death. Nope.
I was outside one winter evening where I used to live, just wearing a pair of regular jeggings, a long sleeved jumper and a jacket and it was 'only' -13C. I was outside walking home for only 15 minutes and my thighs got so cold they felt hot from the inside of my skin. Of course on the outside they were freezing cold and they hurt so much. My fingers and face were numb also. I can't imagine how painful -50C coldness would feel.
There is this candy/ice cream that is made with liquid nitrogen called dragon’s breath There have been reports of peoples tongues bleeding or getting burnt after eating it
The same feeling can be felt in many parts of Canada and Mongolia where it reaches -40C. But yeah... -50C must hurt. I remember my friend getting stuck on a outdoor pullup bar when we were kids. He could only do 6 before he started crying.
The way she was responding and explaining the nature most of the people fails to understand & her bond with the nature can easily be understand through her body language. Especially the way she wanted to preserve the culture and transfer to future generations is appreciable.
@@agunggumelar575 I think our limited dictionary is lacking in proposing any graceful word to define her personality. Having connections with such personality is not nothing more than blessing.
Я жила так. Холод при таких низких температурах ощущается не как холод, а как физическая боль, как будто вас ударили в лицо, к примеру. Бывали дни, когда я так замерзала на улице, что плакала, когда возвращалась домой. Несколько раз у меня было обморожение носа и ушей. Вот почему я переехала в Европейскую часть России 🙂
The lady's description of their people's culture and religion really depicts what our relationship with nature should be.... Respectul and always filled with gratitude.
Right on they just take what they need no more no less!! Our planet would be a much better place to live if we took tips from the native people! They seem to live in harmony with MOTHER NATURE 🌬
I'm from Russia and I've never experienced such coldness. Fortunately I live in the south of the county. The contrast between different parts of Russia is really impressive and amazing..
Where I'm from the winter is cool and very wet , minus 4 celcius most winter nights but in summer we get 40 celcius, but the weather changes quickly. It could be 35 celcius then in 10 minutes windy and heavy rain and 12 celcius, then 5 minutes later back to 35 celcius
There is no time to be depressed in such weater. Live, move or get frozen to death. Sourse: lived there for some years, moved to Vladivostok. Sea fauna is rich here, hunting down octopuses near Russkiy isl. with harpoon is great. Try it, if you will visit Vdk.
They have special rooms with UV lights in it where they can sit to increase the vitamin D in their bodies. There was a fine blog entry about this city somewhere on the internet. It was really interesting to read about it.
I couldn’t imagine living in an area like this. I give a lot of respect to those who live there. Thanks so much for making this video over there. I hope you didn’t suffer for making it.
Well, in -30 or -40 with -50 air becomes very dry and there is no much wind at the winter, well atleast at region where i live. So this makes -40 and -50 feel not so bad as it sounds, sure it's pretty dangerous to stick outside for a long time and after your limbs hurt due to getting frozen a bit but it's not that bad as you can think considering cars, ugly, yet pretty warm buildings, and warm clother of course
When I read press releases about car companies going eco, electric energy based, I remember that here in Russia my phone dies at -27 and the cars don’t stand a chance.
I lived in Russia for 6 years, visited Novosibirsk once but it is nowhere as cols as Yakutsk. I was resident in Ulyanovsk which of course is further south. When we had a record breaking winter of 30 to 33 below zero during my stay there, there was a threat of shutting down all public facilities. In Yakutsk its just another day at the office.
am from Novosibirsk and in last winter we have -40. and I went to my college wearing summer sneakers and two pairs of standart socks, I cant feel my legs and I don’t think I fell a cold )
I do respect the lady, that is her home, her culture, she grew up there and people adopt the climate and nature where they are born. Ruhi Cenet is Turkish; he is looking at from a different angle and he was born in Turkey. I was also born in Turkey but I have been in many countries and ended up living in Arizona. Each person values different things in life; in her case, family life, and nature in her area, she is conditioned to live there. It is not torture to live in a very cold environment. Anyway, Ruhi Bey, selamlar Arizona dan. Ismim Gulten dir.
This documentary was great because the presenter was to the point, didn't waste our time with filler shots and non sense. Very informative and interesting the whole video, thank you
Yes, great video on living in extremely cold weather! I would love to have learned more about the people here and why so many have settled in this very harsh climate in an isolated area.
t really is the end of the world it is since 2000 years when jesus first came now is just at its peak, for god 1 thousand years is a second and a second is 1 thousand years! THE SIGN 666 WILL BE KEPING SUNDAY AS DAY OF WORSHIP! you heared me right! the 4th comandement in the ten laws is "keep my sabats ,that shall be a sign between me and you", it was refering to the jews, but the bible has 100 precent actuality and 100 precent do as god said no matter the times! the godgiven day of worship the sabath is saturday not sunday! sunday was the first day of the weak, vatican and the popes changed it , claiming they have is autorityn as the pope is god on earth, ruler of heavens earth and hell! now this is the bigest blasphemy somone claiming hes god! the pope already met with all worlds leaders, political-religious-and the 1precent wealthiest people on earth the illuminatis A class luciferian puppets! they met saying they discuss the climate change problem! what happened when jesus was crucified , saying that is better for one man to die than the whole people to be in disagreement, this is text book what will happen these days, youl hear this soon enough,! as inflation and economy, the famens the climate calamities , wile keep growing in intensity, whatever they do it by harpp projects or some ar really god let to happen, as its all predicted in Daniel prophet and apocalypse! the fear the teror the need for a solution will expend, ! all this problems will be blaimed on those who refuse to worship sunday , the sign of the pope, and everything will be blamed on this few people who refuse to bow in front of vatican (sunday)! text book what happened with jesus will happen to those who refuse popes autority who claims he is god, and all this wrath is beacouse this public enemys refuse to listen to him! but lucifer was defeated in heavens, was defeated at the cruce, and will be defeated in the end! for those who understand jesuses died for all sins , and all sinners, no man is reedemed by his deeds but by gods grace, and the holy spirit who strenghtens those who care only about what the bible says , and refuse to worship a man given day! evrything is mad for people to be blind to this: "ego" "music" "brandi love", its all made to sell you a false sense of utopia and comfort, meanwille you neglect this most precious times ever on earth! i cant reply back to anything as youtube deletes my replys most of the times, even if i respond from another acount, pray and have faith , jesus is right with you, have faith! dont doubt god a second, imma pray for you to, do aswell! read ISAIAS 55 and 56 , and 31 !!! and you can find the ten comandemnts in exodus 20!
Somewhere in this town is a man named Billy, wearing Jean shorts, no shirt, no shoes… Saying “I ain’t cold, feels good” Edit 1: Damn! Billy is getting a lot of love. 😂
@@istvancsap3513 I took the bait and googled it. It is the usual "Become a billionaire fast and easy through self-realization" bulls*t book to squeeze some money out of the desperate and the gullible. "Censored book, forbidden knowledge" that we freely offer to you. Kek.
@Where's the hen? i live here and maybe i know better 😅 arctic day and night are more expressed up to north, if you look at the map Yakutsk is lower. but yes, surely there are less daylight hours in winter, and more in summer
@@naplzt4k Nevermind nature. Just having the majority of humanity show this level of respect to one another would be a very refreshing breath of fresh air with all of the hurt and pain our species has caused one another throughout history for the most trivial of reasons.
thank u Ruhi.. it was another very informative most especially here in our country where we experience only two seasons.. and were not even expecting that there are country like that it was very amazing
Well, I remember when i was in Yakutsk in a business trip. It was in december 2019. I live in another part of Siberia, so cold winters is not surprising me. But climate is my region is a little bit warmer - the coldest winter temperature ive seen in my city -46c. The normal winter temperature in my area is about from -25c to -40c. When we driving around Yakusk ive noticed many cars, covered with some kind of tents, but it was very thick, so i decide that this covers are insulated . You can see this kind of cover in this video too. Also, almost all cars there have a second windshield and side glasses - because you cant normally drive with one glass - it will be totally covered with frost due to temperature differences in and out of the car. All drivers have a "survival pack" in the trunk - with axe, warm boots and clothes (REALLY warm), blowtorch, firewood and stuff. Unfortunately, this does not always help to save lives. If the car pipes freezes on the move (it is even colder outside the city), people try to warm themselves with fires, then they burn the wheels, then the car itself, and then if no one passes by (the places there are very uninhabited) they freeze to death - such cases happen almost every winter - I saw few burned cars on the side of the road with my own eyes. Thats why in Siberia, mutual assistance on the roads is very well developed - if you are standing on the side of the road with the alarm on - 9 out of 10 people passing by will stop and ask you what is the matter and how to help you. Siberians are considered in Russia to be a very kind and sympathetic people - because otherwise it is very difficult to survive in these conditions.
