I have visited here with a professional crew once and the leader told us a lot of people died here even with best offroad cars. The danger and feeling is even worse that whats shown here. Salute to you and your amazing crew for making this
People putting their lives on the line just to give others education is so amazing I don't even know how to put it further into words. Thank you for making this journey and showing us all how amazing our world truly is!
This is absolutely insane. I had no idea this place even existed. It is literally like a different planet. God bless every brave member of the crew that made this video possible to share with the world!!
I was a tanker in the Corps. The summers in Iraq were very hot (usually between 115°and 120°F). Inside the tanks were even hotter. Our thermometer (inside the tank) read 130°F before. At the end of the day our flight suits would basically stand up on their own because they were covered in salt from our sweat... fun times. He's so right about wearing sunglasses. Even looking down at the sand would burn your face. Part of me misses the desert though. During the night it would cool down, and the sky was beautiful. You could see so many stars, and on very clear nights, you could see the center of the galaxy... it was breathtaking.
@@tk-5268now that I'm in my early 40s I've been able to look back at my time I spent in Iraq (almost 2 years) I can appreciate it a lot more. It's so much different from anywhere else I've been.
I did two tours in the military, on the abot and kbot oil platforms 5 miles the coast of Iraq. With the heat and humidity, the temperatures averaged around 155°. It was so hot that when I came back through the Suez canal, it was 100° f and I had a full set of winter gear on. It's amazing how much your body can acclimate to temperatures.
That’s so true, I spent the last decade living in Phoenix and I recently moved to Albuquerque and the ABQ summers are around 95 and i don’t sweat unless I’m active for more than 10-15 minutes
They (the whole crew) should've had wore some type of heat resistant clothes and equipment, not some ordinary clothes. Bcoz this type of mission (documentary or whatever you may call it) is really fatal. Kudos to them, excellent work, this type of documentary is very interesting to watch. 👍
*_Excellent presentation! The way the information is broken down makes it accessible to everyone, regardless of their prior knowledge on the subject._* 😋
My Iranian friend told me that she made a desert tour in Iran and that they also slept there during the night. She said it was like being on another planet. So quiet and mysterious. Kind of magical. I'd love to go there and see it with my own eyes :)
He's not really underrated, his main channel has like 6,5 million subs and this alternate channel has the same videos that are translated to english and even it has over 1 million subs.
The 150 degrees they mentions was surface temperare very different from air . Not as hot as they make it to seem. Wish they emphasized the difference between the surface and air a little bit more
I served 3 tours in Afghanistan and can honestly say I know exactly what they’re going through. I’ve seen it as high as 65’C and wearing 70lbs of kit. I sweat in places I didn’t know you could sweat.
In the deepest part of the world with insane pressure and no light, the highest points with next to zero oxygen among the coldes and hottest places, life seems to be thriving, and have found it's way to overcome these challenges. This just speaks volumes about how amazing and diverse our planet truly is, and perhaps other exoplanet near us as well. Let's keep it this way for our own- and many more generartions to come's sake.👍💚Hope y'all reading this have a wonderful day and life!
Newly discovered your channels, watched the coldest city in Yakutia, dangerous roads, hottest.....etc, I love your documentaries, enjoy the beauty that nature brings to us, I hope human beings can treat nature with care and kindness to preserve its natural beauty a bit longer. Again, Thank you for documenting extreme nature, but please make sure you (team) are careful and be cautious with your future documentaries.. JX
The highest temperature I've ever experienced was in Baker, California. The air temperature was 127 degrees F, it was completely overwhelming. I was only in the heat for roughly 30 seconds, to go back and forth from a vehicle to the inside of a convenience store. I can't imagine spending hours in that heat like the people in this video, I'd probably pass out lol.
Highest temperature here is in the steam bath ;) Usually 90C and you sit there 10 - 20 min before take a break to cool down. It is not bad at all until you throw water on warm stones in the steam bath to create steam, then it gets so hot that it burns your skin for 30 secons to a minute where you usually throw more water on to keep the burning continuing to get a good steam bath and sweat going. Outside now is "summer" and 6 - 8c today... Summers here is mostly that temperature.
Here in Texas it's gets really hot. This year got to 114F° in summer and it was so hard to breath, air felt like opening an oven and it burns your face. But this is wild. My respect to you.
As someone who travels all over the U.S., "but it's a dry heat" is no joke. I would much rather be in a dry part of the states when it is hot, than any humid place. I've spent a lot of summers up in Canada as well. It doesn't have to be that hot to be extremely uncomfortable when it is humid LOL. I remember being in Michigan in the summer, and it would take so much longer for our towels to get completely dry. I would pull my towel off the line, expecting it to be dry, and it would still feel gross. Variety of climates in the states is insane.
@@robotba89 lol yeah in 🇵🇭 it's not that hot for me like i feel like i can even still wear a jacket and still feel comfortable. but the sweat i sweat out! soaked! Not hot or hard to breathe but you get soaked in sweat. my medicines inside a weekly container thingy (not the prescription refill containers) pills inside my room got soggy too.
@@robotba89 Iran has also a very intressting climates variety. If you look at the start of the video on the google map image of whole Iran you can see the snow kept mountains at the same time this desert.
@@robotba89idk, when it gets this hot it’s painful. I’ve been to Iraq and I’m from Florida, when it gets to 130+ I’d take the humid heat. 130+ is when we had to cancel sorties because planes would have engine issues.
