@@tomservo5007 I understand your soda "felt warm" . I remember going inside a house after being out for several hours in the bush in the cold of a northern Ontario Canada winter as a deer hunter . As we entered the house , the house felt "very warm" .
It blows my mind that people live in such conditions. I mean now there is indoor heating....but imagine 200 years ago! It's crazy and amazing at the same time
@@18skaterboy18 Yes fires are how they heated their homes and how many still warm their home. But if you don't have good insulation the fire isn't going to warm the whole place. I would know since I heat my home with a fire stove but the insulation in my home is lackning so if it's - 15 outside I would have to put on very warm clothes anyway.
yeah we say that in sweden, there is no bad weather only bad clothes haha XD and going around and being outside moving you will get warm with good LAYERS
@Sandra totally get it. I do not like the cold. Love the heat. But I think the cold is probably good for me, so I’ve figured out how to make it tolerable. Base layer is the most important part.
When I was kid I remember -25/-30 in Poland. Now, last few years in winter is -10 on bad day... and in summer there is +30 almost every day. Climate is changing. My little cousin don't know what real winter looks like, when I was her age we get meter of snow by one night. But also the summers weren't that hot...
Even here in Italy. I live in the north, just by the alps, but in winter we are lucky if it go negative in the night. And summer are warmer and dryer. In beteween long weeks of rain. We are almost a tropical climate
I’m from the Netherlands, which is not cold. But I remember every couple of years we would get snow and skate on the canals/lakes. Growing up I even dreamed that one day I would do the elfstedentocht, but I’m not sure there will be one anytime soon. The canals freezing safely will become rarer and rarer.
I live in Melbourne, Australia. When I was young my parents had this huge hardcover book, _"Times Atlas of the World"_ I spent a lot of time looking through it, and I always used to imagine what it was like in faraway places. For me, a place like Yakutia seems almost magical. Hopefully one day I can visit :)
You can travel to South Korea or Japan with Malaysian low cost Air Asia. There are cheap passenger ships between South Korea Busan and Osaka Japan. If you can find a ship or plane to Russia from South Korea or Japan you can use Russian trains or planes to reach Yakutia. Or you can just travel to China from South Korea and enter Russia. Russian trains are very comfortable and cheap. I don't know about your choice but I will prefer visiting Yakutia during summer. Also if you can be able to find a cheap flight to Kazakhstan you can easily travel to Russia and use trains to reach Yakutsk. With a good plan and buying tickets early you can easily save a lot of money. Or just find a Russian cargo ship which is turning back to Russia from Australia or New Zealand. Once you step in Russia or a neighbor country reaching Yakutsk is very easy with Russian trains.
@@ЯнаЯковлева-у8ф In Britain, I have never experienced that kind of coldness. Especially nowadays, thanks to climate change, the winters are really mild (in England anyway)
Yes, in fact, everything works at this temperature and children go to school, because more or less cold is -45 ° С. A -30 ° C is usually the beginning of winter or the end, this temperature is generally warm 😅
I love the casual, "when it's -40 out you can wear this knit hat and it's ok; when it is -50C out you need to wear the fur cap." I like cold weather (like 10C to -5C) but that is some serious acclimatization when you get casual about just -40 temperatures.
Oh wise and unfathomable TH-cam-Algorithm, thanks for taking all my hours of watching horror audio books and Magic: The Gathering gameplay and seeing right through it. You saw my longing gaze into the abyss. You knew of my escapism and in your wisdom you let me know that we can survive anything as long as we are willing to look it straight in the eye and prepare for what we see, not what we wish we would see. And now I need a warm tea.
Was interesting to see how people even survive in this condition coming from someone in Australia where ive never seen a negative Celsius. Your english is great!
Same with me, hi from Yakutia. Always was interesting how people survive in very hot places, like deserts in Africa or Australia. +40..+50C ... unbearable. I'm almost dying when we get +30C in summer.
@@alexandrvasilev2865 in Australia, us and our animals are cold at 20°c. My dog shivers when we have the air conditioner on in summer. When it’s 30° we set the air con to +18-24° and that’s is good enough. I can’t even imagine getting to any less than maybe 7°C ever
@@alexandrvasilev2865 we don’t do anything. We don’t have heaps of out door markets or anything. Everyone just stays inside and blasts the air conditioner because if you go to the beach in that heat your skin will cook and burn with in 30 minutes
@@LifeinYakutia are you able to show me around maybe for a fee if I visit the area for 1 whole winter? I dont know anyone from Siberia lol but I want to visit for about 6months- 1yr. If you are willing to share your socials I can follow and connect. Xoxo.