So theres no restaurants and cafes here just live lifevand each day is a strive for survival. Thankyou for going outside and showing us and sorry you had to endure the pain just for video. But we appreciate your effort ❤ much love from waaaaay acros the world from 🇿🇦
To be fair, this type of documentary deserves to be in in recommended out of nowhere , just for the effort, and information it provides... not like a reaction video or something like that
4:05 better explanation would be: yakutsk is build on permafrost, which means only the top few meters of ground will melt occasionaly, thus buildings would sink or collapse. The pillars on which the houses are build are drilled into the permafrost earth that never melts and thus stable. This is so insane, nice docu.
I have a friend that has been traveling for around 20 years. He lived for months in Alaska and spent a couple winters in north Canada. He went to Yakutsk he lost his two foot pinky fingers without realizing it and was close to lose his ears. Because it is so cold it is very expensive to live there. They went to take some photos and their cair got stuck in the snow just a few miles from the town and they almost died, he said that he loved it but he wouldn't go there again.
As someone who lives in southern Siberia, I can confirm everything he says is true. In winter we have -40c to -50c. It is common when drunk people and animals freeze to death. If you go out in winter with slighly wet hair, you can die or get a serious illness. I once went to school with wet hair during a hard winter (it was -47), I almost died with a body temperature above 43.1, I was shivering, and had a hard time breathing. Doctors said it was meningitis, and I'm lucky to be alive.
Most people who can afford it leave to other cities, I used to live in Israel for 10 years but came back because my mom got sick and needs constant treatment. During summer it is usually warm (24.5c)
1. Most of Yakutian drivers use pre-start heaters. So, they don't need to hold the engine running all the time. 2. Smog actually is an "icy fog". It's natural. 3. About the cemetry. There isn't any thick "ice plate". It's a frozen soil. Yes, it's "permafrost", when talking about constructing a house. They really burn smth (usually used tires) to heat an upper layer. But it's not a big problem to dig a few meters and bury a human. Even in winter. It's +30/+40C in Yakutia at summer, so... 4. Intercity drivers just have a satellite phone. And use it in emergency. Generally, it's a nice video ;)
@@kluasvt828(wikipedia) : With a subarctic climate (Köppen climate classification: Dfc), Yakutsk has the coldest winter temperatures for any major city on Earth. Average monthly temperatures in Yakutsk range from +19.5 °C (67.1 °F) in July to −38.6 °C (−37.5 °F) in January. Yakutsk is the largest city built on continuous permafrost, and many houses there are built on concrete piles. The lowest temperatures ever recorded on the planet outside Antarctica (and possibly some parts of inner Greenland for which detailed climate records are not available) have occurred in the basin of the Yana River to the northeast of Yakutsk. Although winters are extremely cold and long - Yakutsk has never recorded a temperature above freezing between 10 November and 14 March inclusive - summers are warm and occasionally hot (though short), with daily maximum temperatures exceeding +30 °C (86 °F), making the seasonal temperature differences for the region the greatest in the world at 102 °C (184 °F). The lowest temperature recorded in Yakutsk was −64.4 °C (−83.9 °F) on 5 February 1891 and the highest temperatures +38.4 °C (101.1 °F) on 17 July 2011 and +38.3 °C (100.9 °F) on 15 July 1942. The hottest month in records going back to 1834 has been July 1894, with a mean of +23.2 °C (73.8 °F), and the coldest, January 1900, which averaged −51.4 °C (−60.5 °F). Yakutsk is possibly the largest city in the world with an average winter temperature of below −20 °C (−4 °F) degrees. [citation needed] Yakutsk has an inland location, being almost 1,000 km (620 mi) from the Pacific Ocean, which coupled with the high latitude means exposure to severe winters and also lack of temperature moderation. July temperatures soar to an above-normal average for this latitude, with the average being several degrees hotter than more southerly Far East cities such as Vladivostok or Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk. The July daytime temperatures are even hotter than some maritime subtropical areas. The warm summers ensure that Yakutsk, despite its freezing winters, is far south of the tree line. In winter, Yakutsk instead is between 35 °C (63 °F) and 40 °C (72 °F) colder than the mildest cities on similar latitudes in Scandinavia. The climate is quite dry, with most of the annual precipitation occurring in the warmest months, due to the intense Siberian High forming around the very cold continental air during the winter. However, summer precipitation is not heavy since the moist southeasterly winds from the Pacific Ocean lose their moisture over the coastal mountains well before reaching the Lena Valley.
thank you for allowing me to travel through your great videos because i could never afford your adventures. You post real, informational travel videos by also bringing awareness in some. Stay safe out there brother!
I agree, I'm in love with snow and ice and crispy cold air full of oxygen and low in moisture. But this really leans too much on the survival aspect. Exposing your hands for a few minutes and getting frostbite? Hell no!
im flying there today, because my family lives there. it’s really cold in winter but really hot in summer; so hot, even trees and forests are burning every summer, which is crazy
Man the bit about breaking down on the road and dying within a couple of hours of you don't get any help was very scary. The people living there are incredibly strong in so many ways 💞
They probably carry some firewood also with them. Obviously it won't help for long, but maybe enough time for their friends coming to rescue them. I doubt that anyone would just go somewhere without someone else knowing. They've probably survived there for so long because they work together and not alone like in easier conditions people tend to make it on their own. But in there, you need a pack to survive👊
@@noelleblanc4473 Lol, us Finns can beat canadians at hockey😂 maybe like at least once we've won, or twice🤣 but they probably don't have the time playing it, more important things to do😁
Golden rule of the North: if you are going the place where means of communication will not work fine - never go alone. 2-3 cars at least, so others can help you with repair if yours broke down, or at least evacuate people or go for help if it can not be repaired in the field. Also, in Yakutia if you are just parked at the shoulder (or, well, at the the edge of tamped snow) - each and every passing car will slow down and you'll be asked if you are OK.
As a person who lives in Yakutia, I want to add that the biggest injustice is to go to school at -49 when at -50 trips to school for high school students are canceled! Just imagine you go to school in the morning at -49, you can't see anything and your whole body is burning from the cold..... a typical winter day in Yakutia
@@TheShakir98 it’s not normal to freeze during your walk to school. (As a person, who lived in Yakutsk for about 10 years, you don’t get used to this kind of temperature anyhow)
@@spidoe2501 Nah, I hate ALL COMMUNIST'S, EQUALLY! LoL; I don't "discriminate"...Let me guess? It wasn't "REAL" communism, like the 10 other times it failed...? Rofl
I was thinking that too. He said there are 300,000 people living there. That amazes me because I couldn't fathom living in a place I can't go outside without dying for more than 15 minutes in winter. I definitely wouldn't have a car there,too much of a hassle. I am grateful for living where I do.
Its mostly because they were born there and thats all they know, its want they are comfortable with. Its “normal”. Same as someone living where its always hot, you get used to it. ..or there is just not the means to move elsewhere. Or they like it!
I live in Western Siberia Summer +20c +35c (Hate heating :) but love "mild" summer Winter -20c -35c (Hate freezing :) but love "mild" winter . P.S. So I going move to Helsinki with cold summer and "warm" winter
@@Erina_Artemis Now we have +9 Celsius (48.2 Fahrenheit) and windy, in winter we are cold, as you saw in the video, I still go to school and we may not be allowed to go to school only at -48 it can be windy in - 45 and it feels colder than -48, life is normal here, in summer it may even be +37 and for us this is a big shock, sorry for my English
Heat is worse imo, it stesses you out and can make you hostile. Winter is bad but people band together to survive. In cold weather you put on layers and start a fire and get cozy, but when it's hot you can't really just break out a bunch of ice water and take off all of your clothes and relax... Fuck the heat. I can't sleep if I'm not able to cover up with a blanket because it's too hot. I just moved from Texas to Colorado and have been dreaming about snow and winter I literally cannot wait
I am so amazed that people still live in such a very hursh environment and have daily lives like nothing is going on. Dammnnnn they are living inside a very powerful freezer.