Extreme heat is one of the most under-rated dangerous things ever! The natural human tendency is to think that we can get tough and handle the heat, but it can kill us without us necessarily even knowing what's happening. If I were going to do this documentary I would have hauled a huge block of ice in a well-insulated cooler just in case we got stuck there for a few days till emergency help arrived. Getting this documentary done was so dangerous!
Westerner again thinks he's the smartest. No one asked your opinion here Ruhi's documentaries are brilliant and his equipment is sufficient Allahu Akbar.
@@andr_sh No one asked your opinion either, but you freely gave it. My point of saying how dangerous this documentary was to do was not to scold the guy who did it, but rather to help other viewers appreciate how difficult it was. If you feel threatened because someone from the "Western" world makes a comment about extreme heat being very dangerous, then maybe you should stop reading comments on TH-cam. Just a thought.
@@HeyChickens here again, in your comment you managed to give a new instruction 🤡. Instead of doing that you better not bother to write about obvious stuff but just watch the video
Just realised how amazing this channel is. Being able to prove that there actually IS life in a place such as Gandom Beryan must feel like a great accomplishment!
Crazy that a place like this even exists on our own planet. These kinds of conditions are things you'd expect when visiting another planet, but seeing it here on Earth is crazy and goes to show just how dangerous it can be.
Okay, Ruhi, I was actually very concerned about you during this video. A body temp of >99 degrees without a fever indicates the beginning of heat stroke. Thank God you made it out!
Massive respect for crew. This is called going outside comfort zone . Humans are amazing species who used to live in extreme conditions. Now we are confined to comforts of AC homes .
This is a well -filmed to documentary. Like I can really feel the hot coming out from the video. This is amazing. Kudos to you and your whole crew for all the effort and time you put into this.
I saw what you filmed and yet, it is hard to imagine. I went to Death Valley in California when it was 122 F and could barely breathe when walking around, so where you went is hard to compare, hard to imagine. I am so glad you had guides who knew what they were doing. Thank you for your work in producing and sharing your documentaries.
Death Valley CA was said to be the hottest place on earth. I think maybe IRAN got hotter by a little more but they had cheap equipment, and no good business going out there in that kind of killer heat. I think they would pretty much be dead if it was as hot as they say it was. It would take the military and they would do a lot of research and have a lot of serious heat tolerant equipment, tanks. Ice pak helmets and Ice pak clothes would be necessary. It's been 107 July/August Boise, Idaho this year, unprecedented, and 109 along the borders east of Los Angeles County, all sides, Palm Springs, all the way north it's gotten way too hot this year, and we think it feels like seriously dangerous and sit in front of AC until evening. Morning is fine. Las Vegas, NV had this as regular hot temps before, everybody is gone in the day, nobody seen outside like from noon to evening. They dash from AC car to AC at the front door if they do go out. 8/20/22-8-22/22 these last 3 days it broke in LA, temp went down 10 degrees or more and these 3 mornings were loaded with clouds to block the sun so the building didn't heat up in the morning. It was only around 85-90 for 4 hours of late afternoon heat, the past 3 days in my 2nd floor top level apt, in the port of Los Angeles, San Pedro, or Long Beach areas. When the heat was hotter 90-100, I was losing memory and appetite. Temps reported on weather.com for California aren't correct for upper level apartments that collect attic heat that have west facing sunsets with large windows. Parked vehicles heat up to 125 inside if it's 95 outside. Travelers in this Iran desert would probably have put up extra shade racking on top the vehicle to drive in too much heat. There's also not hunger in that heat, people have told me they just want water, they lose appetite if it's that hot. I would say they were at 125 F for 15 minutes. With vehicle AC and electric Ice cooler they last a few more minutes. If there's underground caves parking lots to drive into fast to get out of the heat, they aren't saying but there would have to be. You have to have an underground basement or cave to sit in, and 2 levels down is cooler than 1 level down.
*I have high respect for Ruhi. This is incredible, thanks for this quality content and you literally risking your life by doing this. Be safe always, Ruhi.*
Congratulations, Ruhi, Amir & the rest of the Team. I’m actually super impressed by the quality of your documentaries, and the places you choose. This must have been a SUPER stressful and tense day, production-wise. Like, one tiny mistake, and BOOM, that’s it-gone. Forgive the language, but I can say this no other way: you have balls of steel, my friends, all of you! :) Peace, love…great job!
I would love to visit Iran, well not the dessert because that is far too hot 🥵 but to see the cities, the beautiful architecture and meet the happy friendly people.
@@anar3888 yes that would be the ideal time to travel, I have Neighbors who are from Iran and we became friends very quickly, I know their families now and they are all the loveliest friendliest people you could hope to know, our children play together getting along so well. I saw the photographs taken when they go there for holidays and so many beautiful places. It is my dream destination now. 👍
Not all Iranian desserts are actually hot I especially recommend Mesr village and northern desserts cause they are not hot desserts actually But Lut and south Iran... trust me.. you dont wanna go there in summer
Insane journey, man, appreciate the fact you took a moment to film the mantis, as well as the dedication to be out in this sun for this long. I was just wondering whether there was some better equipment you could have brought there. Like a better thermometer or an electric powered cooler for the tech. Anyways, great video!
TH-cam creator that definitely literally deserves hundred million of subscribers 😭 from coldest fo hottest place. Woah can't wait to your future videos. 😊
Please this documentary needs to be on TV. Very important. Great documentary, the world need to watch this. However this was a very risky adventure you guys embarked on.
I've experienced ~50 degrees centigrade in north western Australia in the Tom Price, Wittenoom, Roeburn area, it was unbearable, I can't imagine what 70 degrees feels like.