In Norway we use a lot of wool and not so much fur, but, it doesn't really get below -20 during the day. When it's below zero I always use thin wool underwear that covers most of the body, that is the biggest secret to keeping warm in Norway. If it's really cold I use two layers(one that is tight, and one loose over it), and then I take either baggy jeans or snowboard pants, a wool sweater, a wool knit cap, woolen knitted mittens, two layers of wool socks and some good shoes. Sometimes I wear a jacket too, but it restricts movement a lot so I prefer not to when I'm walking and doing stuff. This is how I dress if I go skiing, hiking, or just spend a lot of time outdoors at once. I do get the fur though, when it's that cold I think fur is the only thing that works. The only fur I use is if I sleep outside, then I have two reindeer furs that I sleep on.
@@romanal.1738 Because I sometimes go skiing/hiking for a couple of weeks. I love sleeping outside when it's below freezing, the air is just so much fresher. You don't need to worry about being under a tarp because it's not gonna rain anyways. And with the star, moon and snow it gets a really magical feel to it, sleeping outside. But once it gets below -10 I get a tent instead and cover the tent with spruce and snow. I think this is pretty normal in Norway. Maybe not for weeks like me, but, a lot of people goes hiking and skiing on weekends.
Norway here aswell, but the -40 part of Norway. Every winter I tell myself I'm going to move, but then I don't. But next summer, I swear I'll move. I probably won't...
Hello i am Mongolian and i still wondering why Yakutian people is similar to Mongolians. Everytime when i see Yakutians i see face of my cousins friend and family. Wish you best
This is very interesting to see how others live in other countries. I just discovered your videos tonight so I've been watching a few of them. Very nice of you to share your way of life there. Thanks.
Your English is great! It's so cool to see how people live in cold areas. I live in Wisconsin, and it gets - 28 C in the winter once or twice. I couldn't imagine having it be more regular
I grew up in a similarly cold place. I remember the order of getting dressed to have over lapping layers. Underwear, then t-shirt and thin socks, then tuck my t-shirt and socks into my long johns, then wool socks over my long johns, the long sleeve shirt, then tuck socks and shirt into blue jeans, then a sweater. And all that was just my underlayer before putting on jackets and winter clothing. Every morning to be ready for -30.
Brings back memories from my 19th birthday, spent it in -39 Celsius in Brasov Romania😂 tips of your hair freeze, your eyelashes freeze and your nostrils stick togeher the moment you step outside.
Simply remarkable to see how life operates in such extreme weather conditions. As a prairie canadian I can relate to contending with extremes. I was born and raised in Winnipeg Manitoba, which has the most drastic temperature extremes of any north american city. Temperatures between -25 and -35 celsius are common in the winter. Rarely the coldest winter days reach -40 (-45 is the all time winnipeg cold record). Conversely, in the summer, temperatures over +35 degrees celsius are not unheard of. (winnipeg's heat record is 42 degrees).
Hair is the best insulator there is because it traps air so well. We probably *could* make something warmer than fur, but it would likely look pretty much the same and do the same thing.
I can sometimes go outiside just wearing a t-shirt when it is 12 degrees haha, nice and refreshing air! (living in Poland, so really the temperature that bad, pretty much a few degrees below 0 during winter max.)
@@Tea_princess lmao I have already seen Finnish friends on twitter go "ah finally 10°, it's tshirt time again" at the end of winter. meanwhile as a South Western French woman, I still need a light cardigan or at least a long sleeved shirt at 20°.
My wife starts to shiver from +20 C down. Singapore. I myself have experienced -37 C once. That cold is really biting, and even inside my jacket the wind from the movement of the body felt cool. But when I came back home I felt very nice refreshed.
@Troy Krentz When my wife arrived for her very first time in Germany it was - 5 C. That airport did not have an airbridge. She climbed down the aircraft stairs, mumbled "oh my god" and her lower lips shivered faster than I could see, more of a vibration. I don't mind the cold but 8 months long, and fog .... !!
Meanwhile, I can't leave the house when it hits 25°C because I almost pass out from the heat lol. I grew up in Bosnia, in the north, the hottest time of the year is like 30°C. Winters usually range from -15°C to -5°C so I'm the most comfortable at around 5°C.
Grandparents were from Vladivostok. Some place called the 19th mile. Not sure where that is. My Grandma said that there were multiple different types of snow depending on how cold it was. I always thought that was strange.
Even 4 me, man, leaving in Moscow, such temperature sounds very freezing. But...i miss real winter with lots of snow and minus 20-30 degrees. Nowadays our winter looks poor
I grew up a lot in Moscow, and last January I took my English boyfriend to see the snow...and there wasn't any! It's something I had never seen before, a Russian winter without snow and I was so upset he could not experience what I had.
