Lived here for over forty years. Minus forty is something of a novelty these days. In the 1970's, January and February would commonly bring weeks of minus forty-five. The ice fog, and the way that the cold air carries sound, makes those cold winter days very special, and very beautiful. It also teaches respect for nature - being dumb at those temperatures has consequences.
Same question It's always been a dream to live in cold place like this....😂🤗 Such places are not leads then heaven who grew up in +45 degrees weather conditions..😂😂
Same question It's always been a dream to live in cold place like this....😂🤗 Such places are not less then heaven for those who grew up in +45 degrees weather conditions..😂😂
I lived my preteen years in Whitehorse from 1975 to 1980. I remember weather like this very well. I used to be a paperboy and delivered the Whitehorse Star. I'm not sure if it is still around, but I used to deliver papers in this kind of weather every winter. At the time, it seemed normal to me. When my parents relocated to Baltimore, Maryland, I went out and got another paper route to earn some money with. It was then that I realized that when I was in Whitehorse, I had the hardest paper route on the planet.
@Les Brown Wouldn't it be easier to simply understand the metric system? In Australia, we have had the metric system since 1975 and in agriculture, all tradesmen and all industries people everyone communicate in metric system.
@Viktor Ivanov я сравнивал климатические данные, на самом деле, перед тем как написать свой верхний коммент и тоже удивился на этот счет, но в Уайтхорсе средняя влажность по месяцам ниже, чем в моем городе. И норма осадков тоже ниже. А средние температуры по месяцам примерно идентичные. Казалось бы, как так? Уайтхорс расположен в 250-ти км от побережья океана, а так же вокруг него есть довольно большое обилие озер. Но город так же окружен горами со всех сторон и они создают определенный заслон от влажности, видимо. Ну и, в их части света на климат сказываются совершенно другие факторы, поэтому там имеются свои нюансы. А насчет обледенелых ветвей - вы заметили, что из тамошней речки в -40 пар бьет и она не покрыта льдом? Собственно, от этого пара ветки дерева столь заиндевевшие. На вики написано, что у них там четыре гидроэлектростанции работают, видимо вода подогревается за счет каких-то сбросов, не разбираюсь в этом.
@@qadiyrthego-getterfarmer9171 i live in a region of Western Siberia called Ugra or Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Okrug. "Ugra is the historical homeland of the Ob-Ugric peoples: Khanty, Mansi, Nenets, and Selkup. They were engaged in hunting, fishing, cattle breeding. After the Turkic peoples pushed them from south to north, these peoples had to apply their skills in more severe conditions. It is at this new location Ugrians began to domesticate deer". I think it's pretty close to Inuit.
@Виктор Самсонов мои родители примерно в это же время приехали покорять север из теплой БАССР. Тоже рассказывают, что раньше зимы были значительно суровее. Морозы в -40 регулярно случаются и по сей день, конечно, но они уже не столь продолжительны, на пару дней. Это общемировая тенденция. Про Уайтхорс в комментах старожил один пишет, что и у них раньше такие морозы, как на видео, длились неделями. У нас по всей планете температура постепенно растет с конца девятнадцатого века. Это связано и с естественным процессом выхода из ледникового периода, и с деятельностью людей. Парниковые газы, сжигание углеводородов, вот это вот всё. Посмотрим, что тут будет еще через пару десятков лет.
@Виктор Самсонов в поздние советские времена Сибирь считалась растущей и многообещающей, но вот теперь такого не скажешь, увы. Не так уж и плохо, что вы тут только отслужили, а жить не остались=)
@@30BopLeaveYuLeakinLikeAlFaucet I live in Calgary, it is not always cold in the winter but weather changes a lot and could be drastic. On my perspective, I love cold temperature as long as there is no wind hitting my face. Some people love winter, some people hate it.
zack fair true ik i lot of people who love it i live in ottawa but im still new to canada i come from the desserts so you can imagine how it is for me 😂😂 my skin is just not thick like canadians
From Australia and was in -36 in Ontario in 2008. Snot freezes and feel the moisture in your lungs freeze as you breath in.. Will never forget that experience.
I can totally understand *people's aversion to going anywhere cold* ---especially as cold as -40! When someone is either not used to it, or has maybe never experienced real cold at all, it can certainly be shocking. Having grown up in a 'cold winter' climate zone, I learned a few things: ~> *What you think of as 'cold' depends totally upon you* ---your body type and how it adapts; your circulation; your perceptions of discomfort, etcetera. ~> *You physically acclimatize to cold.* I forget the specifics from my university days, but there's actually a loose 'rule' for how long it takes the human body to adapt to colder temps---like, such-and-such a temperature for so many hours per day for 'x' number of days. My own experiences bear this out. Every Fall / early Winter when we'd get the first day of -10 Celcius or so, I thought I was gonna freeze to death. Within about a week of steady temps that low, it actually didn't feel _nearly_ as cold as that first couple of days. (Honestly!) ~> *Dressing warmly mitigates virtually all the feeling of being too cold.* People unfamiliar with being outdoors in a cold climate often can't even imagine _*how_ to dress warmly (to the extent necessary). There is outerwear (and underwear) for every cold temperature. You can actually feel toasty and cozy even in -40C weather. Some areas like the face are a bit trickier, but depending on your skin's sensitivity there are even good coverings for that part of you. ~> *There are advantages to living in a 'Winter cold' climate area.* Granted, whether one views differences as advantages or disadvantages depends on your views on life, but a few totally esoteric, random ones off the top of my head might be: *+ Never having to deal with poisonous snakes* / lizards / other tropical or warm climate creatures or insects when going outside (or sometimes even if you stay inside!). *+ Buildings' exteriors stay cleaner.* Huh? Those used to living in hot climates might not even notice it. But I'll never forget the first couple of times I travelled to warm zones (S.California; India) and noticed all the dark streaks, mould and 'dirt' on many buildings. Never had that back home. My theory is that every Winter cold kills any algae(?) and mould that get a foothold in hot climates. *+ The 'freshness' of cold air.* Cold air just feels, and often smells, fresher than hot air. Could be that cold kills off all the bacterial and mould spores that float around _(
I'm from Windsor, Ontario which is the most southern area in mainland Canada (we're south of parts of Michigan). I have a friend who is from Whitehorse who goes to university with me down here and he says that he'd rather deal with their -40 with relatively low humidity over our -20 with 40-50% humidity because the humidity makes the air sting when it hits you. I've always found that interesting.
well, of course there is always a flow under the ice cover, but rivers do freeze and u can stand on this ice, even in Moscow (quite a warm place for Russia) rivers freeze fully (covered fully with ice) and people stand there and set markets. in my region huge rivers ( 4km width) freeze fully and trucks ride on them with no problems
@Les Brown of course they do!! Even in London the Thames River used to freeze every winter in the 1800s. It’s quite uncommon now due to the climate change but rivers do freeze in most Nordic countries. The bottom may be running, but the top can quite easily be completely frozen.