OK well this isn't right because the hottest ever recorded temperature I's 56 degrees centigrade which was recorded in death Valley california so not true in the slightest
Thank you both, Amir and Ruhi, and your camera man😂 Good to see you all made it back alive! Your risk is much appreciated, I would never have known a place could be soo hot! Plus, like when you went to the coldest place, you do all the tests that I would do of I was there lol.
Man, the World is just freaking amazing, the diverse geographies and landscapes that exist on Earth are breathtaking, I can only imagine all the mysteries and wonders that lie beyond our World and across the Universe.
I've experienced +40°c and I couldn't hack it for more than a few seconds, I can't even begin to imagine how hot it is at the Lut Desert. You, my man, are nuts!
40 degrees is nothing Typical summer day here in texas and infact kids like it bcuz they can have cold water fights and it actually feels good yo get sprayed
You are incredible brother, you are bringing unique experiences.... you are not uploading videos like a chain like others do for money but you are bringing the best ❤️🔥.. thanks bro
I’ve noticed that above 100°F (38°C) wind makes the heat feel worse. My town rarely gets hotter than 95°F (35°C) but a car parked in the sun can get to about 122°F (50°C) and when I fan my face with my hands it feels like a hair dryer in my face and makes the heat feel worse.
In Southern California when we get up to (110F to 117F)….. your water bottle bubbles up if you leave it in your car, in an open parking lot…happened to me in Palm Springs / Indio area many times……❤️‼️⁉️🇺🇸
I've worked in 47c weather in a hot warehouse and the city was blanketed in thick smoke. It was so dry! Should be illegal to have to work in those temperatures. When you jump in the car in those temperatures, you can feel the moisture being sucked out of your face and the skin tightening up as a result.
Such a beautiful country. You can find cold and windy rocky hills of calm and hot deserts . I wish these governments may end the conflicts and Iran gets recognised for its beauty
I can't believe these guys are barely sweating! I'd be drenched. These badasses going out there with regular shoes and clothes! No heat resistent clothing or boots like you see people wearing when studying volcanoes up close. The umbrella was almost comical! Very entertaining video I was immersed from beginning to end!
Completamente apaixonada pelo seu trabalho! Parabéns! 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻 Mesmo com poucos recursos, apresentou o seu melhor, conferiu as temperaturas no local e momento certo, até comprovou a existência de uma vida nesse deserto... realmente sensacional! Desejo muito sucesso sempre!
I had no idea that temps reached past 55c. The highest I've personally experience was 46c and that was for just periods of time. Thank you for sharing this video.
27 degrees is probably the highest iv felt but this is Scotland and that's hot af for Scotland we do get some hot summers heat waves but compared to some places it's probably not that hot but we all get miserable in heat waves in Scotland cause we can't handle it .
this man is constantly putting his ass on the line to give us some quality content. your channel is really interesting, subscribed instantly after seeing your La Rinconada 🇵🇪 video! gives me the chills. 99% of the people living outside of that town probably wouldn’t endure it but you did by the skin of your teeth. your bravery is astounding man.
Oh man! This is highly informative but very risky at the same time. I felt so anxious by just watching it. Salute to you and your team for this documentary.👏Be careful brother!
The hottest i’ve been in personally was 125f (took a day trip to Death Valley) That was air temperature though. I didn’t measure ground temperature but it’s usually about 20 degrees hotter than the air temp so ~145f He’s right when he’s talking about being able to feel it through your shoes. It’s a crazy experience because you want to take them off to cool off but that’s the only thing stopping you from cooking your feet.
Please, put Celsius right to it because only americans can understand this measurement system, the whole world that will read your comment won't understand it.
Fahrenheit is a primitive, obsolete heat measurement unit that is stubbornly used by a tiny fraction of humanity. Please do not use it in such international forums as YT. Once you go Celsius, you never go back!
I went to Death Valley when there was the last heat record. The heat was unbelievable, just like you are describing incredibly hard to breath and the air was like a hair dryer, sweat everywhere. I could not stay out of the car for more then 5 minutes without getting very very thirsty. Thankfully, my AC was working haha. Crazy journey you have made here!
it was my pleasure to be your guide in this trip
You kept him alive
What nab said! Great job man!
At least we know he didn't d13
😂😂😂😂😂
you the man !
I have visited here with a professional crew once and the leader told us a lot of people died here even with best offroad cars. The danger and feeling is even worse that whats shown here. Salute to you and your amazing crew for making this
Why did you go to that useless place ?
@@admin79179once in a life time experience
I can imagine. What made you go there?
@@admin79179 I would guess it's the same reason you're watching a video about that "useless place"; curiosity.
No you didn't .
Special thanks to the Camera man for filming,enduring and not even complaining about the heat👏🏻
Yes
How do you know that cameraman is not complaining???
@@mrpetronski5121 😂 I would be, they just edited that part out
@@mrpetronski5121 exactly 🤦♂️🤣
He clearly wanted to GTFO at 20:17 but this guy didn't care and continued to chase "sand storms"
A moment to appreciate TOYOTA
They were riding a Nissan truck 😂
@@cosmic_gate476 there's 2 cars, a Toyota and a Nissan
At the end of the day. Rely on Japanese engineering. Not some fancy european.
@@ValHazzard nissan for spacious comfortable ride the toyota for life saving emergency back up.
They're massively modified. Not stock.
From -70° to 69.7° this guy's a legend
Yap
140 degrees of change
Nature also 😃
Tbh i think i wont mind the heat there cus i usually bath at like high temperatures like hot enough to cook noodles
@@Founderschannel123 lol shut up
One of the best documentaries in the world, you do your job very well my friend. A channel that definitely deserves over 10 million subscribers.