@Antonio Ceccon Acho q é pq o corpo se acostuma, sou de Olinda, tô acostumada a um calor dos infernos, se eu fosse p Sul sofreria de frio, e se vc vinhesse aq provavelmente sofreria por causa do calor. O nosso corpo está adaptado a ambientes diferentes, n é só psicológico.
@Antonio Ceccon It's not physiological, our bodies adapt to the climates we're living in. People who come from other countries have their physiology adapted to their climate, it takes some until they adapt to the new climate.
I am super impressed with the young lady you interviewed. She should have her own youtube channel. She must have a very interesting life, as you seem to do. Thank you.
@@TS-- true but it’s hard imagine catching criminals or thieves in this weather imagine searching for a lost person what if ur going to job but fall into a puddle of snow and hit ur head and get knocked for 30 mins n u wake up n ur under 5 feet of snow pretty scary
@@hemendraravi4787 And your point is what? What if's can happen anywhere. Extreme heat at 120-130 degrees in death Valley is NO Joke...tourist die a lot when they go walking into the sand dunes in that heat. Extreme anything is no joke.
I'm from city of Majalengka on island of Java in Indonesia. in my country the sun shines every day. so our skin color is generally brown. Siberia in Russia I often see on youtube. i know the city of Vladivostok, lake Baikal and the trans siberian railway. but I've never been out of Indonesia.
The girl speaking, said the proper word: we are not the owners of this land, we are just guests “ this is the reality with the earth Earth is our host and we should take care of it, instead of destroying it centuries now
i like what she is saying about the spirit of nature. I wish the so called "first world" would have only 0.1 % respect for nature and animals like these guys. Would be a healthier world.
My own personal record is -43°C. Before that it was -34-35°C. Back than i thought it can't "feel" any colder than that. The surprise came after it hit 40° when so many things "changed" on top of only the temperature being colder. E.g. the condensattion from breathing hits your face which forms small ice crystals over you face skin which feels like you get stung by 1million tiny needles. Or that your voice changes a little because the cold air that you breathe in... I'd say that up until -35°C for an average joe the winter is like a "gatdamn cold winter". After that it becomes something completely different lol. Listening to her saying that -42-48°C is normal for her is really shocking to me xD
@@cccpredarmy my personal coldest temp I’ve ever experienced is -20c and that’s super cold for me… it’s hard to breathe coz of the cold air. Since I always lived in summer all year round, anything below zero is too cold for me. And I am shocked that she says -42 to -48 is normal for her!
@@Snoopyy_ woah! That’s insane! I’ve seen some people come to Singapore and complaint 35c is super unbearable for them! It’s normal for us though. 😉 it’s the humidity that makes u feel horrible and sweaty..
yep, the usual temperature in winter is -52°C. one day I decided to go on foot for 10 mins (I was broke and couldn't afford even the bus) and almost lost my legs :o
I grew up in Northern Ontario Canada, and we had some record moments of -40C which was absolutely insane. I remember the worst part was always breathing. Breathing without fabrics in front of your mouth makes it feel like you're suffocating.
The men and women who built the infrastructure and homes there must've endured a lot of cold to build those things. Nothing but respect.
Well they are probably built on summer
Most likely not.
@@simplicity474 why not?🤔
@@thePersson Most of the building were probably built by people with warm clothes. I am saying this due to how well the buildings look and if a cold person builds a building it wouldnt look good due to their shivering.
@@simplicity474 haha 🤣 yeah the concrete wouldn't be so smooth if they were shivering 🤣
I love how TH-cam randomly recommends this to everyone in the middle of summer
@Superfly29rr what. It’s July-
Currently winter where I live too. If you can call 22 degrees Celsius winter 😆
might be winter for some people but it’s summer in every part of russia
Lol right
And where i am the Roads are melting just casually bake an egg on the road
Here, the refrigerator is used as a microwave.
Love your content
😂
lol
Lmao
How you maintain sperm, sex and reproduction?
After seeing 100 degree Celsius boiling water scene .. curiosity multiply by 100..
Is any chances of freezing of semen?
This woman you stayed with, her home, her animals, and the forest there are pure magic. Take good care of yourself and your team Ruhi!
What do you mean😂
They keep their food in fridges, to prevent it from being frozen outside.
🤣🤣👏👏
😀😀😀
😂😂😂😂😂😂🤣🤣🤣🤣👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼😉
That is a legit thing, we used to keep food in freezer if we want to eat it that day and keep it out side if we want to keep it for ages because it takes forever to defrost
Hahahhaha
As an African living in the tropical regions of east Africa, i guess i'll never feel what its like for temperature to be below 21 Celsius.
Sometimes we have to be thankful for what we have coz you never know what other people are going through... I enjoyed the show, take care guys!!
Go sit in a freezer and then multiply that feeling by 4 times :D
Last time when I felt the negative cold was very long time ago, in summer it's maximum 35° and winter is minimum is 0°
@@NneonNTJ I literally can't stick my hand in a freezer for more than 20mins 😂
@@midloran where do u live?
@@NneonNTJ that would be more like Ten
A traveller sees a resident of Yakutsk eating ice cream outside.
-Dude why are you doing that? It’s -50C and you are eating ice cream?!
-Ice cream is only -20C. I’m trying to warm myself up
where?
@@priyankagupta2366 Yakutsk
So funny
🤣🤣🤣🤣
The ice cream is still colder than your body temperature tho. Yes I know it is a joke...
Am in South Africa, Johannesburg. It's 21:21pm.Temperature right now is 11°c, feels like 10°. It's currently the beginning of winter and am in bed with a fleece blanket, a comforter and a sweater on, yet my feet are cold (just got into bed). I can't imagine living in a place like that. It's so satisfying to watch though, in the comfort of my bed. All that's missing is a cup of hot cocoa. Just finished watching the Lut Desert experience and the contrast is insane. Great content. Thanks
В России если температура на улице в течении недели держится ниже +8 в многоквартирных домах включается центральное отопление, а в частных домах у всех есть различное отопление - от камина до газового
23:46 in Magadan, Russia, near Yakutsk (+-2000km) +7C so I’m lying with open window because it’s hot
@@дмитрийситник-л8щ now in English, please 😁
@@ИльяКарнаев what?!!! I would freeze to death.
@@TashMagesh once upon a time i went from Magadan to oymakon (the lowest degree in Russia) it was 68 degree for Celsius
So, i said the same (are u crazy?)))
By the way, I was in Johannesburg in last year
U have incredible country, but the centre of the yohannesburg is so dangerous :c
"We are not the owners of this land,we are just guests." If the rest of humanity had this respect for our planet what an amazing place it'd be!!
Awesome piece!
Your really correct
Is this sarcasm
You’re right. They leave their cars running 24/7 creating massive smog and low visibility. They take great care of the planet.
@@flashblack1059 obviously you didn't watch the video or flat out didn't pay attention. Yes the people IN that city did that. The girl and people who she represented that said that DID NOT LIVE THAT WAY!!
This is what TH-cam is all about. Thank you to everyone that contributed to this amazing and informative video!
WELL SAID👍🏼
This is what TH-cam SHOULD BE all about. Agreed!
😯
As an introvert i would love to live there
Couldn’t of said it better 👌🏽👍
Sorry for my english in advance*
Me and my family once nearly died when our car broke down just as he said at 9:00. I was 8 back then. It was not in Yakutsk but it was a similar area, and it was about the same temperature, -47C or -58F. We stuck in a wilderness. And, worst of all, it was at night. My dad left the car to stop someone else on the road so they could transfer us to safety using a cable but there were no cars, maybe like one in 10 or 20 minutes, and no one stoped for us because it was actually illegal to drag another car in that area and people didn't want to get in trouble. So he stood there for more than an hour waiting and raising his hand when another car passed us by (i remember how he got into the car from time to time with little icicles on his mustache, and i'm not joking). Meanwhile my mom tried to warm me on the backseat, taking everything from the car like clothes and such, she even took off her upper clothes for me because i guess i was freezing to death, since soon i simply passed out. When i woke up i realised that we were saved by a passerby who was not afraid of the consequences and helped us to get to the hotel. I was lying under three blankets while my mom was lying under her clothes by my side, sacrificing herself for me once again. But my dad... Oh lord, that poor man spent the night in a cold garage fixing our car. He haven't slept one minute. When we woke up he was done and we hit the road again eager to get home.