As girl said, the most regular wear is "BASK" company, i think its our local. Next, if you have more money), you can buy the "Canada Goose", imported from Canada of course. But the most prestige is norwegian once. I didnt know the name correctly, we just call it norway)
I want to experience winter in Yakutia.. in our country, India, the climate is very hot but on seeing your videos I feel cool and realize the chillness.. thanks for posting the videos related to your closest beautiful town
Reading comments from south east asia countries here makes me smile. Hello from Malaysia! I only experienced up -10 degrees when I was in Beijing. Can't imagine how -40 feels like. :)
Thank you for sharing your culture with us. This was a very informative video. In my hometown it's rarely below zero, but last winter I was in another city and it was -8 degrees. It was freezing cold for me and I cannot even imagine how cold -40 degrees is...
Would happily take on extreme cold any day. In my home country ( Australia ) we have devastating summers. Temp can rise to and over + 40 c . And fires. 🔥.
I live in Texas, and it gets in the 100s (fahrenheit) regularly here in summer. However, being raised in a climate that does get relatively cold in winter (though nowhere NEAR this cold), I can tell you, if your body is used to heat, the cold will feel that much more extreme and brutal to you. I appreciate cool days and jacket weather, but wouldn't want to deal with cold like this.
This is so funny to watch, thinking about these paople actualy living in such cold conditions and are still smiling about it !!! Great video and highly recomended to others !! Keep up the good work !!
Thank you for your video . In the UK it gets a little cold (-3) , but could not imagine how to cope with day to day temperatures of how you live in -10+! Nice vid n keep warm!
I am a new subscriber.. I'm so interested whats life in Yakutia or Sakha.. keep posting. I'm from a tropical country and you got a insane weather out there. more power to your channel!
I really can’t understand how people can live in such conditions for months on end. I lived in Northeastern Illinois in the Midwestern up until this year, and to me that winter was unbearable. But it wasn’t even close to being as cold as in this video.
The fur makes sense, especially on the boots! The hairs would trap air on the outside and keep the cold away from your skin - it blocks wind too. If it's snowing so much then anything you touch could either chill you or melt and chill you badly, so insulation would help a lot. I've never seen furred boots before like yours - they're beautiful and I'd love to have some but my hometown only reaches 0°f for like a week or two in February and only in the last few years at that. Thank you for making this video!
Будьте благословенны алгоритмы ютьба, которые совершенно рандомно вбросили мне это видео. Ничего подобного не гуглила и не искала, хотя обсуждала в вк с маман вчера что пора в сибирь, мол в Оймяконе щас норм, наверное.))) Магия!
@sneksnekitsasnek Maria said that the temperature in summer can reach 35 C degrees. So, it's the highest, not the average temp. And due to the dry climate, one doesn't feel hot. www.timeanddate.com/weather/russia/yakutsk/climate
Wow, I live in South Africa, and we reached -5 degress a few days ago and everyone was complaining about the cold! We barely get snow, only on the mountains. Our homes are not built to deal with very cold temperatures. I can never imagine saying -40 degress is "not so bad" haha
Thank you for sharing this I have wondered how you live in the freezing cold I live in Arizona USA near the Mexican border. We have 93 degrees heat in October In the summer about 105 heat We wear flip flops and shorts and tanks
I only started reading about Yakutsk recently, I find it really interesting. I'm going to check out more of your channel, I hope you also have videos of summer.
yakuta people sit in a fridge to keep warm.
you joke, but I remember going inside a building after being outside in -30F and getting a soda from a vending machine ... the soda felt 'warm'.
@Russian lad No No No..that's what I do in bed to keep warm. My wife hates me.
@@tomservo5007 LOL. That's right. And to heat coffee...a few ice cubes in your morning brew. The best part of waking up is ice bergs in your cup.
Come to Finland...
@@tomservo5007 I understand your soda "felt warm" . I remember going inside a house after being out for several hours in the bush in the cold of a northern Ontario Canada winter as a deer hunter . As we entered the house , the house felt "very warm" .
It blows my mind that people live in such conditions. I mean now there is indoor heating....but imagine 200 years ago! It's crazy and amazing at the same time
what's so crazy about it? Humans discovered fire a long time ago, how do you think they heated their homes for thousands of years?
@@18skaterboy18, the climate there is inhumane. I would love to visit though.
@@18skaterboy18 It's crazy that people did it thousands of years ago too
@rvidal0001 I think they all died.
@@18skaterboy18 Yes fires are how they heated their homes and how many still warm their home. But if you don't have good insulation the fire isn't going to warm the whole place. I would know since I heat my home with a fire stove but the insulation in my home is lackning so if it's - 15 outside I would have to put on very warm clothes anyway.