Just already 3 minutes ago updated bro 😄
@@talhaozkan7893 Biliyorum Türk kardeşim, sadece destek yorumu atmak istedim :)
Turk kanalinda baktim Ademe katiliyorum.
Yes sir
Robot comment alert
People putting their lives on the line just to give others education is so amazing I don't even know how to put it further into words. Thank you for making this journey and showing us all how amazing our world truly is!
they didnt even wear the right shoes .. legit children in a car
Amazing wasn’t the word that came to my mind. Stupid I thought of that word.
*Jesus Christ* died to save us. Now that's amazing.
Stupidity
@@madaneoulix1312
They're wearing tennis shoes when they need hiking boots. What were they thinking.
You went to the hottest part after the coldest part of the world. Thanks for this incredible content.
bro you stole my nick
sed
sed also means “thirst” in spanish, perfect for this video
@@gejutell Yr aj apke bhai ny PUBG ki new video dali ha 🥺kindly bta sktey ap video kesi bani haa 🥺🤍or video ma kuch kami hu to btana lazmi plz 🥺
you mean after 1year
This is absolutely insane. I had no idea this place even existed. It is literally like a different planet. God bless every brave member of the crew that made this video possible to share with the world!!
God isn't real
This man is trying to fool us .
@@ankanghosh4554 What do you mean try to explain I do not understand
This temperature is very common in desert and 69 is ground temperature not air temperature
THIS VIDEO HAS NO SOURCES
I was a tanker in the Corps. The summers in Iraq were very hot (usually between 115°and 120°F). Inside the tanks were even hotter. Our thermometer (inside the tank) read 130°F before. At the end of the day our flight suits would basically stand up on their own because they were covered in salt from our sweat... fun times. He's so right about wearing sunglasses. Even looking down at the sand would burn your face.
Part of me misses the desert though. During the night it would cool down, and the sky was beautiful. You could see so many stars, and on very clear nights, you could see the center of the galaxy... it was breathtaking.
Your comment made my imagination go wild, beautifully worded!
@@tk-5268now that I'm in my early 40s I've been able to look back at my time I spent in Iraq (almost 2 years) I can appreciate it a lot more. It's so much different from anywhere else I've been.
What an amazing experience. Glad you made it home!
@@latriciastraw239thanks
@@CommonCentrist82how do you feel about ending people's lives based on a lie
I did two tours in the military, on the abot and kbot oil platforms 5 miles the coast of Iraq. With the heat and humidity, the temperatures averaged around 155°. It was so hot that when I came back through the Suez canal, it was 100° f and I had a full set of winter gear on. It's amazing how much your body can acclimate to temperatures.
Thanks for doing that for our country, no rip I’d be there.
Wait... You're saying you felt cold in 50° cooler weather or you just weren't getting hot even with big clothes on?
That’s so true, I spent the last decade living in Phoenix and I recently moved to Albuquerque and the ABQ summers are around 95 and i don’t sweat unless I’m active for more than 10-15 minutes
I’ve been in 120-125f many times, mostly in the SoCal desert around the salton sea
You were in enemy waters . My loved one died there. I hope you were very well compensated , for the risk taken.
After watching this video I realized how much of a dedicated independent film maker you are. You are crazy to endure those hot temperatures!
You and your team are so brave for risking your safety to inform us of interesting places thank you Ruhi
Have you heard of the Save Soil movement before?🌎🌏🌍 It could help reverse desertification all around the world 🙏
Brave and foolish! Great video all the same.
@@savesoil3133 get the heck here. what happend to the river moment you did.
They (the whole crew) should've had wore some type of heat resistant clothes and equipment, not some ordinary clothes. Bcoz this type of mission (documentary or whatever you may call it) is really fatal. Kudos to them, excellent work, this type of documentary is very interesting to watch. 👍
@@nigefal Yr aj apke bhai ny PUBG ki new video dali ha 🥺kindly bta sktey ap video kesi bani haa 🥺🤍or video ma kuch kami hu to btana lazmi plz 🥺
Insane. It's like another planet. Huge respect to the people who brave that place.
*_Excellent presentation! The way the information is broken down makes it accessible to everyone, regardless of their prior knowledge on the subject._* 😋
Wtf with this writing style?
weirdo
bot
This guy is amazing, from the coldest place to the hottest.
Yes he is he's one of my favorites
I think it should be illegal to sell new cars without AC and heat, worldwide.
@@islamisthetruewaytogod6812amen
My Iranian friend told me that she made a desert tour in Iran and that they also slept there during the night. She said it was like being on another planet. So quiet and mysterious. Kind of magical. I'd love to go there and see it with my own eyes :)
I’m at your service
Bet the skies at night is a wonderland……❤️❤️❤️❤️🇺🇸
Same in Death Valley, but the highest temps 144F..
I would freakout but it s good to have experienced company- deserts and icelands are no joke
The “desert” is a ex quarry
Why ?
This guy is so amazing and underrated! Makes by far the best documentaries in the world. Keep up the good work, man! 👏
Robot comment alert
@@billkgeorge I don't know what that even means.
@@billkgeorge hater comment alert
@@billkgeorge u look more like an robot cus i see same comment of u under every comment 🤦🏻♂️
He's not really underrated, his main channel has like 6,5 million subs and this alternate channel has the same videos that are translated to english and even it has over 1 million subs.
100F is easily my limit. I get headaches just from air that is heavy. I cannot imagine piling on another 50F!!