To this day, i think about how we could die out there, and how they both saved themselves and me through perseverance, cold (no pun intended) thinking and cooperation.
edit: and i can't even imagine how frightened they were. But they freaking did it anyway.
I love my parents.
❤❤❤❤❤
Damn bro your dad is the mc
🙏🏽
Much respect to your family. Love and caring. God bless you.
Amazing story bro and I just read it on a spirit journey. I can't wait till we all become more aware that our fellow humans. Are more important than any law. And we should always care for eachother especially in life or death scenarios. 🙏🙌😇
That's crazy to live in such conditions. Thank you girl for helping bring this to us in the comfort of our homes. I pray you good fortunes and hope you have no finger issues moving forward in your life.
Yeaa. I want to know if she was o.k.
"We are guests not the owner of land" are loving words for accepting and respecting mother nature. Thanks.
Why living there ?
@@kalyankumarchattopadhyay7128 we lives in earth planet. Nothing can be exception as freezing, hot or other natural disasters. Actually, human is a kind of burden on the planet if we think of global warming or pollutions. Personally, I love this planet , solar system and the universe through Hubble and JWST telescope. U can live ur live in 50 celcious, as u wish dude.
They leave their gas powered car's running constantly... Lol. Mother nature, who?
th-cam.com/video/V2_yM52NCKg/w-d-xo.html
respect 'mother nature'? that's the place of pure animal cruelty
I am russian and the coldest temperature I had was -33C. I have no idea how -60C or below feels like. Its unbelievable people can live in such conditions for entire life
Ur City name?
@@സന്തോഷംസമാധാനം I lived in Saint Petersburg for about 25 years
Same for me, i live in Syktyvkar and the coldest for me was -40C. But i moved to Crimea for a year and the maximum was a -8C and it was really cold too, i dont know how does it work xD
@@nearinhumanspeed i think it has to do with air density. Idk what exactly happens, but you dont feel the difference between -20C and 0C as much as you feel the difference between 0C and 20C
@@razyi9183 Depends on geography too. In the UK, it's really dry cause we're surrounded by a river. Lived in Lithuania, it's really nice down there. -20°C in Lithuania feels like -5° in the UK. The thing that confuses me is that I've heard the temperatures in July are around +20°C in Yakutsk. Imagine going from +20 to -60, jezus
Imagine being a google maps photographer and getting assigned to this place.
they use cars so he would be fine
@@alibabapirce9782 did you not see in the video that cars are literally frozen over if they’re not turned on so even though he’d have a car it’s still probably a huge pain and driving in those weather conditions is probably even worse than walking around. So no actually I don’t think they’d just be “fine” considering the amount of risks there are
@@the_Jdogg they would just film it in summer
they´ll just film in summer. Its 21°C there right now (during the night) and tomorrow it will go up to 29°C.
Whomp whomp
Am I the only one who absolutely LOVES winter? The bitter cold, the frosty snow, the quiet emptiness, its all so surreal...
Winter sure is pretty but life during winter is absolutely brutal and miserable.
есть зима, а есть ледяной ад, в котором даже дышать больно
youre not the only one, i like it too, but this is an extreme that nobody should enjoy, even the most hardcore of cold lovers, i want no part in this place lol, ill stick with like…alaska, thats somewhere i wanna go
I do too, but for 6 months
This is a city where literally everyone is just chillin.
Watching TH-cam is my Hobby too
My guy is everywhere
My dude watching TH-cam 24/7 and commenting on every vid. Respect.
@@wildnature6433 fr
Bruh you again 😑
We’ve all come here together on the 29th of July, that’s crazy. Have a good life everyone!❤️
My bday :)
@@YoureNotThatGuyPal Congratulations! 🎉🎊
Amen🕺🏻💕
You’re Not That Guy Pal. Happy Bday!
@@YoureNotThatGuyPal happy birthday ❤️❤️😍😍😍🇧🇦👋🏽
Breaking the ice is not just a social thing
It’s a survival necessity here.
Nice one
@@Vesondor thnx for showing appreciation and interest
@@dr.rebuttal3009 youre wholesome :)
@@itsbubblywubbly3308 thank you. You are too.
@@laurabrown6037 what!?!?
人間の適応力というか、そこで生きる為の工夫や順応がすごい
I lived my first 15 years of my life in Yakutia. I am very glad that this place is of interest to bloggers. In fact, these places look very forgotten and most of the young people are eager to leave there, as I did 7 years ago. The climate for a visiting person seems terrible, but for a local resident it is familiar. Moreover, when I moved to a warmer place, I even missed the cold and snowy winters. Come to these places in the summer and you will be very surprised! The untouched nature of inexplicable beauty. In Yakutia, you can spend a short, but unforgettable summer vacation
Maybe winter vacation, I like snow, In my country, no winter and snow.
What’s the weather like in the summer?
How cold is ur Summer? 😂
Sounds like it's hard to survive there, so easy to die. Did you live your first 15 years really carefully?
@@briansegoe4718 up to 30 degrees
"a banana can be turn into a hammer in minutes" are the words i never thought i would hear in my life
Damn
😅😅😅😅
😂😂😂😂
I liked when he hung his laundry out to dry 🤣🤣🤣🤣
хахахахаха
That description of the car breaking down and you only have 30 min to fix it was genuinely terrifying to me.
Same
When I lived in Alaska, they said it's illegal to pass by a hitch hiker on the highway away from civilization from December to April if the temp is below 0.
I didn't fact check it, but I found it interesting
Yeah I’d be lighting things on fire at that point
let me guess, you are an American?
Seriously. I don't even like changing a wiper blade if it's cold out. Imagine trying to diagnose and repair your vehicle on the side of the road while you're literally freezing to death. Nope.
I admire the people who live there.
They are really strong and well adapted.
”When its too cold it feels like burning.”
Scary and fascinating at the same time.
I was outside one winter evening where I used to live, just wearing a pair of regular jeggings, a long sleeved jumper and a jacket and it was 'only' -13C. I was outside walking home for only 15 minutes and my thighs got so cold they felt hot from the inside of my skin. Of course on the outside they were freezing cold and they hurt so much. My fingers and face were numb also. I can't imagine how painful -50C coldness would feel.
Put ice and salt in hand.
There is this candy/ice cream that is made with liquid nitrogen called dragon’s breath
There have been reports of peoples tongues bleeding or getting burnt after eating it
The same feeling can be felt in many parts of Canada and Mongolia where it reaches -40C. But yeah... -50C must hurt. I remember my friend getting stuck on a outdoor pullup bar when we were kids. He could only do 6 before he started crying.
@@meghanh2511 its called frostbite
Fascinating how humans can adapt to live anywhere. Didn't realize there were modern cities in this climate. Great video!
Verkhoyansk more colder than Yakutsk
@@Стартуем Alright liar
I'd never live here
We dont adapt really, we influence our environment to accommodate us.
@@ufc990 that’s true 👍👍👍
The way she was responding and explaining the nature most of the people fails to understand & her bond with the nature can easily be understand through her body language. Especially the way she wanted to preserve the culture and transfer to future generations is appreciable.
Beautiful, right?
Just make it short “she’s beautiful”
@@agunggumelar575 I think our limited dictionary is lacking in proposing any graceful word to define her personality. Having connections with such personality is not nothing more than blessing.
She has a TH-cam. Life in yakutia
@@airtioteclint Thank you so much, i am really humbled for this, you have made my day.
Я жила так. Холод при таких низких температурах ощущается не как холод, а как физическая боль, как будто вас ударили в лицо, к примеру. Бывали дни, когда я так замерзала на улице, что плакала, когда возвращалась домой. Несколько раз у меня было обморожение носа и ушей. Вот почему я переехала в Европейскую часть России 🙂
Ну и молодец
E a guerra ?