Outside is -40 degree Celsius, and she smiles from the heart
Yeah! I'm from the Uintahs and it doesn't get to -40, at the least at -10 to -20.
Finally a climate that you don't need to convert celsius to fahrenheit!
В Якутии круто
-40 ain't that bad to be honest. You tend to get used to it.
It gets to -60 Fahrenheit where I live 🥶
In Thailand also 42 but +42..
And its only a few thousand kilometres below its almost in the same time zone
Lol
84... :OO
lol nice one
As an aussie this is very relatable
Proves the saying: there’s no such thing as bad weather, just bad clothing choices.
Great video. Wish I could get that jacket in the US.
yeah we say that in sweden, there is no bad weather only bad clothes haha XD and going around and being outside moving you will get warm with good LAYERS
I disagree with this saying. You can protect yourself against cold, rain and wind, but there are no good clothing choices for +30 C.
@@hermenegildakociubinska6665 just wear an ice jacket, of course!
@@hermenegildakociubinska6665 can confirm. When it gets to the upper 40s (too common these days) shoes aren't enough; they just melt on the pavement
@Sandra totally get it. I do not like the cold. Love the heat. But I think the cold is probably good for me, so I’ve figured out how to make it tolerable. Base layer is the most important part.
When I was kid I remember -25/-30 in Poland. Now, last few years in winter is -10 on bad day... and in summer there is +30 almost every day. Climate is changing. My little cousin don't know what real winter looks like, when I was her age we get meter of snow by one night. But also the summers weren't that hot...
Yes, climate change is drastic all over the world.
Even here in Italy. I live in the north, just by the alps, but in winter we are lucky if it go negative in the night. And summer are warmer and dryer. In beteween long weeks of rain. We are almost a tropical climate
yeah in Scotland, we used to have 20cm snow every winter, now we're lucky to even get a sprinkle
Even where I'm from in Canada, we'd always have tons of snow around Christmas. Now there's hardly any real snow until January.
I’m from the Netherlands, which is not cold. But I remember every couple of years we would get snow and skate on the canals/lakes. Growing up I even dreamed that one day I would do the elfstedentocht, but I’m not sure there will be one anytime soon. The canals freezing safely will become rarer and rarer.
I live in Melbourne, Australia. When I was young my parents had this huge hardcover book, _"Times Atlas of the World"_
I spent a lot of time looking through it, and I always used to imagine what it was like in faraway places. For me, a place like Yakutia seems almost magical. Hopefully one day I can visit :)
You can travel to South Korea or Japan with Malaysian low cost Air Asia. There are cheap passenger ships between South Korea Busan and Osaka Japan. If you can find a ship or plane to Russia from South Korea or Japan you can use Russian trains or planes to reach Yakutia. Or you can just travel to China from South Korea and enter Russia. Russian trains are very comfortable and cheap. I don't know about your choice but I will prefer visiting Yakutia during summer.
Also if you can be able to find a cheap flight to Kazakhstan you can easily travel to Russia and use trains to reach Yakutsk. With a good plan and buying tickets early you can easily save a lot of money. Or just find a Russian cargo ship which is turning back to Russia from Australia or New Zealand. Once you step in Russia or a neighbor country reaching Yakutsk is very easy with Russian trains.
6:33 her hair has turned white with ice! Mad!
pretty common thing here tho, when i was little i didn’t even mind that somewhere winter is not like that, in Yakutia 😂
hahaha i just made the subconscious conclusion in my head that she suddenly was blond, forgot the cold was involved !
@@emillebest ahh i see i see
@@ЯнаЯковлева-у8ф In Britain, I have never experienced that kind of coldness. Especially nowadays, thanks to climate change, the winters are really mild (in England anyway)
The vapour from your breath sticks to hair when it is very cold. I have had my eyelashes stick together after blinking.
“When it’s not that cold, like -40 degrees, you can wear just a knit hat :)”
😀 bruh 😀
My head freezes in a knit hat when it's -20 outside 😂
I just had to replay that a couple times to make sure she wasn't saying -4 degrees.
I can't even imagine -40 degrees, -4 is too cold for me.
*me, portuguese and now living in france where it’s significantly cold and can’t go out without a jacket if it’s less than 10°*
Me, a tropical country girl... "Those clothes must be heavy"..
once it gets below zero it all feels the same tbh
I love learning about other parts of the world! What a wonderful planet we live on.
I start freezing at +17C haha. And our temp hardly ever goes below that during the day. Speaking from Nairobi Kenya.
interesting, for me it is the border between comfortable and too cool temperature inside home
You 2 should visit each other! She goes to you in the summer and you visit her in the winter! :D
right?? if temps go below 15 degrees during daytime I'm like "what's going on I'm gonna die". speaking from Brazil!