The 150 degrees they mentions was surface temperare very different from air . Not as hot as they make it to seem. Wish they emphasized the difference between the surface and air a little bit more
The hottest temp on record is 134 in Death Valley Ca. This guy is click baiting.
@@lloydchristmas1086 quick google search away lol
@@lloydchristmas1086Ruhi Çenet's video is about the ground temperature. Death Valley is the hottest in air temperature.
@@cindylau4857 Nobody cares about the ground temp...go record the ground temp at death valley its probably way hotter.
Some of the nicest people i ever met was people from Iran ! God bless the people of Iran
Their “government” is another story. It seems hell bent on sowing chaos and keeping its people down
I served 3 tours in Afghanistan and can honestly say I know exactly what they’re going through. I’ve seen it as high as 65’C and wearing 70lbs of kit. I sweat in places I didn’t know you could sweat.
Afghanistan is a strange land.in some place it is too hot and in other too cold
Facts, I served 4 tours in Tajikistan & I was wearing 80lbs of kit, it was crazy.
I served 5 tours in Iraq and my kit was 90 lbs. I was soaked even late at night.
@@katedaphne4495 🤣🤣🤣 I’m looking forward to my 6th tour in Turkmenistan wearing 100lbs if kit next time tbh
@@DuxLax12345 Hope to see you there on my 6th tour.
In the deepest part of the world with insane pressure and no light, the highest points with next to zero oxygen among the coldes and hottest places, life seems to be thriving, and have found it's way to overcome these challenges. This just speaks volumes about how amazing and diverse our planet truly is, and perhaps other exoplanet near us as well. Let's keep it this way for our own- and many more generartions to come's sake.👍💚Hope y'all reading this have a wonderful day and life!
Created. ...
Subhan'Allah.... Imagine Jahanam.. May Allah protect us.
Ameen
Ameen
Doesnt exist
@@mezlay2 how do you know that?
@@redcrown5154 Because I have no reason to believe it exists. Same like I don't believe that fairies exist.
It was my pleasure to be your cameraman in this video
You did a great job, kudos to your team work
Liar i was the cameraman
@@shawana Thanks
It's wonderful, the difference between the hottest and the coolest temperatures is about 150 degree centigrade.
Why does it got so hot? The dead sea is the lowest point, but it doesn't get nearly this hot.
@@SylkaChan because the sea is dead~
@@jasonp2174🤣👍
And both places “Yakutia and this Lut desert are not too far away from each other, they both in Asia and theres only few countries in between them
@@SylkaChan ever heard about specific heat capacity?
Basically if the impurities in the water increases it's heat capacity also increases
Newly discovered your channels, watched the coldest city in Yakutia, dangerous roads, hottest.....etc, I love your documentaries, enjoy the beauty that nature brings to us, I hope human beings can treat nature with care and kindness to preserve its natural beauty a bit longer. Again, Thank you for documenting extreme nature, but please make sure you (team) are careful and be cautious with your future documentaries.. JX
I watched the coldest place then this . This guy is dedicated!
The highest temperature I've ever experienced was in Baker, California. The air temperature was 127 degrees F, it was completely overwhelming. I was only in the heat for roughly 30 seconds, to go back and forth from a vehicle to the inside of a convenience store. I can't imagine spending hours in that heat like the people in this video, I'd probably pass out lol.
Highest temperature here is in the steam bath ;) Usually 90C and you sit there 10 - 20 min before take a break to cool down. It is not bad at all until you throw water on warm stones in the steam bath to create steam, then it gets so hot that it burns your skin for 30 secons to a minute where you usually throw more water on to keep the burning continuing to get a good steam bath and sweat going.
Outside now is "summer" and 6 - 8c today... Summers here is mostly that temperature.
so that's about 45 degrees ...
The hottest I've experienced was on the way to Vegas Death valley in the summer and our air conditioning broke down. The heat was insane.
@@bear4045Death Valley is brutal and people have died there. 😢
@@bear4045I would have quit life
I love the cold.... Cant handle heat ... Just normal heat gets to me... Hats off to u and ur team
This legend brings the best content on TH-cam, this content is so good that you can’t believe it’s free! Amazing
Robot comment alert
@@billkgeorge what happen to you bro
@@billkgeorge nah bruh Im not a robot, its just great content forreal
Here in Texas it's gets really hot. This year got to 114F° in summer and it was so hard to breath, air felt like opening an oven and it burns your face. But this is wild. My respect to you.
It got really hot indeed this summer!!Makes me sick@josey2490jr
As someone who travels all over the U.S., "but it's a dry heat" is no joke. I would much rather be in a dry part of the states when it is hot, than any humid place. I've spent a lot of summers up in Canada as well. It doesn't have to be that hot to be extremely uncomfortable when it is humid LOL. I remember being in Michigan in the summer, and it would take so much longer for our towels to get completely dry. I would pull my towel off the line, expecting it to be dry, and it would still feel gross.
Variety of climates in the states is insane.
@@robotba89 lol yeah in 🇵🇭 it's not that hot for me like i feel like i can even still wear a jacket and still feel comfortable. but the sweat i sweat out! soaked! Not hot or hard to breathe but you get soaked in sweat. my medicines inside a weekly container thingy (not the prescription refill containers) pills inside my room got soggy too.
@@robotba89 Iran has also a very intressting climates variety. If you look at the start of the video on the google map image of whole Iran you can see the snow kept mountains at the same time this desert.
@@robotba89idk, when it gets this hot it’s painful. I’ve been to Iraq and I’m from Florida, when it gets to 130+ I’d take the humid heat. 130+ is when we had to cancel sorties because planes would have engine issues.