I am from the United States of America. Where I live, I have a hard enough time with 0 degrees, let alone -40 degrees. Those people must be used to it. I got frostbite in -22 degrees when I was only 19 years old. I know that I be in trouble with -40 degrees. Great video 👍 and scenery. Thank you for posting this.
Living in a place that never sees snow and whose lowest temperature along the year are around 7 ⁰C on the coldest winter nights, I must say: too beautiful, but too hard to bear. Walking carefully to avoid falls, cleaning the car and waiting a lot to get the engine hot (mine takes it in 7 minutes) and driving very slowly, winter tires, all-wheel drive as a must... I respect. Greetings from Brazil.
Born and lived there as an adult Beautiful!! Also lived in Winnipeg. Difference is That at those temperatures in Whitehorse there is no wind Smoke goes up like an arrow. In Ywg it howls. That makes it much colder. Portage and Main is very very chilly place Main at Waterfront is beautiful in any season
when I'm walking around the desert in the Middle East, its normal for me. I'm sure its the same over there in Yukon, when you guys walk around in the middle of snow.
Lived there over 40 years ago and still think about the place a lot. I see that Murdoch's is still there and even has the same old sign. Hougen's has moved across the street and doesn't appear to be the ''big'' department store it used to be. Many fond memories and have always wanted to go back but living a little far away for that now especially with all the covid restrictions. Thanks for the video although I do remember quite a few days that were a lot colder when we huddle up in the Yukon Inn or the Klondike Inn and drink beer and laugh about it.
As a kid,I grew up in south central Alaska on a homestead( back before statehood). Cold was not a stranger. Trees would explode, nose hairs froze, frost lungs from over exertion, steps squeeked in the snow. Moved to Michigan's Upper Penninsula & about froze!! We were not prepared for the snow totals but, the biggest thing was the WIND!! There was cold there too but, those damm winter winds sweeping in off Lake Superior were another world. Constant blizzards, humongous snow drifts, constant snowfall & the constant winds would create a world not seen outside siberia.
Living near the equator I would probably die in that place. But I have to say that the place and the atmosphere are stunningly beautiful. Greetings from Ecuador, South America.
I've been reading a book series that takes place in the Yukon wilderness but it frequently mentions places like Whitehorse and Dawson City, so I've been looking up these places out of sheer curiosity and idk I find it fascinating.
Finland represent! The coldest I've experienced was -35 while in the Army doing my national service. The cold is no joke. I was super exhausted and slept like a log every night after a full day outside, even when it was just shooting range or something not so physical, your body consumes so much energy by just shivering. :D
In my younger days I rode a bike in -15C just for the fun of it, but not longer than for an hour at a time or so. A good cap covering the ears, thick gloves and a warm scarf or similar around the neck were most important, more than a good jacket, because the physical effort produces enough "waste energy" to keep most of the body warm. The biggest problem was with my glasses becoming foggy from my breath. When there is no wind, the air is dry and the sun is shining on the snow-covered landscape it is very pleasant to take a walk even at -20C. Finland has an interesting climate - while it can get as cold as -40C in winter, especially in the north, during summer temperatures often rise above +30C (when I visited Helsinki in July several years ago it was +32C and about +28C in Oulu). This amplitude must be a challenge to construct bridges, pipelines, railways and roads that can handle it. Of course there are other regions in the northern hemisphere with similar temperature characteristics - inland parts of Canada, Siberia, parts of Kazakhstan to name a few.
I live in Eastern Siberia, Yakutia republic. In winter we have temperature almost - 50 degrees Celcius. And our coldest village - Oimyakon has a record of the coldest place on earth. - 71.2 degrees Celcius.
@Les Brown i dont know what ''tim horton'' is ....but then, someone wrote tim horton is a coffee house in canada..how does someone holding a tim horton coffee cup makes someone look canadian?
brown buter because it’s freezing ass cold outside, and that Canuck is just walking along with his Tim Horton coffee like it’s the middle of summer. That’s why it’s so Canadian lol.
Weather so cold that the heat in your car barely does anything, and your footsteps echo off the building beside you. Winter in Canada is rough but you acquire a taste for it because it really is beautiful. I always get this wonderful feeling when fall hits because I know winter is around the bend.
I lived in Whitehorse, Yukon from April 2008 to August 2022, before moving back to Calgary, Alberta. The coldest temperatures I've experienced up there was - 46 Celsius, and that was before the windchill. Those temperatures of 40 below or more aren't bad if there's no wind, you get used to it, dress in many layers before you finish with your parka. Now at those temperatures if the wind picks up to 30km/h or more it can feel like -70 Celsius and that's when it gets dangerous if you are not prepared. I still remember how temperatures of 40 below or more are very hard on vehicles, even when plugged in, if it did start was really rough on your vehicle, and while driving takes forever for the interior of your vehicle to warm up, the steering wheel was cold and stiff, put extra effort on the steering wheel to make turns, gear shifting was stiff also, very hard on the oil also, like molasses. Smartphones would only work for a few minutes in these extreme temperatures before going dead. During the winter it wasn't the cold temperatures that got me, it was the 19 hrs of darkness each day and the record snowfall and pact of the winters of 2020, 2021 and 2022, tired of shoveling the white stuff. Whitehorse may be known for being a dry climate, but with climate change, I believe that place is getting more wetter, Summers more rainfall and Winters more snowfall than before. Summers in Whitehorse are beautiful, you have 24hrs of daylight and 19hrs of sun each day, but the temperatures rarely get above 29 Celsius, the hottest temperature I've experienced up there was 30 Celsius, so when I moved back to Calgary and faced 35 Celsius in August and September of 2022, just about died, not used to that heat. Overall l miss Whitehorse, Yukon greatly, the beauty of the wilderness up there, definitely plan to revisit and connect with old friends someday, but Calgary is my home now, was before from 1970 to 2008.