It is interesting how our bodies adapt to our environments. Alaskan cattle can have heatstrokes at 15C.
as a floridian, i can definitely relate.
‘When it’s not that cold, like -40 degrees...’
Me: not that cold? 😱
Yes, in fact, everything works at this temperature and children go to school, because more or less cold is -45 ° С. A -30 ° C is usually the beginning of winter or the end, this temperature is generally warm 😅
@@dushistaya it can get as low as -55 degrees
"- 42ºC" "not that cold" '-'
@sneksnekitsasnek will you be hibernating the whole winter?😂😂😂😂
It’s average winter temperature in Yakutia, it can be colder and in some regions of Yakutia the temperature can be near -70 C (Oymyakon city) 😄
@sneksnekitsasnek Sorry, but you would have to get out of bed, because at this temperature in Yakutsk, all people work or go to school :)
There actually are inhabitated places over there regularly hitting -80° C. That's cold then.
Th coldest it gets in my town is like 10C, and even then we'll have winter days of about 30C lol. I'd die in Yakutia
I love the casual, "when it's -40 out you can wear this knit hat and it's ok; when it is -50C out you need to wear the fur cap."
I like cold weather (like 10C to -5C) but that is some serious acclimatization when you get casual about just -40 temperatures.
This was randomly recommended to me
5:44 "When it's not that cold, when it's like -40 degrees"
Oh wise and unfathomable TH-cam-Algorithm, thanks for taking all my hours of watching horror audio books and Magic: The Gathering gameplay and seeing right through it. You saw my longing gaze into the abyss. You knew of my escapism and in your wisdom you let me know that we can survive anything as long as we are willing to look it straight in the eye and prepare for what we see, not what we wish we would see.
And now I need a warm tea.
This comment is saving me today. Peace, brother
Was interesting to see how people even survive in this condition coming from someone in Australia where ive never seen a negative Celsius. Your english is great!
Same with me, hi from Yakutia. Always was interesting how people survive in very hot places, like deserts in Africa or Australia. +40..+50C ... unbearable. I'm almost dying when we get +30C in summer.
@@alexandrvasilev2865 in Australia, us and our animals are cold at 20°c. My dog shivers when we have the air conditioner on in summer. When it’s 30° we set the air con to +18-24° and that’s is good enough. I can’t even imagine getting to any less than maybe 7°C ever
@@sarahdemartin1183 but what you do when you have to work outside in +40ºC. Does it need to do special preparations?
@@alexandrvasilev2865 we don’t do anything. We don’t have heaps of out door markets or anything. Everyone just stays inside and blasts the air conditioner because if you go to the beach in that heat your skin will cook and burn with in 30 minutes
@@sarahdemartin1183 what about emergency services? Electricians? Construction workers? Et cetera.
Your boots are so beautiful! Thank you for sharing your culture with us! :-)
So... Elon Musk should ask this woman how to dress properly in Mars.
😂😂😂
@@LifeinYakutia are you able to show me around maybe for a fee if I visit the area for 1 whole winter? I dont know anyone from Siberia lol but I want to visit for about 6months- 1yr. If you are willing to share your socials I can follow and connect. Xoxo.
@@LifeinYakutia sorry I found your IG in the description box..
@@LifeinYakutia you should meet up with Elon Musk
제길
In Norway we use a lot of wool and not so much fur, but, it doesn't really get below -20 during the day. When it's below zero I always use thin wool underwear that covers most of the body, that is the biggest secret to keeping warm in Norway. If it's really cold I use two layers(one that is tight, and one loose over it), and then I take either baggy jeans or snowboard pants, a wool sweater, a wool knit cap, woolen knitted mittens, two layers of wool socks and some good shoes. Sometimes I wear a jacket too, but it restricts movement a lot so I prefer not to when I'm walking and doing stuff. This is how I dress if I go skiing, hiking, or just spend a lot of time outdoors at once.
I do get the fur though, when it's that cold I think fur is the only thing that works. The only fur I use is if I sleep outside, then I have two reindeer furs that I sleep on.
We have a mix in Northern Finland. We only get to like -35 tho
Why on earth do you sleep outside when it's so cold...?!
@@romanal.1738 Because I sometimes go skiing/hiking for a couple of weeks.
I love sleeping outside when it's below freezing, the air is just so much fresher. You don't need to worry about being under a tarp because it's not gonna rain anyways. And with the star, moon and snow it gets a really magical feel to it, sleeping outside. But once it gets below -10 I get a tent instead and cover the tent with spruce and snow.
I think this is pretty normal in Norway. Maybe not for weeks like me, but, a lot of people goes hiking and skiing on weekends.
@sneksnekitsasnek I didn't know it was a competition.