Extreme heat is one of the most under-rated dangerous things ever! The natural human tendency is to think that we can get tough and handle the heat, but it can kill us without us necessarily even knowing what's happening. If I were going to do this documentary I would have hauled a huge block of ice in a well-insulated cooler just in case we got stuck there for a few days till emergency help arrived. Getting this documentary done was so dangerous!
Apparently you don't go to these places without a guide. Edmund Hillary wouldn't have made it to the top of Mt Everest without Norgay Tenzing.
They mentioned their GPS had their location along with a company that would immediately come for them.
Westerner again thinks he's the smartest. No one asked your opinion here
Ruhi's documentaries are brilliant and his equipment is sufficient
Allahu Akbar.
@@andr_sh No one asked your opinion either, but you freely gave it. My point of saying how dangerous this documentary was to do was not to scold the guy who did it, but rather to help other viewers appreciate how difficult it was. If you feel threatened because someone from the "Western" world makes a comment about extreme heat being very dangerous, then maybe you should stop reading comments on TH-cam. Just a thought.
@@HeyChickens here again, in your comment you managed to give a new instruction 🤡. Instead of doing that you better not bother to write about obvious stuff but just watch the video
Just realised how amazing this channel is. Being able to prove that there actually IS life in a place such as Gandom Beryan must feel like a great accomplishment!
Crazy that a place like this even exists on our own planet. These kinds of conditions are things you'd expect when visiting another planet, but seeing it here on Earth is crazy and goes to show just how dangerous it can be.
Such a high effort documentary, you never fail to deliver. Undoubtedly the best channel on youtube
Robot comment alert
did he? :)
Apart from parts where he mention nasa 🤣
The “desert” is a ex quarry
@@lukamagnotta2155 haha Luka you know :*
Okay, Ruhi, I was actually very concerned about you during this video. A body temp of >99 degrees without a fever indicates the beginning of heat stroke. Thank God you made it out!
This is wild. That is crazy hot. Awesome video, as always.
Huge respect for the unseen cameraman. You are a legend; you don't even make a complain about the heat.
I’m also stunned by the cameraman’s endurance as well as the heat resistance of the camera itself
Massive respect for crew. This is called going outside comfort zone . Humans are amazing species who used to live in extreme conditions. Now we are confined to comforts of AC homes .
Oh my gosh your videos are so fascinating! can’t believe you conquered this ! 🎉
This is a well -filmed to documentary. Like I can really feel the hot coming out from the video. This is amazing. Kudos to you and your whole crew for all the effort and time you put into this.
This is't film.This is video
@@JustTruthBabythe act is called “filming”. Although the two may be interchangeable, due to the time of the production, it’s considered a short film.
You make the best documentaries in the world I love how you narrate everything so clearly and precisely and quickly it is beautiful
No he does not. Robot comment alert
@@billkgeorge what ta f
I saw what you filmed and yet, it is hard to imagine. I went to Death Valley in California when it was 122 F and could barely breathe when walking around, so where you went is hard to compare, hard to imagine. I am so glad you had guides who knew what they were doing. Thank you for your work in producing and sharing your documentaries.
you should try Phoenix on a average day lmao
Death Valley CA was said to be the hottest place on earth. I think maybe IRAN got hotter by a little more but they had cheap equipment, and no good business going out there in that kind of killer heat. I think they would pretty much be dead if it was as hot as they say it was. It would take the military and they would do a lot of research and have a lot of serious heat tolerant equipment, tanks. Ice pak helmets and Ice pak clothes would be necessary. It's been 107 July/August Boise, Idaho this year, unprecedented, and 109 along the borders east of Los Angeles County, all sides, Palm Springs, all the way north it's gotten way too hot this year, and we think it feels like seriously dangerous and sit in front of AC until evening. Morning is fine. Las Vegas, NV had this as regular hot temps before, everybody is gone in the day, nobody seen outside like from noon to evening. They dash from AC car to AC at the front door if they do go out. 8/20/22-8-22/22 these last 3 days it broke in LA, temp went down 10 degrees or more and these 3 mornings were loaded with clouds to block the sun so the building didn't heat up in the morning. It was only around 85-90 for 4 hours of late afternoon heat, the past 3 days in my 2nd floor top level apt, in the port of Los Angeles, San Pedro, or Long Beach areas. When the heat was hotter 90-100, I was losing memory and appetite. Temps reported on weather.com for California aren't correct for upper level apartments that collect attic heat that have west facing sunsets with large windows. Parked vehicles heat up to 125 inside if it's 95 outside. Travelers in this Iran desert would probably have put up extra shade racking on top the vehicle to drive in too much heat. There's also not hunger in that heat, people have told me they just want water, they lose appetite if it's that hot. I would say they were at 125 F for 15 minutes. With vehicle AC and electric Ice cooler they last a few more minutes. If there's underground caves parking lots to drive into fast to get out of the heat, they aren't saying but there would have to be. You have to have an underground basement or cave to sit in, and 2 levels down is cooler than 1 level down.
@@ouivalerie You are just jealous
Death Valley has the land surface heat record at 201F (93.3C) so the title of this video is more so clickbait than fact.
@@ParaditeRs It is likely the desert in the video actually gets hotter than the maximum temperature recorded in Death Valley.
Who else is here after visiting the video about the coldest place on Earth?