It’s a bigger town than I assumed it was. There are trees; I didn’t know if it was too far north for them. And there was flowing water in the river, not frozen.
Very impressed with both the town and the people. I have always wondered what the capital of the Yukon looked like and was pleasantly surprised. I liked the way the townsfolk just went about their daily routines. Here in London anything below 40 fahrenheit is considered cold let alone minus 40 celsius.
Sometimes when it's this cold out and a very, very clear day with no wind you can just see smoke from chimneys going straight up and up and up and up into the sky.
Sure miss the Yukon and it's people. Now 87, a veteran and on my own. Think I'll go back next year and some day croak in peace. Living in the south is no hell. Peace everyone.
I could not live in that. Vancouver Island is cold enough for me when the mercury drops on a cold winter night to -6C / 25°F. I don't like winter, even here where there's two seasons - dry (summer) wet (winter).
@@Frazzo Vancouver is a different type of cold though. It's just chilly, grey and rainy for months on end. I could not handle that honestly. The Pacific Northwest is just too dreary, I'd get depressed after a while. But maybe that's on account of me growing up in Southern California and Texas lol.
@@SoloTravelerOffTheBeatenPath I hear ya ... the wet winters aren't for everyone. Stand still for too long and the moss will start going on ya. I love it here. If I was rich, I would always have a home here. My buddy posted a video from today. Finally some rain! th-cam.com/video/D4Yu59av6v8/w-d-xo.html Cheers.
NW Wisconsin has been -42 real temperature with a windchill of -110. You could take a cup of steaming hot coffee and toss it out the second story window, and it would hit the ground like coffee glass. You could take water in your mouth and spit it out the window under pressure and create instant snow. That's why we live in rural Middle TN, where we actually used the A/C a couple times during the Winter.
I did a 7 day long wintercourse in the swedish army with -40c a couple of the days. And yeah sure it was cold, but as long as you didnt stand still and moved around it wasnt that bad actually. Amazing nightskies when its that cold also, zero moisture in the air. So you can see all the stars super clear when youre in the forest. It was an amazing experience for a 19 year old. And lets not mention the nordic lights....
🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷👏🏻, Wow, how can you guys live at a place like this, our skins weren’t made to support such freezers, that is, these temperatures are colder than the freezer of my refrigerator or worse, living inside of it, it makes no sense to me, it must be so painful, it’s beautiful and all, but no, thank you but not thanks. It looks tho, so so serene and of an immense beauty. I am sure that the wind is the worst factor in these situations. Do you guys get to see the Nordic lights at this latitude? What about frost bite at mines -40?
Kinda weird. It's 90 where I'm at right now and my AC is doing a very good job. But as soon as I started watching this, I actually started shivering a little and had to reach for a blanket.
I live in Ontario. When it gets to -30 , any exposed skin is bitten raw by the cold. It gets so painful that you begin to be insensitive to anything colder. -40 is bad but I cant tell the difference in pain between -30 and -40
That looks beautiful viewed from inside where it’s warm lol. The problem is there are a lot more problems to deal with when you get those low temps and it’s harder to fix and systems don’t operate correctly. It gets old.
looks cold but as of late in Manitoba been have just as cold weather with our none stop blizzards. really cool to see how everything looks with snow on it
And here i never experienced snow in my entire life. Leave the snow, temperature here never goes below 15° C even in winter. Temperature ranges between 15° C (winter) to 45°C (summer) here..
This takes me back to a week I spent in Whitehorse in January back in 2012. I think it got this cold just after I left, but there was more snow. I remember watching a plow one night clear the road and it was just a road of more snow behind it.
Oh my god, this is city of my dream.. Well, assuming from video. But I have a bunch of positive emotions when watching snow, fog, mist.. I would escape from stifling Montreal in a heartbeat, but unfortunately cannot now because of work. Thanks a lot for showing all this cold beauty!
Deadhorse is an unincorporated community located within the CDP of Prudhoe Bay in North Slope Borough, Alaska, United States, along the North Slope near the Arctic Ocean.
I lived in North Bay for a while and one morning I woke up and it was -46 C... but man. The Yukon is so amazing. If this pandemic is ever over id love to visit!
I hope you get to visit. I did, for just under 2 weeks last month (September 2022) - best trip ever! It's a great little city and has so much to offer. GO! 😉👍
Actually, I find temperatures just above freezing harder to digest than when it is waaay below 0 degrees. When it is just cold or very mildly freezing, the humidity in the air makes it feel a lot colder than it is. But when temperatures go really low, the air dries out and the cold somehow becomes less intrusive. I can get the shivers at 1 degree Celsius but will happily walk around in my t-shirt at -10, as long as the sun is out and there's no wind.
@@daved3948 Lucky you. Here in Belgium, winter means short, dark and drizzly days with temperatures well above freezing. Some winters we get a few days of frost, but those are becoming increasingly rare in more recent years, unfortunately (I love a good frost!).
I lived in Minnesota for 14 years, I loved the 1st couple winters, after that, I was as depressed as no one could be, so I moved to Florida, 7 years ago, so far, I am not missing MN at all!!!
@@missm661 Actually the Yukon has by a wide margin the highest gun ownership per capita in the country. We also have by far the most dense grizzly bear population in the country. Might be something to that.
-40 is real cold and since I live in Quebec I am accustomed to this kind of cold and I choose -40 over 40 Celsius anytime. One thing that puzzles me is why does it feel so cold in Minneapolis? When it's cold in Minnesota it's almost unbearable.
@@dodovomitory3496 If that is the only issue, then I wonder why they are not used more in extreme temperatures where regular cars have to be left on all winter, Electric cars don't need warming up like regular car engines do, and they would save a lot of fuel and of course be less damaging to the environment.
@@Pining_for_the_fjords because of the reason i said lol. it's just less convenient and also very cold areas are more remote and have less charging station. maybe in couple years it will be more viable
if you can garage in your house or near and you keep your car inside then i dont see problem if it stays a bit in cold till you work. But if it always outside batery will last shorter for sure.
Lovely pictures. Normally, I love Winter. It is the most beautiful time of year as far as I'm concerned. Here in the Twin Cities (Minnesota) it can get rather cold and windy in those months. But we have ice hockey and outdoor sports to pass the time. Things are a bit different today due to the virus and the perils it may bring. Hopefully, we will be able to endure the coming months and any possible hazards. I'll be sure to have hot bowls of soup with lots of spinach to help keep me warm & (hopefully) healthy when those cold days come. My best to all ...