Hi girl
@@CarlosAlexandre-yy4uewhat you talking about ??
@@CarlosAlexandre-yy4ueあなたは子供ですね
The lady's description of their people's culture and religion really depicts what our relationship with nature should be.... Respectul and always filled with gratitude.
That's whay is so obvious they rush to protect dogs on streets.. the dog was so cool, wasn't it?
Right on they just take what they need no more no less!! Our planet would be a much better place to live if we took tips from the native people! They seem to live in harmony with MOTHER NATURE 🌬
In voodoo it's the same
kevo, unaona ile baridi ya kimende na limuru si kitu?
I agree kabisa.
I'm from Russia and I've never experienced such coldness. Fortunately I live in the south of the county. The contrast between different parts of Russia is really impressive and amazing..
Bljad
Where I'm from the winter is cool and very wet , minus 4 celcius most winter nights but in summer we get 40 celcius, but the weather changes quickly. It could be 35 celcius then in 10 minutes windy and heavy rain and 12 celcius, then 5 minutes later back to 35 celcius
@@baltaci774 cyka pasasi
Привет :)
TerrorRussia
The people are living in this area, must be very strong, physically and mentally. It’s extremely cold, can easily feel depressed.
There is no time to be depressed in such weater. Live, move or get frozen to death.
Sourse: lived there for some years, moved to Vladivostok. Sea fauna is rich here, hunting down octopuses near Russkiy isl. with harpoon is great. Try it, if you will visit Vdk.
эээ это наша земля удите а то медведи захавают
no im not)
they had + 50°C this summer, you need to be even stronger to face this
They have special rooms with UV lights in it where they can sit to increase the vitamin D in their bodies. There was a fine blog entry about this city somewhere on the internet. It was really interesting to read about it.
Thank you for the tour for us. I have been touched by the woman love of her family and environment.
I couldn’t imagine living in an area like this. I give a lot of respect to those who live there. Thanks so much for making this video over there. I hope you didn’t suffer for making it.
@G-Man Всехейтер oh really? Whoa. What was the warmest temperature you’ve gotten over there?
@G-Man Всехейтер oh wow
Well, in -30 or -40 with -50 air becomes very dry and there is no much wind at the winter, well atleast at region where i live. So this makes -40 and -50 feel not so bad as it sounds, sure it's pretty dangerous to stick outside for a long time and after your limbs hurt due to getting frozen a bit but it's not that bad as you can think considering cars, ugly, yet pretty warm buildings, and warm clother of course
@@CarlaMcCarthyPomegranate96
Pe kA
@@ratking7383 how frequent people take bath there ?
fun fact: there’s a small town close to yakutsk called oymyakon that is even colder than yakutsk, they cant even drive cars because the oil freezes
Yea yea omyakon is village that ik from others docu series too, even they only have 1 bus for all childern in the village from one of the docu series
@@outright4620 yes, and they’re life is on the line when they travel with it basically
@@outright4620 in the same town there in summer fishing + 33... It's the total opposite...
When I read press releases about car companies going eco, electric energy based, I remember that here in Russia my phone dies at -27 and the cars don’t stand a chance.
Here in Toronto it the temperature goes down to -30 sometimes.
This is what TH-cam was supposed to be.
@@foreverlearning6743 I do Agree...!!
Agreed. More of this and less Jimmy Fallon and buzzfeed please.
💯
Yeah
@@foreverlearning6743 no one cares
I lived in Russia for 6 years, visited Novosibirsk once but it is nowhere as cols as Yakutsk. I was resident in Ulyanovsk which of course is further south. When we had a record breaking winter of 30 to 33 below zero during my stay there, there was a threat of shutting down all public facilities. In Yakutsk its just another day at the office.
am from Novosibirsk and in last winter we have -40. and I went to my college wearing summer sneakers and two pairs of standart socks, I cant feel my legs and I don’t think I fell a cold )
-30 это для Якутии весна.
So... we just all got it recommended out of nowhere on the same day
Yezz
lol same
lol same
Yeah lol
Yeah
All those layers and it still can't compete with animal fur, nature is amazing.
Like yeah dude
God is amazing
God is amazing.
Or being warm blooded lol
God is amazing who created the nature and all animals
Imagine children going in the refrigerator to get some warmth...
th-cam.com/video/uLBbQr4TgrI/w-d-xo.html
Lol
Lmao 😂
That was damn nice
😐👏👏👏👏
I do respect the lady, that is her home, her culture, she grew up there and people adopt the climate and nature where they are born. Ruhi Cenet is Turkish; he is looking at from a different angle and he was born in Turkey. I was also born in Turkey but I have been in many countries and ended up living in Arizona. Each person values different things in life; in her case, family life, and nature in her area, she is conditioned to live there. It is not torture to live in a very cold environment. Anyway, Ruhi Bey, selamlar Arizona dan. Ismim Gulten dir.
This documentary was great because the presenter was to the point, didn't waste our time with filler shots and non sense. Very informative and interesting the whole video, thank you
He was propably feeling cold and just wanted to be done with it
@@bkamau1 😁
Yes, great video on living in extremely cold weather!
I would love to have learned more about the people here and why so many have settled in this very harsh climate in an isolated area.
@@XcanaryinacoalmineX he already explained why they came here
t really is the end of the world it is since 2000 years when jesus first came now is just at its peak, for god 1 thousand years is a second and a second is 1 thousand years! THE SIGN 666 WILL BE KEPING SUNDAY AS DAY OF WORSHIP! you heared me right! the 4th comandement in the ten laws is "keep my sabats ,that shall be a sign between me and you", it was refering to the jews, but the bible has 100 precent actuality and 100 precent do as god said no matter the times! the godgiven day of worship the sabath is saturday not sunday! sunday was the first day of the weak, vatican and the popes changed it , claiming they have is autorityn as the pope is god on earth, ruler of heavens earth and hell! now this is the bigest blasphemy somone claiming hes god! the pope already met with all worlds leaders, political-religious-and the 1precent wealthiest people on earth the illuminatis A class luciferian puppets! they met saying they discuss the climate change problem! what happened when jesus was crucified , saying that is better for one man to die than the whole people to be in disagreement, this is text book what will happen these days, youl hear this soon enough,! as inflation and economy, the famens the climate calamities , wile keep growing in intensity, whatever they do it by harpp projects or some ar really god let to happen, as its all predicted in Daniel prophet and apocalypse! the fear the teror the need for a solution will expend, ! all this problems will be blaimed on those who refuse to worship sunday , the sign of the pope, and everything will be blamed on this few people who refuse to bow in front of vatican (sunday)! text book what happened with jesus will happen to those who refuse popes autority who claims he is god, and all this wrath is beacouse this public enemys refuse to listen to him! but lucifer was defeated in heavens, was defeated at the cruce, and will be defeated in the end! for those who understand jesuses died for all sins , and all sinners, no man is reedemed by his deeds but by gods grace, and the holy spirit who strenghtens those who care only about what the bible says , and refuse to worship a man given day! evrything is mad for people to be blind to this: "ego" "music" "brandi love", its all made to sell you a false sense of utopia and comfort, meanwille you neglect this most precious times ever on earth! i cant reply back to anything as youtube deletes my replys most of the times, even if i respond from another acount, pray and have faith , jesus is right with you, have faith! dont doubt god a second, imma pray for you to, do aswell! read ISAIAS 55 and 56 , and 31 !!! and you can find the ten comandemnts in exodus 20!
An old Russian joke:
- Hey, Ivan, how cold is it where you live now?
- About -20 or so.
- Hmm, on TV they say it's -50.
- Oh, maybe outside it is.
Lol
sheesh
Ни разу такой шутки не слышал.
Hmm I don't get it 🤔
@@Samanthamoemoes -20 would be inside the house they are living in.
Somewhere in this town is a man named Billy, wearing Jean shorts, no shirt, no shoes…
Saying “I ain’t cold, feels good”
Edit 1: Damn! Billy is getting a lot of love. 😂
He got buried 3 days later😭🥶
@@DeadPresident00BC hahaha😂 lol
@@DeadPresident00BC 🤣🤣🤣
Blacks live there place instantly Become White 😂😂
Not Billy. It's Vova.🤣
it's kinda crazy how nobody's talking about the forbidden ebook called Secret Pathway to Triumph
wtf is that n why is it forbidden
@@istvancsap3513 its a secret, nobody must know about it. except few randomly selected youtube commentators.