*I have high respect for Ruhi. This is incredible, thanks for this quality content and you literally risking your life by doing this. Be safe always, Ruhi.*
Congratulations, Ruhi, Amir & the rest of the Team. I’m actually super impressed by the quality of your documentaries, and the places you choose. This must have been a SUPER stressful and tense day, production-wise. Like, one tiny mistake, and BOOM, that’s it-gone. Forgive the language, but I can say this no other way: you have balls of steel, my friends, all of you! :) Peace, love…great job!
You deserve a slot on Discovery Channel or The National Geographic Channel.. great content!!!
These types of vlogs are ten times better than NatGeo/ Discovery……because those channels have Political Agendas to promote…..⁉️‼️🇺🇸
Love from Poland to Iran and Turkey!
Thanks for exposing us to the part of the world some of us would never imagine getting to. We truly appreciate your adventures✌
th-cam.com/video/pJfLtCEuRYA/w-d-xo.html
Love the aerial shots shows how flat the earth is.
The “desert” is a ex quarry
@@lukamagnotta2155 FLAT EARTH FOR LIFE 🤟🏾🤟🏾🤟🏾
@@et3rnal746 hello fellow awaken one
14:20 the guide was very concerned and caring,which is appreciable
I would love to visit Iran, well not the dessert because that is far too hot 🥵 but to see the cities, the beautiful architecture and meet the happy friendly people.
U can visit this place in winter. A great place for photos
@@anar3888 yes that would be the ideal time to travel, I have Neighbors who are from Iran and we became friends very quickly, I know their families now and they are all the loveliest friendliest people you could hope to know, our children play together getting along so well. I saw the photographs taken when they go there for holidays and so many beautiful places. It is my dream destination now. 👍
Not all Iranian desserts are actually hot I especially recommend Mesr village and northern desserts cause they are not hot desserts actually
But Lut and south Iran... trust me.. you dont wanna go there in summer
@@winnerswontquitquitterswil544 thank you for the information and I will keep that in mind 👍
dont go dangerous and dishonest ppl
This was so intense!! Thanks for the quality content Ruhi! Respect from 🇸🇴!
🇸🇴🇹🇷
You and the team have Incredible mental and physical strength... Hats off. Mad respect.
It was my pleasure to be your cameraman in this trip❤🔥
Insane journey, man, appreciate the fact you took a moment to film the mantis, as well as the dedication to be out in this sun for this long.
I was just wondering whether there was some better equipment you could have brought there. Like a better thermometer or an electric powered cooler for the tech.
Anyways, great video!
The effort you guys put into these documentaries are unimaginable. Hats off to you guys and Amir’s team. Congratulations on your achievements, Ruhi.
TH-cam creator that definitely literally deserves hundred million of subscribers 😭 from coldest fo hottest place. Woah can't wait to your future videos. 😊
Already he have
@@Kzlmno I meant hundred million subscribers 😅 my bad
Robot comment alert
@@billkgeorge Robot anti-commenter alert!
#incredibleviews 🔥🔥
I love how you go for quality not quantity, all your videos are so worth waiting for. Fascinating stuff! Thanks for risking your life.
Big fan of u bro ❤ This is what TH-cam meant to be!
Thank you for always putting yourself at risk for the documentaries you give us. Always amazing and always informative my friend!
Please this documentary needs to be on TV. Very important. Great documentary, the world need to watch this. However this was a very risky adventure you guys embarked on.
One of the toughest documentary i ever seen in my life. I love your passion, hats off to you.
Finally you’re using your own voice , so much better!
I RESPECT the work that was put into this video. This is truly a LEGENDARY DOCUMENTARY! ❤️
I've experienced ~50 degrees centigrade in north western Australia in the Tom Price, Wittenoom, Roeburn area, it was unbearable, I can't imagine what 70 degrees feels like.
That feeling when you sweat and stick to your clothes is the worst. Ill stay here in Canada 🇨🇦. - 20°C is more than hot enough in the summer.
@@PBRRoughStockRanch yip, I know that feeling all too well. After 23 years in Australia I'm back in Ireland but I will return to Australia again.
@BazBbee B It would be my first place to see if I ever decide to leave Canada. Awesome wildlife and beautiful people. 🇨🇦🍻🇦🇺
OK well this isn't right because the hottest ever recorded temperature I's 56 degrees centigrade which was recorded in death Valley california so not true in the slightest
yeah like my comment we reached 52°c in Adelaide 2 years ago and it was difficult to breath
Thank you both, Amir and Ruhi, and your camera man😂
Good to see you all made it back alive!
Your risk is much appreciated, I would never have known a place could be soo hot!
Plus, like when you went to the coldest place, you do all the tests that I would do of I was there lol.
I admire your creativity and courage. Amazing.
That insect is just as surprised as you guys were! "What the heck is this dude doing here?!?!"
*From "-70°C to 69.2°C"* 👀
*Ruhi is a legend!* 🙏
I was like on edge just watching it. I even can't imagine what kind of work, you guys, did. It's mind-boggling😮😮😮
Man, the World is just freaking amazing, the diverse geographies and landscapes that exist on Earth are breathtaking, I can only imagine all the mysteries and wonders that lie beyond our World and across the Universe.
This is insane. Glad someone made this trip so that no one else tries to do the same.
It is necessary for education these types of videos
I plan on going there lol!
I live in Calgary Alberta. Summer it gets +40C and winter -40C ... Some places like this and then Yakutsk... Couldn't imagine
I've experienced +40°c and I couldn't hack it for more than a few seconds, I can't even begin to imagine how hot it is at the Lut Desert. You, my man, are nuts!
me too and i was swimming the whole day
40 degrees is nothing
Typical summer day here in texas and infact kids like it bcuz they can have cold water fights and it actually feels good yo get sprayed
If you had high blood pressure,its over
It was good working with you and helping you in your Journey.❤
Your videos are incredible and heavily underrated!