Lived here for over forty years. Minus forty is something of a novelty these days. In the 1970's, January and February would commonly bring weeks of minus forty-five. The ice fog, and the way that the cold air carries sound, makes those cold winter days very special, and very beautiful. It also teaches respect for nature - being dumb at those temperatures has consequences.
What's your opinion about going for a job to this place
@@Jeevan_john14 yes same question from me plz
Same question
It's always been a dream to live in cold place like this....😂🤗
Such places are not leads then heaven who grew up in +45 degrees weather conditions..😂😂
Same question
It's always been a dream to live in cold place like this....😂🤗
Such places are not less then heaven for those who grew up in +45 degrees weather conditions..😂😂
Looks like such a beautiful city I hope to visit one day...
I lived my preteen years in Whitehorse from 1975 to 1980. I remember weather like this very well.
I used to be a paperboy and delivered the Whitehorse Star. I'm not sure if it is still around, but I used to deliver papers in this kind of weather every winter. At the time, it seemed normal to me. When my parents relocated to Baltimore, Maryland, I went out and got another paper route to earn some money with. It was then that I realized that when I was in Whitehorse, I had the hardest paper route on the planet.
Wow! nice info my friend :)
@danks den absolutely :)
@untrepid two I know....coldest city in Canada ☺
Hello there paperboy!
I love being a northerner (although I'm WAY south of Whitehorse). I think it makes people resilient.
I think people there sleep in the fridge to keep warm
Pengoled 😂🤣🤣
Lol
lol
I dont think they even need to own a fridge. Would be pretty useless in that weather
UnboxViews haha agree
When the snow squeaks like that you know it's cold.
Feel like everybody from the north can just imagine that
When did it squeak? I've never been in anything below 10 degrees
@@raing8942 3:53
@@raing8942 its squeaking trust xD
TheRyansLion reminds me of spongebobs boots.
me: looking for a white horse in the video
A to Z Pest control management hahaha
A to Z Pest control management Whitehorse is the Capital City of Yukon in Canada.
A to Z Pest control management how about Yellow Knife ??
Michael Clarke Duncan in Armageddon
Is this a Red Dead reference? If so, I keep trying to break in that horse but fail every time!
TH-cam recommendations: Wanna see average people doing average things in tundra conditions?
Me: yes, perfect.
Same. 🙂
This stupid meme needs to stop
Mike McGlock and you need to develop a sense of humor
"If you liked that, you're going to love the cars running at idle while their exhaust spews forth in an elegant display of chemicals and water vapor!"
@@AlexSmith-tt8kh The OP's comment is unfunny because its overused
I used to live in Western Siberia and always believed that we had the harshest winters on the planet. But now I feel Siberians are not alone.
Interesting fact, -40 C is also -40 F.
Most interesting would be..
Why is that so?
@Les Brown
At last someone bilingual
@Les Brown
Sorry, I didn't mean to offend. Merely a bad attempt at humour.
@Les Brown
Wouldn't it be easier to simply understand the metric system?
In Australia, we have had the metric system since 1975 and in agriculture, all tradesmen and all industries people everyone communicate in metric system.
@Les Brown
Yes, I now understand what you mean.
Especially as US is imperial measure
-40 does not feel that cold because the air is so dry. Wind is what makes you feel cold.
And moisture
We have here in Siberia like -31c with wind sometimes, its much worse that -50c
@@Swomie Yep, ive peeled skin from my nose and cheeks many times after heavy freezing. Not a best emotions i would say.
wet cold feels much worse than dry, If russia gets rain after snow it's bitter.
@@WayToManyAssassins we have no rain for 7 month or more, average temp for winter here is about - 25c, so only snow
I live in Western Siberia. Whitehorse's climate is very similar to ours. Alas, our city is less beautiful.
@Viktor Ivanov я сравнивал климатические данные, на самом деле, перед тем как написать свой верхний коммент и тоже удивился на этот счет, но в Уайтхорсе средняя влажность по месяцам ниже, чем в моем городе. И норма осадков тоже ниже. А средние температуры по месяцам примерно идентичные. Казалось бы, как так? Уайтхорс расположен в 250-ти км от побережья океана, а так же вокруг него есть довольно большое обилие озер. Но город так же окружен горами со всех сторон и они создают определенный заслон от влажности, видимо. Ну и, в их части света на климат сказываются совершенно другие факторы, поэтому там имеются свои нюансы.
А насчет обледенелых ветвей - вы заметили, что из тамошней речки в -40 пар бьет и она не покрыта льдом? Собственно, от этого пара ветки дерева столь заиндевевшие. На вики написано, что у них там четыре гидроэлектростанции работают, видимо вода подогревается за счет каких-то сбросов, не разбираюсь в этом.
@@drainglaive what do the inuits look like in Siberia?
@@qadiyrthego-getterfarmer9171 i live in a region of Western Siberia called Ugra or Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Okrug.
"Ugra is the historical homeland of the Ob-Ugric peoples: Khanty, Mansi, Nenets, and Selkup. They were engaged in hunting, fishing, cattle breeding. After the Turkic peoples pushed them from south to north, these peoples had to apply their skills in more severe conditions. It is at this new location Ugrians began to domesticate deer". I think it's pretty close to Inuit.
@Виктор Самсонов мои родители примерно в это же время приехали покорять север из теплой БАССР. Тоже рассказывают, что раньше зимы были значительно суровее. Морозы в -40 регулярно случаются и по сей день, конечно, но они уже не столь продолжительны, на пару дней. Это общемировая тенденция. Про Уайтхорс в комментах старожил один пишет, что и у них раньше такие морозы, как на видео, длились неделями. У нас по всей планете температура постепенно растет с конца девятнадцатого века. Это связано и с естественным процессом выхода из ледникового периода, и с деятельностью людей. Парниковые газы, сжигание углеводородов, вот это вот всё. Посмотрим, что тут будет еще через пару десятков лет.