Norway here aswell, but the -40 part of Norway. Every winter I tell myself I'm going to move, but then I don't. But next summer, I swear I'll move.
I probably won't...
The boots look so cool!
Hello i am Mongolian and i still wondering why Yakutian people is similar to Mongolians. Everytime when i see Yakutians i see face of my cousins friend and family. Wish you best
I think so too, She is also similar to Japanese.
I think We probably have same or similar DNA😃
because they are ansistors of both turks and mongolian i think they are ancient turk people
@Googoo ga ga it's yo boi Baby Yoda ok thanks for correction but someone told me modern turkey is modern turk and central asian are ancient turks
She is very similar to Korean sisters and moms. Even in us.
The Yakutians also share a lot of ancestral makeup of a number of indigenous peoples of the Americas.
This is very interesting to see how others live in other countries. I just discovered your videos tonight so I've been watching a few of them. Very nice of you to share your way of life there. Thanks.
Seeing this from Canada like yeah that sounds about right
For some odd reason I at first read the title as “why I wear Yakuza in the winter” and I was extremely concerned
And i read Yakult lol
i read it as yukata LMAO we all had the wrong idea but both japanese
😂😂😂😂
Hello from Qazaqistan 🇰🇿👋🏼👋🏼👋🏼
In eastern Canada, it gets to -20 to -30 in the coldest months, and it’s already impossible for me to survive...
I’m amazed by this video
Haha yeah I live in eastern Canada too and -30 is too much for me, I can't imagine colder than -42 😅😅
I live in central Canada and -40 isn’t to terrible
With wind chill it can get down to -40 sometimes in Toronto. It’s not the worst but I still wouldn’t want to be outside for more than 30 minutes.
@@mollyoxy windchill doesn't count :)
@@juliogonzo2718 it literally does
Your English is great! It's so cool to see how people live in cold areas. I live in Wisconsin, and it gets - 28 C in the winter once or twice. I couldn't imagine having it be more regular
I grew up in a similarly cold place. I remember the order of getting dressed to have over lapping layers. Underwear, then t-shirt and thin socks, then tuck my t-shirt and socks into my long johns, then wool socks over my long johns, the long sleeve shirt, then tuck socks and shirt into blue jeans, then a sweater. And all that was just my underlayer before putting on jackets and winter clothing. Every morning to be ready for -30.
What city do you live in to be so cold?
Most of central Canada is like this.
Brings back memories from my 19th birthday, spent it in -39 Celsius in Brasov Romania😂 tips of your hair freeze, your eyelashes freeze and your nostrils stick togeher the moment you step outside.
Wow, when was -39°C in Brașov?
@@tromkalixon6933 19 December 2010😅
As someone who lives in a place where winter gets down to -40, this is super helpful for ideas to stay warm, since I walk everywhere/don’t drive.
Simply remarkable to see how life operates in such extreme weather conditions. As a prairie canadian I can relate to contending with extremes. I was born and raised in Winnipeg Manitoba, which has the most drastic temperature extremes of any north american city. Temperatures between -25 and -35 celsius are common in the winter. Rarely the coldest winter days reach -40 (-45 is the all time winnipeg cold record). Conversely, in the summer, temperatures over +35 degrees celsius are not unheard of. (winnipeg's heat record is 42 degrees).
You are very charming and full of personality. Love your video’s
In Rio de Janeiro winter is like 20 degree Celsius.
Correct, 25 degrees and we don the jackets
No matter how cold place is people looks so warm and beautiful. I long to go there. Love from India. ❤
im an indonesian, i uesd to live in Ekaterinburg for 3 years. -30C was horrible.. would like to visit Yakuts some day.. nice video. great !))
I still can’t believe that we haven’t been able to easily manufacture clothing that is warmer than fur!! Nature is amazing!
Hair is the best insulator there is because it traps air so well.
We probably *could* make something warmer than fur, but it would likely look pretty much the same and do the same thing.
The other day I wore two pairs of socks and boots to school and my feet were so cold... But it was 12°C
Gotta some snow pants, make those boots have wool too
How were you cold in 12C weather with 2 pairs of socks and boots? that's attire for -12C over here XD buy stuff made of wool.
I can sometimes go outiside just wearing a t-shirt when it is 12 degrees haha, nice and refreshing air! (living in Poland, so really the temperature that bad, pretty much a few degrees below 0 during winter max.)
@@Tea_princess lmao I have already seen Finnish friends on twitter go "ah finally 10°, it's tshirt time again" at the end of winter. meanwhile as a South Western French woman, I still need a light cardigan or at least a long sleeved shirt at 20°.
@@iyawakarehen 20°c is my preferred temprature for wearing flowy dresses and other summery clothing, when it's 30° outside I feel like I am dying!