Robot comment alert
You are incredible brother, you are bringing unique experiences.... you are not uploading videos like a chain like others do for money but you are bringing the best ❤️🔥.. thanks bro
He's also doing it for money & paying bots like you to post stupid comments
@@billkgeorge bro what
@@billkgeorge why
I’ve noticed that above 100°F (38°C) wind makes the heat feel worse. My town rarely gets hotter than 95°F (35°C) but a car parked in the sun can get to about 122°F (50°C) and when I fan my face with my hands it feels like a hair dryer in my face and makes the heat feel worse.
In Southern California when we get up to (110F to 117F)….. your water bottle bubbles up if you leave it in your car, in an open parking lot…happened to me in Palm Springs / Indio area many times……❤️‼️⁉️🇺🇸
I've worked in 47c weather in a hot warehouse and the city was blanketed in thick smoke. It was so dry! Should be illegal to have to work in those temperatures.
When you jump in the car in those temperatures, you can feel the moisture being sucked out of your face and the skin tightening up as a result.
This guys ability to still persevere is truly inspiring
Such a beautiful country. You can find cold and windy rocky hills of calm and hot deserts . I wish these governments may end the conflicts and Iran gets recognised for its beauty
Appreciate your effort man. Discovering information like this is difficult. Thank you and you got a subscriber.
Hmm
Great effort, youtube algorithm should catch up and make this a 50 million sub channel. It's literally some of the best content available on the site.
Robot comment alert
@@billkgeorge Bill G: the latest antropomorphic robot fresh off from the DARPA lab.
th-cam.com/video/pJfLtCEuRYA/w-d-xo.html 🌞
@@Kenan-Z ayooo 😭 😭 🤣 🤣 🤣 🤣
@@billkgeorge oh shit this guy
I can't believe these guys are barely sweating! I'd be drenched. These badasses going out there with regular shoes and clothes! No heat resistent clothing or boots like you see people wearing when studying volcanoes up close. The umbrella was almost comical!
Very entertaining video I was immersed from beginning to end!
They’re sweating, it’s just evaporating immediately
Completamente apaixonada pelo seu trabalho! Parabéns! 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
Mesmo com poucos recursos, apresentou o seu melhor, conferiu as temperaturas no local e momento certo, até comprovou a existência de uma vida nesse deserto... realmente sensacional! Desejo muito sucesso sempre!
Yes
This was awesome. I cant even begin to imagine how that heat feels all over your body for so long.
I had no idea that temps reached past 55c. The highest I've personally experience was 46c and that was for just periods of time. Thank you for sharing this video.
27 degrees is probably the highest iv felt but this is Scotland and that's hot af for Scotland we do get some hot summers heat waves but compared to some places it's probably not that hot but we all get miserable in heat waves in Scotland cause we can't handle it .
this man is constantly putting his ass on the line to give us some quality content. your channel is really interesting, subscribed instantly after seeing your La Rinconada 🇵🇪 video! gives me the chills. 99% of the people living outside of that town probably wouldn’t endure it but you did by the skin of your teeth. your bravery is astounding man.
Oh man! This is highly informative but very risky at the same time. I felt so anxious by just watching it. Salute to you and your team for this documentary.👏Be careful brother!
The “desert” is a ex quarry
Dont be anxious bro They dont messure the actual temperature of the air. Lets be real
@@nikolaykostadinov2335 Why wouldnt they is the Question. Going that far in such a hot place and then just lie about the temp. ? Wouldnt make sense
The hottest i’ve been in personally was 125f (took a day trip to Death Valley)
That was air temperature though. I didn’t measure ground temperature but it’s usually about 20 degrees hotter than the air temp so ~145f
He’s right when he’s talking about being able to feel it through your shoes. It’s a crazy experience because you want to take them off to cool off but that’s the only thing stopping you from cooking your feet.
excuse me but we are scientists, we don't use fahrenheit
Please, put Celsius right to it because only americans can understand this measurement system, the whole world that will read your comment won't understand it.
@@chirikitsu lol I was just kidding, it's easy enough to google
@@Talisman09 Americans are always rude
Fahrenheit is a primitive, obsolete heat measurement unit that is stubbornly used by a tiny fraction of humanity. Please do not use it in such international forums as YT. Once you go Celsius, you never go back!
That was a deadliest adventure. Hats off👏👏
I went to Death Valley when there was the last heat record. The heat was unbelievable, just like you are describing incredibly hard to breath and the air was like a hair dryer, sweat everywhere. I could not stay out of the car for more then 5 minutes without getting very very thirsty. Thankfully, my AC was working haha. Crazy journey you have made here!
Breathe*
Thanks for also using Fahrenheit, those conversions still get me
This is insane. You travelled from -70 to +70 degrees.
Excellent Ruhi, what an experience. Makes you wonder how hot this will become in the future.
Thank you for sharing.
never heard about Lut desert anywhere, thanks ruhi for great content.
Because İts part of iran
Love tho see that you posted been here since the beginging keep up the good work love your vids man❤️
He has been in TH-cam for 10 years. This is his main channel: m.th-cam.com/users/Ruhi%C3%87enetMedya/videos?view=0&sort=da&flow=list
Wow you’re amazing , i love all your documentaries, good job Ruhi..
Robot comment alert
Good explanation and the best documentary so far. Simple and Very articulate
You definitely deserve more subscribers because we can see how much effort you have put
Just keep on going ✨👍