@Виктор Самсонов в поздние советские времена Сибирь считалась растущей и многообещающей, но вот теперь такого не скажешь, увы. Не так уж и плохо, что вы тут только отслужили, а жить не остались=)
As long as there is no wind, its pretty nice to walk outside at -40.
no its not nice i live in canada and i fucking hate it
@@30BopLeaveYuLeakinLikeAlFaucet I live in Calgary, it is not always cold in the winter but weather changes a lot and could be drastic. On my perspective, I love cold temperature as long as there is no wind hitting my face. Some people love winter, some people hate it.
zack fair true ik i lot of people who love it i live in ottawa but im still new to canada i come from the desserts so you can imagine how it is for me 😂😂 my skin is just not thick like canadians
I bet -40 would knock covid 19 on its ass! The instant the vapour comes out of your mouth it freezes.
From Australia and was in -36 in Ontario in 2008. Snot freezes and feel the moisture in your lungs freeze as you breath in.. Will never forget that experience.
I can totally understand *people's aversion to going anywhere cold* ---especially as cold as -40! When someone is either not used to it, or has maybe never experienced real cold at all, it can certainly be shocking.
Having grown up in a 'cold winter' climate zone, I learned a few things:
~> *What you think of as 'cold' depends totally upon you* ---your body type and how it adapts; your circulation; your perceptions of discomfort, etcetera.
~> *You physically acclimatize to cold.* I forget the specifics from my university days, but there's actually a loose 'rule' for how long it takes the human body to adapt to colder temps---like, such-and-such a temperature for so many hours per day for 'x' number of days.
My own experiences bear this out. Every Fall / early Winter when we'd get the first day of -10 Celcius or so, I thought I was gonna freeze to death. Within about a week of steady temps that low, it actually didn't feel _nearly_ as cold as that first couple of days. (Honestly!)
~> *Dressing warmly mitigates virtually all the feeling of being too cold.* People unfamiliar with being outdoors in a cold climate often can't even imagine _*how_ to dress warmly (to the extent necessary). There is outerwear (and underwear) for every cold temperature. You can actually feel toasty and cozy even in -40C weather. Some areas like the face are a bit trickier, but depending on your skin's sensitivity there are even good coverings for that part of you.
~> *There are advantages to living in a 'Winter cold' climate area.* Granted, whether one views differences as advantages or disadvantages depends on your views on life, but a few totally esoteric, random ones off the top of my head might be:
*+ Never having to deal with poisonous snakes* / lizards / other tropical or warm climate creatures or insects when going outside (or sometimes even if you stay inside!).
*+ Buildings' exteriors stay cleaner.* Huh? Those used to living in hot climates might not even notice it. But I'll never forget the first couple of times I travelled to warm zones (S.California; India) and noticed all the dark streaks, mould and 'dirt' on many buildings. Never had that back home. My theory is that every Winter cold kills any algae(?) and mould that get a foothold in hot climates.
*+ The 'freshness' of cold air.* Cold air just feels, and often smells, fresher than hot air. Could be that cold kills off all the bacterial and mould spores that float around _(
Might not have poisonous bud and snakes but the Mosquitoes in the north are fucking unbearable
yukon: freezing temperatures that could kill you in minutes
humans: ah yes, a perfect place to live.
Similar to very hot places.
They obviously don't just move there for no reason. There is likely some natural resource that attracted them to those places.
oooodin aren’t there heaps of indigenous people in places like this?
Also everyone YES I know there are reasons people move to arid regions. just read the dry joke and give it a pity laugh thanks!
At least with cold, you can always put on more layers. In the heat, there is only so much you can take off.
I'm from Windsor, Ontario which is the most southern area in mainland Canada (we're south of parts of Michigan). I have a friend who is from Whitehorse who goes to university with me down here and he says that he'd rather deal with their -40 with relatively low humidity over our -20 with 40-50% humidity because the humidity makes the air sting when it hits you. I've always found that interesting.
The quality of this video is incredible! I can feel the cold thru my display 😂
Moving to this place so that my pc stays cool while gaming !!
bruh you will stay cool while gaming,like you will simply freeze :D
In too cold weather devices like smartphones starts to malfunction - very slow response time or stops working until warmed up.
That sounds like something someone of your age would say. Just put your xbox in the ice box, that would work to (Nah just kidding little guy)
My selfmade NASA like gaming PC would still heat up the whole city while I'm gaming.
The perfect place for intel system lmao.
I'm actually surprise the water wasn't completely frozen.
@Les Brown some do of course ;-)
well, of course there is always a flow under the ice cover, but rivers do freeze and u can stand on this ice, even in Moscow (quite a warm place for Russia) rivers freeze fully (covered fully with ice) and people stand there and set markets. in my region huge rivers ( 4km width) freeze fully and trucks ride on them with no problems
@Les Brown of course they do!! Even in London the Thames River used to freeze every winter in the 1800s. It’s quite uncommon now due to the climate change but rivers do freeze in most Nordic countries. The bottom may be running, but the top can quite easily be completely frozen.
@Les Brown There are thermal waters right there that's why it didn't freeze even salt water would freeze at those temps
@@sampejke There are thermal waters right there that's why it didn't freeze even salt water would freeze at those temps
Cold weather for Canadians: -40°C
Cold weather for Australians: 5°C
XD
Yes
Britain had a very bad taste of land
Cold weather for Brazilians: 18ºC
@Les Brown you mean 20?
Les Brown i va notice that British people wear shorts and sandals starting at 10c
I am from the United States of America. Where I live, I have a hard enough time with 0 degrees, let alone -40 degrees. Those people must be used to it. I got frostbite in -22 degrees when I was only 19 years old. I know that I be in trouble with -40 degrees. Great video 👍 and scenery. Thank you for posting this.
@Les Brown I only dress like that in the summer time. Not the winter time.
I love cold weather...snow, cold winds, fog, rain, rain with some lightning on the mix, I just love it.
Severe, yet beautiful
I'm from Las Vegas and some of the shots look postcard perfect....just majestic looking town! Thansk for showing!
As an Aussie, I lived just outside Whitehorse for four years. Beautiful country up that way.
Living in a place that never sees snow and whose lowest temperature along the year are around 7 ⁰C on the coldest winter nights, I must say: too beautiful, but too hard to bear. Walking carefully to avoid falls, cleaning the car and waiting a lot to get the engine hot (mine takes it in 7 minutes) and driving very slowly, winter tires, all-wheel drive as a must... I respect. Greetings from Brazil.
That's cold weather!
That's not cold, that's f**g cold.
hey Anton what the hell are you doing here?
/nicholas cage you dont say pic goes here
Diane Albrecht thats not f***ing cold , its mother****ing cold
@@Ramstein31469 thats a whole lot of mothers being f*cked...