@@istvancsap3513 I took the bait and googled it. It is the usual "Become a billionaire fast and easy through self-realization" bulls*t book to squeeze some money out of the desperate and the gullible. "Censored book, forbidden knowledge" that we freely offer to you. Kek.
sometimes we forget, how blessed we are.
Fr tho
What about them, aren't they also blessed?
@@daijub1283 how is walking outside and dying within few minutes called a blessing?
I wish I lived there. Better there than in a huge city
@@rhusselcombo7696 how is living in an oppressed country called a blessing?
The 4 seasons in most places - (summer, spring, fall, winter)
The 4 seasons in this city - (winter, super winter, mega winter, ultra winter)
if it reaches -100 F it will be called Space Winter
In Singapore, its hot, hotter, hottest and humid🤣🤣
lol there are all 4 seasons, the climate is continental so there is significant annual variation in temperature
up to +30-35C in summertime
@Where's the hen? i live here and maybe i know better 😅 arctic day and night are more expressed up to north, if you look at the map Yakutsk is lower. but yes, surely there are less daylight hours in winter, and more in summer
@Where's the hen? exactly
"We are not owners of this land. We are just guests" So true.
I picked up on that as well,,,
We are the owners of the Earth though.
@Lil Yeet tell white people that.
imagine if most of humanity had this kind of respect for nature
@@naplzt4k Nevermind nature. Just having the majority of humanity show this level of respect to one another would be a very refreshing breath of fresh air with all of the hurt and pain our species has caused one another throughout history for the most trivial of reasons.
thank u Ruhi.. it was another very informative most especially here in our country where we experience only two seasons.. and were not even expecting that there are country like that it was very amazing
хех Это Россия
Jeez, this place makes Canada look like a tropical island lol
Canada goes to the north Pole, so there are areas ( unhabited) that are just as cold. Check the town of " Alert". Military installation though.
There is place in canada inhabited like joe mariconadas said
@@jeansimongat those areas in Canada don't have a 300k population like YAKUTSK does
😂😂😂
Greenland already crying
They look like wonderful, honest, hardworking people. God bless!
Well, I remember when i was in Yakutsk in a business trip. It was in december 2019. I live in another part of Siberia, so cold winters is not surprising me. But climate is my region is a little bit warmer - the coldest winter temperature ive seen in my city -46c. The normal winter temperature in my area is about from -25c to -40c.
When we driving around Yakusk ive noticed many cars, covered with some kind of tents, but it was very thick, so i decide that this covers are insulated
. You can see this kind of cover in this video too.
Also, almost all cars there have a second windshield and side glasses - because you cant normally drive with one glass - it will be totally covered with frost due to temperature differences in and out of the car.
All drivers have a "survival pack" in the trunk - with axe, warm boots and clothes (REALLY warm), blowtorch, firewood and stuff.
Unfortunately, this does not always help to save lives. If the car pipes freezes on the move (it is even colder outside the city), people try to warm themselves with fires, then they burn the wheels, then the car itself, and then if no one passes by (the places there are very uninhabited) they
freeze to death - such cases happen almost every winter - I saw few burned cars on the side of the road with my own eyes.
Thats why in Siberia, mutual assistance on the roads is very well developed - if you are standing on the side of the road with the alarm on - 9 out of 10 people passing by will stop and ask you what is the matter and how to help you. Siberians are considered in Russia to be a very kind and sympathetic people - because otherwise it is very difficult to survive in these conditions.
Thanku for sharing this information.
That’s really nice to hear, thanks for sharing.
Very interesting. I live in Finland and have only experienced - 30 celcius at most. I'd love to visit yakutsk someday. Of course with very good gear.
Yet me living in a tropical country think that 27°C is cold and have to cover myself in a blanket 😭😂, thank you for sharing this ❤
@@wishbuddy7016 in 27 celcius I'm sweating like no tomorrow :D but I still enjoy summer
So theres no restaurants and cafes here just live lifevand each day is a strive for survival. Thankyou for going outside and showing us and sorry you had to endure the pain just for video. But we appreciate your effort ❤ much love from waaaaay acros the world from 🇿🇦
This video made me realize just how little I know about this enormous and diverse world.
Most Americans have that
@@jhondeer8981 always some American slander for no reason
You're absolutely right
บ้านผมร้อนมาเมืองไทย
th-cam.com/video/_UIm8arThQc/w-d-xo.html
@@cosmicqueso3570 slander would be something inaccurate. They aren’t wrong.
Can’t get over the fact that we all got this on our recommendation on the same day
For real 😂
shook
and We're ALL watching Lol 🤦♀️
To be fair, this type of documentary deserves to be in in recommended out of nowhere , just for the effort, and information it provides... not like a reaction video or something like that
same here
I admire the people of that place, especially the girl interviewed.
Stop simping
Ignore the stranger under your comment and above my comment.
@@thtguyish yea cause that's definitely simping 🤦♂️ do u even know what simping means lol 😂
ĺll
@@thtguyish That's.... not what simping is.
Your videos are very interesting. Keep it up x
4:05 better explanation would be: yakutsk is build on permafrost, which means only the top few meters of ground will melt occasionaly, thus buildings would sink or collapse. The pillars on which the houses are build are drilled into the permafrost earth that never melts and thus stable.
This is so insane, nice docu.
Great explanation, now I get it
Unless you’ve actually experienced it I don’t think any of us can even imagine how cold this must REALLY feel
Comme to Quebec Canada you will feel the cold its almose like that
@@benjifunk9741 not even close lol
@@benjifunk9741 Not Even comparable lol.
I visited in 2019 i had on me 3 pants and shirts socks many on me
One year in Wisconsin about a few years back was -40°F. Cold as fuckin shit I cannot even imagine -96
I have a friend that has been traveling for around 20 years. He lived for months in Alaska and spent a couple winters in north Canada. He went to Yakutsk he lost his two foot pinky fingers without realizing it and was close to lose his ears. Because it is so cold it is very expensive to live there. They went to take some photos and their cair got stuck in the snow just a few miles from the town and they almost died, he said that he loved it but he wouldn't go there again.
WHAT!? 😳
@@TieraOwens cold causes numbness and can freeze your tissues, bones, etc. Then... When you use a hammer, you can break your hands with no pain
Yep fun frostbite
I had a homeless patient that tried amputating his toes due to severe frostbite.
I AM LOW END DEVICE PLAYER BUT STILL PLAYING AND UPLODING VIDEO 😭😭❤️💯💯💯👍👌
Your channel is great! Been watching nonstop since discovering it. Thanks! 🙂
As someone who lives in southern Siberia, I can confirm everything he says is true. In winter we have -40c to -50c. It is common when drunk people and animals freeze to death. If you go out in winter with slighly wet hair, you can die or get a serious illness. I once went to school with wet hair during a hard winter (it was -47), I almost died with a body temperature above 43.1, I was shivering, and had a hard time breathing. Doctors said it was meningitis, and I'm lucky to be alive.
Brother, this is a miracle of nature. You people lives in -40 degrees and we live in +50 degrees..
Hello from Austin, Texas.
whats the temperature like in the summer times?
Most people who can afford it leave to other cities, I used to live in Israel for 10 years but came back because my mom got sick and needs constant treatment.
During summer it is usually warm (24.5c)
0
1. Most of Yakutian drivers use pre-start heaters. So, they don't need to hold the engine running all the time.
2. Smog actually is an "icy fog". It's natural.
3. About the cemetry. There isn't any thick "ice plate". It's a frozen soil. Yes, it's "permafrost", when talking about constructing a house. They really burn smth (usually used tires) to heat an upper layer. But it's not a big problem to dig a few meters and bury a human. Even in winter. It's +30/+40C in Yakutia at summer, so...
4. Intercity drivers just have a satellite phone. And use it in emergency.
Generally, it's a nice video ;)
He speaks too much about things he doesnt know
-50 in winter and +30 in the summer? Really? That seems obscure
I think he means -30
@@kluasvt828 yeah) Not for long period. Maybe just at mid-summer. But it's real. Usual siberian climate.