My mom wears sweater when it hits 25 c. I live in indonesia
My wife starts to shiver from +20 C down. Singapore.
I myself have experienced -37 C once. That cold is really biting, and even inside my jacket the wind from the movement of the body felt cool. But when I came back home I felt very nice refreshed.
@Troy Krentz
When my wife arrived for her very first time in Germany it was - 5 C. That airport did not have an airbridge. She climbed down the aircraft stairs, mumbled "oh my god" and her lower lips shivered faster than I could see, more of a vibration.
I don't mind the cold but 8 months long, and fog .... !!
Meanwhile, I can't leave the house when it hits 25°C because I almost pass out from the heat lol.
I grew up in Bosnia, in the north, the hottest time of the year is like 30°C. Winters usually range from -15°C to -5°C so I'm the most comfortable at around 5°C.
@@anongirl6714 = ice girl
We could not sleep in the same bed then, haha
@@krollpeter i don't think she wants to, mate, stop being a creepy
Here in the UK the whole country falls apart when it occasionally goes to minus minus 1 lol
ok i dont know why this video popped up in my recommended but this is the prettiest girl ever
Yakut girls in general are cool and pretty
Greetings from Vladivostok!❤️
This winter was so warm in my city. I miss you, Snow😭
Grandparents were from Vladivostok. Some place called the 19th mile. Not sure where that is. My Grandma said that there were multiple different types of snow depending on how cold it was. I always thought that was strange.
Even 4 me, man, leaving in Moscow, such temperature sounds very freezing. But...i miss real winter with lots of snow and minus 20-30 degrees. Nowadays our winter looks poor
Same in Lithuania, last winter was so warm, there was no snow only rain, which is very unusual
@@miglegribauskaite4010 Norway too... :/
@@gurururuwarararara8164 oh jeez..
@@gurururuwarararara8164 Same in Poland unfortunately. Nowadays a temperature below 0 is a special event...
I grew up a lot in Moscow, and last January I took my English boyfriend to see the snow...and there wasn't any! It's something I had never seen before, a Russian winter without snow and I was so upset he could not experience what I had.
"What I wear in Yakutia in winter"
... Absolutely everything you possibly can?
ikr? catch me adding a ski mask and ski goggles to that ensemble. 😂
As girl said, the most regular wear is "BASK" company, i think its our local. Next, if you have more money), you can buy the "Canada Goose", imported from Canada of course. But the most prestige is norwegian once. I didnt know the name correctly, we just call it norway)
I want to experience winter in Yakutia.. in our country, India, the climate is very hot but on seeing your videos I feel cool and realize the chillness.. thanks for posting the videos related to your closest beautiful town
Under those extreme conditions even the most mundane details are important.
Love from TURKEY 🇹🇷
Reading comments from south east asia countries here makes me smile. Hello from Malaysia! I only experienced up -10 degrees when I was in Beijing. Can't imagine how -40 feels like. :)
The hat is so beautiful. Beautifully crafted.
This is fascinating thank you for teaching us.
I am so glad I found your channel, because I have always been interested in everything russian and Yakutia as well :)
Wow! She's gorgeous!!! :)
Spending a winter in Yakutia will definitely build character. If I get to do that, I'm putting it on my resume under "other achievements".
I love the cold snowy weather
Thank you for sharing your culture with us. This was a very informative video. In my hometown it's rarely below zero, but last winter I was in another city and it was -8 degrees. It was freezing cold for me and I cannot even imagine how cold -40 degrees is...
Those gloves without the fingers are called “mittens” 😊
It's funny cause in russian they are actually called "mityenki". Very similar to "mittens"))
in german they're called handshoes
@@ljf9143 interesting, never heard of "mityenki", we call it "varezhki". I'm native russian speaker from south of Russia
in Holland we call ´m ´wanten´
@@nillehessy Same word here in Sweden: "Vantar"
Beautiful accent and your English is excellent.
Respect to the Yakutia people for surviving and thriving in such harsh conditions!
Very well explained, Thank you, John from Indiana, US
Live in Indianapolis
Would happily take on extreme cold any day. In my home country ( Australia ) we have devastating summers. Temp can rise to and over + 40 c . And fires. 🔥.
Think it agian mate,
I live in Texas, and it gets in the 100s (fahrenheit) regularly here in summer. However, being raised in a climate that does get relatively cold in winter (though nowhere NEAR this cold), I can tell you, if your body is used to heat, the cold will feel that much more extreme and brutal to you. I appreciate cool days and jacket weather, but wouldn't want to deal with cold like this.
This is so funny to watch, thinking about these paople actualy living in such cold conditions and are still smiling about it !!! Great video and highly recomended to others !! Keep up the good work !!