I'm from Costa Rica,I was living there ,Love canada love white horse!!❤️,Soy de Costa Rica, estuve viviendo ahí,amo Canada,Amo white horse!❤️
Kinda reminds me of Edmonton in Feb....,waiting for the bus to work at 6 a.m with one nostril frozen shut....eyes full of ice.....LOVE it!
Born and lived there as an adult
Beautiful!!
Also lived in Winnipeg.
Difference is That at those temperatures in Whitehorse there is no wind
Smoke goes up like an arrow. In Ywg it howls. That makes it much colder. Portage and Main is very very chilly place
Main at Waterfront is beautiful in any season
when I'm walking around the desert in the Middle East, its normal for me. I'm sure its the same over there in Yukon, when you guys walk around in the middle of snow.
Nikki B I’ve been in both, minus forty, plus 50, that’s why they have malls.
Humans are evolved to live in hot weather. Extreme cold? Not so much.
@@tacocruiser4238 i dont think so,bottom of your feet boils alive when in desert
Doesn’t snow much when it’s that cold
Lived there over 40 years ago and still think about the place a lot. I see that Murdoch's is still there and even has the same old sign. Hougen's has moved across the street and doesn't appear to be the ''big'' department store it used to be. Many fond memories and have always wanted to go back but living a little far away for that now especially with all the covid restrictions. Thanks for the video although I do remember quite a few days that were a lot colder when we huddle up in the Yukon Inn or the Klondike Inn and drink beer and laugh about it.
Beautiful. Look at all those brave souls going about their day like it's just another day. 😆 Thanks for the upload.
The locals call it Tuesday.
Nice weather, no need to fight with mosquitoes.
It is just another day. I work on this street.
what are their options???
It is just another day. And -40 when you have proper clothes is OK. It's not the same as if it was unexpectedly suddenly -40 in some warmer place.
Being from the South I am shivering just watching. It is beautiful.
Note the "carpet" attached to the front grill (2:07) to help with keeping the motor warm. My Dad did this every winter on his truck grill.
This feels so serene and peaceful. Canada is truly a beauty:)
You want to go there in the summer
I live here!!! I actually love it when it get cold like this! Although I must say winters are not as cold as they used to be
These TH-cam recommendations keep getting better.
yep. This is the stuff I like.
WHERE'S THE GOD DAMN HORSE??????????????????//
Interesting comment. Ever since I deleted everything with the word ‘Trump’ in it, I’ve started getting better videos.
This recommended by TH-cam when we are experiencing a heatwave in the Netherlands.
Experienced Amsterdam at plus 35, not fun......Also live thru Northern Ontario winters at minus 30-40 every year, Love it.
In Southern Ontario, we got minus 35 and plus 35 in same year, I love Canada but the weather tests you every year
@Ocean WLL?? I didn't say 10 concecutive days, I said in the same year, and it common to see the deep swings was my point, like Aug and Jan
Here in Southern California it was 46 celcius
😂😂😂🤣
As a kid,I grew up in south central Alaska on a homestead( back before statehood). Cold was not a stranger. Trees would explode, nose hairs froze, frost lungs from over exertion, steps squeeked in the snow. Moved to Michigan's Upper Penninsula & about froze!! We were not prepared for the snow totals but, the biggest thing was the WIND!! There was cold there too but, those damm winter winds sweeping in off Lake Superior were another world. Constant blizzards, humongous snow drifts, constant snowfall & the constant winds would create a world not seen outside siberia.
Still not cold as my mother in law
put his corpse in a freezer
Living near the equator I would probably die in that place. But I have to say that the place and the atmosphere are stunningly beautiful. Greetings from Ecuador, South America.
Until you experience it you can’t even imagine what -40 feels like. Been there done that
I've been reading a book series that takes place in the Yukon wilderness but it frequently mentions places like Whitehorse and Dawson City, so I've been looking up these places out of sheer curiosity and idk I find it fascinating.
Finland represent! The coldest I've experienced was -35 while in the Army doing my national service.
The cold is no joke. I was super exhausted and slept like a log every night after a full day outside, even when it was just shooting range or something not so physical, your body consumes so much energy by just shivering. :D
In my younger days I rode a bike in -15C just for the fun of it, but not longer than for an hour at a time or so. A good cap covering the ears, thick gloves and a warm scarf or similar around the neck were most important, more than a good jacket, because the physical effort produces enough "waste energy" to keep most of the body warm. The biggest problem was with my glasses becoming foggy from my breath.
When there is no wind, the air is dry and the sun is shining on the snow-covered landscape it is very pleasant to take a walk even at -20C.
Finland has an interesting climate - while it can get as cold as -40C in winter, especially in the north, during summer temperatures often rise above +30C (when I visited Helsinki in July several years ago it was +32C and about +28C in Oulu). This amplitude must be a challenge to construct bridges, pipelines, railways and roads that can handle it. Of course there are other regions in the northern hemisphere with similar temperature characteristics - inland parts of Canada, Siberia, parts of Kazakhstan to name a few.
Respect you.
@@adamzieba8364 You wore a scarf at -15C ?? You wimp
I live in Eastern Siberia, Yakutia republic. In winter we have temperature almost - 50 degrees Celcius. And our coldest village - Oimyakon has a record of the coldest place on earth. - 71.2 degrees Celcius.
У вас -40 вообще норма.
Love the guy all bundled up carrying his Tim Hortons... so Canadian...
um, i dont get it...maybe cuz im amurcan
tim hortons is a coffee shop chain that’s only in canada i think
@Les Brown i dont know what ''tim horton'' is ....but then, someone wrote tim horton is a coffee house in canada..how does someone holding a tim horton coffee cup makes someone look canadian?
brown buter because it’s freezing ass cold outside, and that Canuck is just walking along with his Tim Horton coffee like it’s the middle of summer. That’s why it’s so Canadian lol.
drizzleRomanceGirl Tmmy Ho’s is also in some parts of the US. For example, my hometown Buffalo, NY.
Weather so cold that the heat in your car barely does anything, and your footsteps echo off the building beside you. Winter in Canada is rough but you acquire a taste for it because it really is beautiful. I always get this wonderful feeling when fall hits because I know winter is around the bend.
It’s August, why am I watching this right now?
natasha Woodbury huh it was a joke.
@@silencenhikes6692 I'm sorry man, my gf Natasha was having that time of the month... I apologize if any offense was taken.