@@kluasvt828(wikipedia) :
With a subarctic climate (Köppen climate classification: Dfc), Yakutsk has the coldest winter temperatures for any major city on Earth. Average monthly temperatures in Yakutsk range from +19.5 °C (67.1 °F) in July to −38.6 °C (−37.5 °F) in January. Yakutsk is the largest city built on continuous permafrost, and many houses there are built on concrete piles.
The lowest temperatures ever recorded on the planet outside Antarctica (and possibly some parts of inner Greenland for which detailed climate records are not available) have occurred in the basin of the Yana River to the northeast of Yakutsk. Although winters are extremely cold and long - Yakutsk has never recorded a temperature above freezing between 10 November and 14 March inclusive - summers are warm and occasionally hot (though short), with daily maximum temperatures exceeding +30 °C (86 °F), making the seasonal temperature differences for the region the greatest in the world at 102 °C (184 °F). The lowest temperature recorded in Yakutsk was −64.4 °C (−83.9 °F) on 5 February 1891 and the highest temperatures +38.4 °C (101.1 °F) on 17 July 2011 and +38.3 °C (100.9 °F) on 15 July 1942. The hottest month in records going back to 1834 has been July 1894, with a mean of +23.2 °C (73.8 °F), and the coldest, January 1900, which averaged −51.4 °C (−60.5 °F). Yakutsk is possibly the largest city in the world with an average winter temperature of below −20 °C (−4 °F) degrees. [citation needed]
Yakutsk has an inland location, being almost 1,000 km (620 mi) from the Pacific Ocean, which coupled with the high latitude means exposure to severe winters and also lack of temperature moderation. July temperatures soar to an above-normal average for this latitude, with the average being several degrees hotter than more southerly Far East cities such as Vladivostok or Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk. The July daytime temperatures are even hotter than some maritime subtropical areas. The warm summers ensure that Yakutsk, despite its freezing winters, is far south of the tree line. In winter, Yakutsk instead is between 35 °C (63 °F) and 40 °C (72 °F) colder than the mildest cities on similar latitudes in Scandinavia.
The climate is quite dry, with most of the annual precipitation occurring in the warmest months, due to the intense Siberian High forming around the very cold continental air during the winter. However, summer precipitation is not heavy since the moist southeasterly winds from the Pacific Ocean lose their moisture over the coastal mountains well before reaching the Lena Valley.
It's fascinating how people live in different parts of the world!
Pointless to live there because the heating cost would be extreme
Glady take -70 over Brazil. Their avg spiders are horrendous, let alone every other creature their.
@@iair-conditiontheoutsideai3076 and i would love to eat icecream from there
It really isn't but okay
Afrixa
thank you for allowing me to travel through your great videos because i could never afford your adventures. You post real, informational travel videos by also bringing awareness in some. Stay safe out there brother!
As someone who likes colder weather. Even i wouldn't want to live here. This is just extreme.
Very harsh weather for hot continents people i hope i can survive 1 day without any difficulty
Same, i love cold conditions, but that is way higher than my expectations.
Don't suppose they're too worried about global warming?
I agree, I'm in love with snow and ice and crispy cold air full of oxygen and low in moisture. But this really leans too much on the survival aspect. Exposing your hands for a few minutes and getting frostbite? Hell no!
im flying there today, because my family lives there. it’s really cold in winter but really hot in summer; so hot, even trees and forests are burning every summer, which is crazy
Man the bit about breaking down on the road and dying within a couple of hours of you don't get any help was very scary. The people living there are incredibly strong in so many ways 💞
And stupid in so many more 🤦
They probably carry some firewood also with them. Obviously it won't help for long, but maybe enough time for their friends coming to rescue them. I doubt that anyone would just go somewhere without someone else knowing. They've probably survived there for so long because they work together and not alone like in easier conditions people tend to make it on their own. But in there, you need a pack to survive👊
Yeah but we Canadians can beat them at hockey.
@@noelleblanc4473 Lol, us Finns can beat canadians at hockey😂 maybe like at least once we've won, or twice🤣 but they probably don't have the time playing it, more important things to do😁
Golden rule of the North: if you are going the place where means of communication will not work fine - never go alone. 2-3 cars at least, so others can help you with repair if yours broke down, or at least evacuate people or go for help if it can not be repaired in the field.
Also, in Yakutia if you are just parked at the shoulder (or, well, at the the edge of tamped snow) - each and every passing car will slow down and you'll be asked if you are OK.
As a person who lives in Yakutia, I want to add that the biggest injustice is to go to school at -49 when at -50 trips to school for high school students are canceled! Just imagine you go to school in the morning at -49, you can't see anything and your whole body is burning from the cold..... a typical winter day in Yakutia
Блин, как же я это понимаю. Сам здесь живу
Huge respect for people living there. It is so extreme. I won't last even a day.
@@RK-ve4xp i mean you do know its just normal for them?
@@TheShakir98 it’s not normal to freeze during your walk to school. (As a person, who lived in Yakutsk for about 10 years, you don’t get used to this kind of temperature anyhow)
in Latvia-coldest was -35C in february,some 20 yrs ago,as a kid by then i liked that-chool canceled:) usualy around -20C in winter is ok
Danke!
This documentary left me feeling humble
This documentary left me hating communism even that much more! Imagine the # of innocent people that froze to death in Stalin's gulags...?
Hate stalin then
@@spidoe2501 Nah, I hate ALL COMMUNIST'S, EQUALLY! LoL; I don't "discriminate"...Let me guess? It wasn't "REAL" communism, like the 10 other times it failed...? Rofl
@@brentfarvors192 You need a hug dad
@@brentfarvors192 ever heard of Guantanamo Bay?
Imagine living in a place where everyday you are literally fighting for your life! Respect for these people.
Every day*
@@jgamer2228 it’s not that serious
Sounds like America to me
@@jgamer2228 imagine being YOU 😂😴😴😴
@@BigDavoNorriwong for real, try being white and living in Chicago’s East side
Just goes to show that when you call a place home, you’ll endure a lot to stay there. This is crazy cool
Bcoz of Conditioning...they r used to this...their roots r there, it is their comfort zone...
It's crazy. We're stupid
pun intended
@@PrateekS1411 that is literally what he said
@@ignlmao agreed...my bad...a bit off these days
Well sitting in Delhi and watching thus gives me relief...
It's amazing that people live in such a cold place that I can't even imagine.
I was thinking that too. He said there are 300,000 people living there. That amazes me because I couldn't fathom living in a place I can't go outside without dying for more than 15 minutes in winter. I definitely wouldn't have a car there,too much of a hassle. I am grateful for living where I do.
@@lisad1655 yup and population growing, ppl stop leaving so rapidly as before
t chiatrn l cgghieun
Its mostly because they were born there and thats all they know, its want they are comfortable with. Its “normal”. Same as someone living where its always hot, you get used to it. ..or there is just not the means to move elsewhere. Or they like it!
Me this morning: "wow, its 2°C outside, must be the coldest day of the year"
People from Yakutsk: "wow, its 2°C outside, pool seasson just begun!"
Where do u live
90 degree summers are normal there...
Wow, liquid water I like it
I live in Western Siberia
Summer +20c +35c (Hate heating :) but love "mild" summer
Winter -20c -35c (Hate freezing :) but love "mild" winter
.
P.S. So I going move to Helsinki with cold summer and "warm" winter
Same in Paraguay, the coldest i've seen was 2ºC and that is like VERY cold here.
This is probably one of the best videos TH-cam has ever recommended to me
Yeiii to me as well today 😂
Mind blowing & very considerate thoughts of the Yakutskinan host about their local environment & ecology ! Hats off !
Here in Kenya, we've never come below 20°C, I can't imagine how do these people manage to survive that extreme low temperatures
The same way you guys deal wit heat lol
In kashmir, it's negative temp most of the winters. th-cam.com/video/Q-mylHBp2rI/w-d-xo.html
They get used to it
@@marinateonit06 I was about to say that. I used to live somewhere hot for a while, but it was very tough.
I went snowshoeing in -32 degrees Celsius and I wasn’t cold at all. Then again I was dressed really good for the cold
This was a random recommended video but i enjoyed every second of it
yeah than the other click bait nonsense they usually recommend me
For me too
Sameeee
Big respect for the people living there!