Wow your eyes are so pretty 😤💗❤️💖
You are earnest and objective. I am enjoying your channel!!
Those boots have such beautiful details, wow!
I miss Siberia! Hopefully I will get to visit Yakutia next time I come!
100th comment!😊😊😊
Love from India.
Conserve your beautiful ethnic group and language!🙏🙏🙏
@Micky Calebro why so mean man.
What a strange comment lol
@@cameronhowe1110
Dont you love your language and culture?
@@adityanawani8134 I think Cameron commented Micky's strange comment. And you wrote the beautiful one. :)
@@romanal.1738
Ok!😁😁😁
Enjoying your videos. You are so pretty . Keep creating and show us around your awesome country. Big fan ❤️❤️
A few months ago I was doing research on Yakutia and it's honestly really surprising seeing something like this in my recommendations
Thank you for your video . In the UK it gets a little cold (-3) , but could not imagine how to cope with day to day temperatures of how you live in -10+!
Nice vid n keep warm!
I am a new subscriber.. I'm so interested whats life in Yakutia or Sakha.. keep posting. I'm from a tropical country and you got a insane weather out there. more power to your channel!
Oh my God!!!!!!!! That is freezing cold!!!!! Really amazing that there are still quite many people to live. Wish you all the best!!!
I really can’t understand how people can live in such conditions for months on end. I lived in Northeastern Illinois in the Midwestern up until this year, and to me that winter was unbearable. But it wasn’t even close to being as cold as in this video.
The fur makes sense, especially on the boots! The hairs would trap air on the outside and keep the cold away from your skin - it blocks wind too. If it's snowing so much then anything you touch could either chill you or melt and chill you badly, so insulation would help a lot. I've never seen furred boots before like yours - they're beautiful and I'd love to have some but my hometown only reaches 0°f for like a week or two in February and only in the last few years at that. Thank you for making this video!
No such thing as cold weather, just wrong clothing 👍
Great to know something about your country please keep doing. Best wishes 🌺!
11° C here at the moment and I am wearing two sweaters and covering myself with 3 blankets and a hot water bag at my feet.
Those boots are gorgeous!
Будьте благословенны алгоритмы ютьба, которые совершенно рандомно вбросили мне это видео. Ничего подобного не гуглила и не искала, хотя обсуждала в вк с маман вчера что пора в сибирь, мол в Оймяконе щас норм, наверное.))) Магия!
What a beautiful view of the cemetery you have from your window
Haha it’s unfinished building, not a cemetery 😂
you're so pretty! i thought moscow was cold, but now i get just how much worse it could get lol
you are the cutest TH-camr i have seen so far!!!!!!
Thank you for telling us the place where you live. I wonder how life goes in Yakutsk and now i think i have learnt something about it.
You have no idea how I'd be ecstatic to travel to Yakutia!
Me too, but in summer time, when the living is easy...
@sneksnekitsasnek Maria said that the temperature in summer can reach 35 C degrees. So, it's the highest, not the average temp. And due to the dry climate, one doesn't feel hot.
www.timeanddate.com/weather/russia/yakutsk/climate
For minus 20 on sweden i thought it was cold with snow pants. Can't imagine in -40
It’s - 22 degrees outside today and it’s pretty warm for winter. I live in Yakutsk too
The first time i heard or saw yakutzk was on the show “departures” what a beautiful place!
Thank You!
you're so pretty!
“When it’s not that cold, when it’s like -40 degrees” 😂 lovit
Very thank
Я ♥️ якутия
Я южной Корее
Wow, I live in South Africa, and we reached -5 degress a few days ago and everyone was complaining about the cold! We barely get snow, only on the mountains. Our homes are not built to deal with very cold temperatures. I can never imagine saying -40 degress is "not so bad" haha
pretty girl
Loved this video!! I want to visit Yakutsk one day!
-40 C = -40 F - I worked at that temperature in a freezer hold aboard a ship in the Bering sea Alaska. It’s cold.
I've always wanted to visit there. I love the cold, but we'll see how I like it there. Thanks for the video.
-41C is -41.8 in F so basically it's so cold that the 2 temperature scales meet
It's soo cold but they dress warm.
Thank you for sharing this
I have wondered how you live in the freezing cold
I live in Arizona USA near the Mexican border. We have 93 degrees heat in October
In the summer about 105 heat
We wear flip flops and shorts and tanks
Hey I'm from AZ too! I live in Tucson, so like an hour from the border :)
@@gabbym333
I live in Sierra vista AZ
Tomorrow is Saturday and the temperatures are going up to the 80s in the middle of November
I only started reading about Yakutsk recently, I find it really interesting. I'm going to check out more of your channel, I hope you also have videos of summer.