I lived in Whitehorse, Yukon from April 2008 to August 2022, before moving back to Calgary, Alberta. The coldest temperatures I've experienced up there was - 46 Celsius, and that was before the windchill. Those temperatures of 40 below or more aren't bad if there's no wind, you get used to it, dress in many layers before you finish with your parka. Now at those temperatures if the wind picks up to 30km/h or more it can feel like -70 Celsius and that's when it gets dangerous if you are not prepared. I still remember how temperatures of 40 below or more are very hard on vehicles, even when plugged in, if it did start was really rough on your vehicle, and while driving takes forever for the interior of your vehicle to warm up, the steering wheel was cold and stiff, put extra effort on the steering wheel to make turns, gear shifting was stiff also, very hard on the oil also, like molasses. Smartphones would only work for a few minutes in these extreme temperatures before going dead. During the winter it wasn't the cold temperatures that got me, it was the 19 hrs of darkness each day and the record snowfall and pact of the winters of 2020, 2021 and 2022, tired of shoveling the white stuff. Whitehorse may be known for being a dry climate, but with climate change, I believe that place is getting more wetter, Summers more rainfall and Winters more snowfall than before. Summers in Whitehorse are beautiful, you have 24hrs of daylight and 19hrs of sun each day, but the temperatures rarely get above 29 Celsius, the hottest temperature I've experienced up there was 30 Celsius, so when I moved back to Calgary and faced 35 Celsius in August and September of 2022, just about died, not used to that heat. Overall l miss Whitehorse, Yukon greatly, the beauty of the wilderness up there, definitely plan to revisit and connect with old friends someday, but Calgary is my home now, was before from 1970 to 2008.
Thank you very very very much
I love your videos like this
It’s a bigger town than I assumed it was. There are trees; I didn’t know if it was too far north for them. And there was flowing water in the river, not frozen.
Whitehorse has a dry cold. I would take that over Ottawa's humid -20C any day of the week.
That dry cold thing is rubbish. Minus 40 is life endangering without any wind.
@@sarpsarp8987 Yeah lol
Ottawa cannot compare in the sightest. On record cold days with windchills yeah sure. But rarely does windchills go below -40C
Sooo cooool😬 Love winter!
One of the first businesses you see is YUKON TRAVEL. I would have thought there would be a line out the door.
Very impressed with both the town and the people. I have always wondered what the capital of the Yukon looked like and was pleasantly surprised. I liked the way the townsfolk just went about their daily routines. Here in London anything below 40 fahrenheit is considered cold let alone minus 40 celsius.
Sometimes when it's this cold out and a very, very clear day with no wind you can just see smoke from chimneys going straight up and up and up and up into the sky.
Find me a video of this!! Why does it happen?
Sure miss the Yukon and it's people. Now 87, a veteran and on my own. Think I'll go back next year and some day croak in peace. Living in the south is no hell. Peace everyone.
Its a privilege and blessing living in a country like Canada i love it
I could not live in that. Vancouver Island is cold enough for me when the mercury drops on a cold winter night to -6C / 25°F.
I don't like winter, even here where there's two seasons - dry (summer) wet (winter).
@@Frazzo Vancouver is a different type of cold though. It's just chilly, grey and rainy for months on end. I could not handle that honestly. The Pacific Northwest is just too dreary, I'd get depressed after a while. But maybe that's on account of me growing up in Southern California and Texas lol.
@@SoloTravelerOffTheBeatenPath I hear ya ... the wet winters aren't for everyone. Stand still for too long and the moss will start going on ya. I love it here. If I was rich, I would always have a home here.
My buddy posted a video from today. Finally some rain! th-cam.com/video/D4Yu59av6v8/w-d-xo.html
Cheers.
NW Wisconsin has been -42 real temperature with a windchill of -110. You could take a cup of steaming hot coffee and toss it out the second story window, and it would hit the ground like coffee glass. You could take water in your mouth and spit it out the window under pressure and create instant snow. That's why we live in rural Middle TN, where we actually used the A/C a couple times during the Winter.
I did a 7 day long wintercourse in the swedish army with -40c a couple of the days. And yeah sure it was cold, but as long as you didnt stand still and moved around it wasnt that bad actually. Amazing nightskies when its that cold also, zero moisture in the air. So you can see all the stars super clear when youre in the forest. It was an amazing experience for a 19 year old. And lets not mention the nordic lights....
🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷👏🏻, Wow, how can you guys live at a place like this, our skins weren’t made to support such freezers, that is, these temperatures are colder than the freezer of my refrigerator or worse, living inside of it, it makes no sense to me, it must be so painful, it’s beautiful and all, but no, thank you but not thanks. It looks tho, so so serene and of an immense beauty. I am sure that the wind is the worst factor in these situations. Do you guys get to see the Nordic lights at this latitude? What about frost bite at mines -40?
Kinda weird. It's 90 where I'm at right now and my AC is doing a very good job. But as soon as I started watching this, I actually started shivering a little and had to reach for a blanket.
@Les Brown Lol. 90° F. Haha.
Just another beautiful day in Whitehorse, Canada. I can't wait to visit this winter! ;)
2:15 a bmw indicating is more gob smacking then the cold
I live in Ontario. When it gets to -30 , any exposed skin is bitten raw by the cold. It gets so painful that you begin to be insensitive to anything colder. -40 is bad but I cant tell the difference in pain between -30 and -40
That looks beautiful viewed from inside where it’s warm lol. The problem is there are a lot more problems to deal with when you get those low temps and it’s harder to fix and systems don’t operate correctly. It gets old.
Am assuming homelessness is not an issue in Whitehorse, Or Drivebye shootings ?
Nice and warm , I'd love to take a vacation here
I was a driller in Northern ont. and we had to work in minus 55 degrees up in Timmons, Minus forty is tough but I bet it gets colder than that.
I think I'll move to Canada, it's just like reversed Australia right? It looks awesome there! I'd way rather -40C winters than +40C summers
As a Canadian i promise you you dont 😭
at least a guy can dress for -40 and go out.
@@danstrayer111 It doesn't work like that lmao u will still die of cold
Australia is just the knockoff version of Canada
@@keto538 I see. That's why there are people walking around in the video.
looks cold but as of late in Manitoba been have just as cold weather with our none stop blizzards. really cool to see how everything looks with snow on it
Everybody in the comments be like: "i lived there in the mid 70s...." etc
😂😂😂😂
Yes, that's good :-)
I've never lived there
@@crystalmethking me niether
"Everybody in the comments be like: "i lived there in the mid 70s...." etc"
Ya what is up with that. Was there a gold rush or somethin' at the time?