Thnx
@@txnbxy you live there?
@@Erina_Artemis yes
@@txnbxy tell me how is it like there
@@Erina_Artemis Now we have +9 Celsius (48.2 Fahrenheit) and windy, in winter we are cold, as you saw in the video, I still go to school and we may not be allowed to go to school only at -48 it can be windy in - 45 and it feels colder than -48, life is normal here, in summer it may even be +37 and for us this is a big shock, sorry for my English
I love Yakut people. They respect the universe.
As soon as I was like “I hate this heat” TH-cam said “Don’t be ungrateful”
Adversely, as soon as I thought " i hate this heat" TH-cam said, "here's a place that isn't on fire, maybe go there"
😂😂
Heat is worse imo, it stesses you out and can make you hostile. Winter is bad but people band together to survive. In cold weather you put on layers and start a fire and get cozy, but when it's hot you can't really just break out a bunch of ice water and take off all of your clothes and relax... Fuck the heat. I can't sleep if I'm not able to cover up with a blanket because it's too hot. I just moved from Texas to Colorado and have been dreaming about snow and winter I literally cannot wait
@@Beanie-Sandals you are speaking facts 💯 bro
th-cam.com/video/77qt7dMzkKE/w-d-xo.html&pp=sAQA
Ned Stark: "Winter is coming"
Russians in Yakutsk: "That's cute."
th-cam.com/video/2zx8SbgzqJw/w-d-xo.html
in Russia not only Russians. In Yakutia - Sakha
@@Warmwintercats sakha is a tribe u dingus
@@stranger-kg3qs In Yakutia not only Sakha. Half of people live here is Russsians
@@Warmwintercats... Sakha is a nation and language
I’ve been watching Ruhi Çenet since 2017 and feel incredibly happy to see his content finally being loved and known worldwide, as he deserves.
ありがとうございます!
Gordon Ramsay: Are the meats here fresh?
Citizen: No they're frozen.
Gordon: Awh f***** me.
“It can be fresh frozen tho”
Best comment
th-cam.com/video/Icu5iipM7rg/w-d-xo.html
.
.
.
.
LOL
gold
Respect to the lady and the way she talks about nature and the culture of this land!!
What happpened to Greece that needs to be justified?
I love her
@@gamwtizesti it is not easy to explain to some one that is not aware of the political situation of a country and its corrupt government..
"the next like brow"
"the next like brow"
"the next like brow"
th-cam.com/video/a9quLwmpNc8/w-d-xo.html
@@CristinaGreece okay, then where should I find info about it?
Imagine a crime scene there.
“What was the murder weapon?”
“Umm. Pyjamas , sir”
Even underwear or banana can kill someone
@@Rajastraveltales yeah he just said that bro
man beat with banana is preserved. He will survive once thawed out
Hahhshsha
Of course he died of blunt force trauma.
Watching from South Africa🇿🇦
I am so amazed that people still live in such a very hursh environment and have daily lives like nothing is going on. Dammnnnn they are living inside a very powerful freezer.
@Antonio Ceccon Acho q é pq o corpo se acostuma, sou de Olinda, tô acostumada a um calor dos infernos, se eu fosse p Sul sofreria de frio, e se vc vinhesse aq provavelmente sofreria por causa do calor. O nosso corpo está adaptado a ambientes diferentes, n é só psicológico.
@Antonio Ceccon It's not physiological, our bodies adapt to the climates we're living in. People who come from other countries have their physiology adapted to their climate, it takes some until they adapt to the new climate.
on the good side you can store covid vaccines in the open if something you have to keep them in a warmer.
They are tougher too
Hursh
I am super impressed with the young lady you interviewed. She should have her own youtube channel. She must have a very interesting life, as you seem to do. Thank you.
I agree...she had some good things to say about life and living
She knows so much about life
She does have her own channel and she's awesome!: th-cam.com/channels/tQtf9JHV6SosfsoDIK5b4Q.html
She does have a YT channel... th-cam.com/users/LifeinYakutiavideos
@@ladi_di8060 thanks much, be right there
Thats incredible how people can adapt to such extreme conditions.
It ain't that bad
@@TS-- true but it’s hard imagine catching criminals or thieves in this weather imagine searching for a lost person what if ur going to job but fall into a puddle of snow and hit ur head and get knocked for 30 mins n u wake up n ur under 5 feet of snow pretty scary
@@hemendraravi4787 Trust me I know how it feels
@@hemendraravi4787 And your point is what? What if's can happen anywhere. Extreme heat at 120-130 degrees in death Valley is NO Joke...tourist die a lot when they go walking into the sand dunes in that heat. Extreme anything is no joke.
I'm from city of Majalengka on island of Java in Indonesia. in my country the sun shines every day. so our skin color is generally brown. Siberia in Russia I often see on youtube. i know the city of Vladivostok, lake Baikal and the trans siberian railway. but I've never been out of Indonesia.
The girl speaking, said the proper word: we are not the owners of this land, we are just guests “ this is the reality with the earth
Earth is our host and we should take care of it, instead of destroying it centuries now
These ppl put their hand it a freezer and be like "this shit warm"
ahahaha 😂
Lmaoo
Not really, its still cold but not colder
I bet they might start sweating if left open
When my mom was deployed she said heat got up to 150 degrees f and the people that lived there would have the freezers set at 70-80 degrees
I love the girl at the end. She seems like such a wonderful person.
because she looked like Chinese, but still having tall height and big face, and very calm...!
i like what she is saying about the spirit of nature. I wish the so called "first world" would have only 0.1 % respect for nature and animals like these guys. Would be a healthier world.
Dont be rude get your nasty comment out of here
@@T1C45 your comment wasn't needed
@@T1C45 you're horrible
Omg this is where i live, didn't thought that i will ever find a video with this much views in english about my city
Yes
@@asifshappi Why are you still living there..??
I lives in USA,,, and i was born on there
@@thisisa.mezing4382 mine?
how do u cope?is there ever summer?
Amazing great video , I really like it .Greetings from the beautiful old city Punta Arenas Antarctica Patagonia Chile 🇨🇱
Love how brutally honest he is about how tough life is there. Its refreshing to see someone show the hard reality instead of panaromic beauty shots.
Good. vm.tiktok.com/ZSeaVkEfA/
@@mahza. please like subscribe and share my channel thank 🌹❤️
"42-48°C is not really winter to me" is the most unexpected thing you would hear in your life.
My own personal record is -43°C. Before that it was -34-35°C. Back than i thought it can't "feel" any colder than that. The surprise came after it hit 40° when so many things "changed" on top of only the temperature being colder. E.g. the condensattion from breathing hits your face which forms small ice crystals over you face skin which feels like you get stung by 1million tiny needles. Or that your voice changes a little because the cold air that you breathe in...
I'd say that up until -35°C for an average joe the winter is like a "gatdamn cold winter". After that it becomes something completely different lol. Listening to her saying that -42-48°C is normal for her is really shocking to me xD
@@cccpredarmy my personal coldest temp I’ve ever experienced is -20c and that’s super cold for me… it’s hard to breathe coz of the cold air. Since I always lived in summer all year round, anything below zero is too cold for me. And I am shocked that she says -42 to -48 is normal for her!
@@jacobson1981 hahah this sounds weird to me because I live in Canada and here, -20°C is considered like a hot day during the winter..
@@Snoopyy_ woah! That’s insane! I’ve seen some people come to Singapore and complaint 35c is super unbearable for them! It’s normal for us though. 😉 it’s the humidity that makes u feel horrible and sweaty..
yep, the usual temperature in winter is -52°C. one day I decided to go on foot for 10 mins (I was broke and couldn't afford even the bus) and almost lost my legs :o
I did not know such a place existed. Thank you for this video. I will appreciate all the world now more than ever before.
It amazes me that on one planet we can have such temperature extremes. Think of Death Valley, which was at 129 degrees fahrenheit last week. Wow.
I grew up in Northern Ontario Canada, and we had some record moments of -40C which was absolutely insane. I remember the worst part was always breathing. Breathing without fabrics in front of your mouth makes it feel like you're suffocating.