That river at 2:40 does it emit some geothermal warmth? It can't otherwise be liquid at those temps, right?
And here i never experienced snow in my entire life. Leave the snow, temperature here never goes below 15° C even in winter. Temperature ranges between 15° C (winter) to 45°C (summer) here..
where?
Sounds like you’re talking about India haha
This takes me back to a week I spent in Whitehorse in January back in 2012. I think it got this cold just after I left, but there was more snow. I remember watching a plow one night clear the road and it was just a road of more snow behind it.
You can't even imagine how much I would love to live in a place like this...It's beautiful 😪
Even here in Ottawa, Ontario Canada we often get down to -35 to -40 in the winter its crazy
Fun fact: negative 40 C is also negative 40 farenheit!
Why is the Fahrenheit so flexible?
At warmer temps
Matt called it an "interesting fact" 2 weeks ago. I'm sure you know Matt.
You just copied the comment above you.
Ricky you're a big fat phony!
@@nicoh332 I did, but unknowingly
Oh my god, this is city of my dream.. Well, assuming from video. But I have a bunch of positive emotions when watching snow, fog, mist.. I would escape from stifling Montreal in a heartbeat, but unfortunately cannot now because of work.
Thanks a lot for showing all this cold beauty!
Funny, because I often want to live in Montreal again. But you're right, I think, in that lots of good things happen here.
People going about their business like bosses. Proud to be Canadian.
Imagine how cold it would be if you fell into that river!
On second thought, considering the air temp is -40C, the water might actually feel warm!
I see a lot of white, but I didn't see any horse... CLICKBAIT!
also this is a joke, I know it's the name of a place.
Not to be confused with DeadHorse which is also cold.
@@everready2903 redhorse
I think he is referring to WhiteHorse Pike in NJ
No it is a place in Canada.
Deadhorse is an unincorporated community located within the CDP of Prudhoe Bay in North Slope Borough, Alaska, United States, along the North Slope near the Arctic Ocean.
I lived in North Bay for a while and one morning I woke up and it was -46 C... but man. The Yukon is so amazing. If this pandemic is ever over id love to visit!
I hope you get to visit. I did, for just under 2 weeks last month (September 2022) - best trip ever! It's a great little city and has so much to offer. GO! 😉👍
Its a dry cold eh?
R u from whitehorse yukon
Yeah it is.
The best kind of cold is a dry cold; as long as you dress properly and protect exposed skin.
I am definitely no expert on extreme Cold Weather Conditions ?
But at this temperature ( -40 ) i would have thought the river would be solid ?
Who else thought a white horse will be coming through the fog running..😅
raises hands, **looks uncomfortably around**
Surprised the river wasn't frozen over. I actually drove through White Horse in 1995 coming back from Alaska. In the summer of course.
I can't even survive a 4° temperature
Actually, I find temperatures just above freezing harder to digest than when it is waaay below 0 degrees. When it is just cold or very mildly freezing, the humidity in the air makes it feel a lot colder than it is. But when temperatures go really low, the air dries out and the cold somehow becomes less intrusive.
I can get the shivers at 1 degree Celsius but will happily walk around in my t-shirt at -10, as long as the sun is out and there's no wind.
@@berttroubleyn3475 this is true and weird at the same time. my ohio weather is somewhat like this.
@@daved3948 Lucky you. Here in Belgium, winter means short, dark and drizzly days with temperatures well above freezing. Some winters we get a few days of frost, but those are becoming increasingly rare in more recent years, unfortunately (I love a good frost!).
@@berttroubleyn3475 it all depends on the humidity of the air
Hold on!!! 2:41 how is it -40 and the river is not frozed?
Beautiful Canada
I lived in Minnesota for 14 years, I loved the 1st couple winters, after that, I was as depressed as no one could be, so I moved to Florida, 7 years ago, so far, I am not missing MN at all!!!
Cold but no homeless, no riots, no looting, ...
Jeff Smith not yet
No mosquitoes either.
And no guns. Beautiful place
@@missm661 Actually the Yukon has by a wide margin the highest gun ownership per capita in the country. We also have by far the most dense grizzly bear population in the country. Might be something to that.
There's a statue that needs removal at 0:52
-40 is real cold and since I live in Quebec I am accustomed to this kind of cold and I choose -40 over 40 Celsius anytime. One thing that puzzles me is why does it feel so cold in Minneapolis? When it's cold in Minnesota it's almost unbearable.
In the words of John Turner, "Are you Canadian or are you a tourist!"
A chinadian these days 😌
This is just breathtakingly beautiful !!! I wish it would get like this in WA state!
try Winthrop, Wa and the Pasayten plateau in the winter. It gets that cold.
I wonder if there's any issues running electric cars at those temperatures.
yes battery lasts less
@@dodovomitory3496 If that is the only issue, then I wonder why they are not used more in extreme temperatures where regular cars have to be left on all winter, Electric cars don't need warming up like regular car engines do, and they would save a lot of fuel and of course be less damaging to the environment.
@@Pining_for_the_fjords because of the reason i said lol. it's just less convenient and also very cold areas are more remote and have less charging station. maybe in couple years it will be more viable
if you can garage in your house or near and you keep your car inside then i dont see problem if it stays a bit in cold till you work. But if it always outside batery will last shorter for sure.
@@Pining_for_the_fjords because the biggest issue is keeping yourself warm in the vehicle. Which takes incredible power.
What about a video in Baghdad with 55 degrees Celcius in August
@Les Brown but people aren't really living there so
Lovely pictures. Normally, I love Winter. It is the most beautiful time of year as far as I'm concerned. Here in the Twin Cities (Minnesota) it can get rather cold and windy in those months. But we have ice hockey and outdoor sports to pass the time.
Things are a bit different today due to the virus and the perils it may bring. Hopefully, we will be able to endure the coming months and any possible hazards. I'll be sure to have hot bowls of soup with lots of spinach to help keep me warm & (hopefully) healthy when those cold days come.
My best to all ...
Just came across this. I was there at that time. Have felt -50c in Quebec City.. thanks for the memories!
Hey random person scrolling down the comments.....
Have a wonderful day :)
You too, be safe...
😂😂😂😂
Thanks brother
Are people do not turn off engines in cars there ?