Siberian villagest are the coldest places in the world now! Woo hoo!

Siberian villages are the coldest places in the world now! Woo hoo!

The only website that gives the full answer to the question, “Which places are the coldest on the Earth now?” is Ogimet.com. Check it!

Currently, the world’s coldest place is Oymyakon (also known as Ojmjakon) in East Yakutia, Siberia / Russia). It’s -46.9C now.

Other top coldest places on the Earth belong to Yakutian (Siberian) villages:

2. Segen-Kyuel’, -46.4 °C
3. Tompo, -44.4 °C
4. Batamaj, -43.7 °C
5. Ust’- Moma, -43.1 °C
6. Curapca, -43.0 °C
7. Verhojansk, -42.9 °C

Do you know what? This winter will be coldest in Yakutia (East Siberia/Russia) definitely, as such lowest temperatures are usual for this region. Cold winter weather dwells in Siberia as well as in Yakutsk, that’s becoming to be recognized as the coldest city in the world.

Dislike citing newspapers, as I prefer the original content, but… What a nice story The Boston Globe wrote about the life in the extreme weather conditions. In the article “Cold pushes life to the extremes,” the author describes pretty good all sides of such living in the cold…

And, hey, my Siberian city of Yakutsk was mentioned in it. Take a look.

..For further perspective, consider the Siberian city of Yakutsk, where it averaged 40 below zero last week.

Inna Likhachyova, who works at Tour Service Centre in Yakutsk, 3,000 miles east of Moscow, tittered at the idea of 22 below.

“If you plan to come here, you will need a fur hat, fur boots, two pairs of pants,’’ she said. “It is not cold for us, but you might have a different idea of what cold is.’’…

The story contains the video as well. So it is really worth to read.

Tagged with:
 
Coldest places on Earth at WX-Now... and no Siberian settlements of Verkhoyansk and Oymyakon in the top...

Coldest places on Earth at WX-Now... and no Siberian settlements of Verkhoyansk and Oymyakon in the top...

A year ago I chatted with Jordi, the Catalonian meteorology fan, who runs an amazing blog about amazing snow, http://amazingsnow.wordpress.com/. Think, he is more than just a climate fan, he is actually a pro. Once he wrote the article Limits of Oymyakon for Cold United. A professional could create such a scientific text only.

So I asked him, whether it is possible to display the chart of the current coldest places weather info on any website and, if yes, how to do that. He said that the lowest for “the moment” was not an easy thing to find.

However, Jordi gave me the link to the weather info website www.ogimet.com, I presume, he was working on its development, and said that the world’s coldest places ranking didn’t work yet at that moment…

A few months ago, I received a message from a class mate, who lives now in Calgary. He provided the link to WX-Now’s Coldest places on Earth page and stated, “Calgary is the second coldest place in the world!” I said, “What?!”

(more…)

Just imagine. You woke up in the morning and see this in the window…

Polar bears invaded the Russian region of Sakha-Yakutia in Siberia's Arctic. Photo by Boris Gorokhov

Polar bears invaded the Russian region of Sakha-Yakutia in Siberia's Arctic. Photo by Boris Gorokhov

Polar bears invaded the Russian region of Sakha-Yakutia in Siberia's Arctic. Photo by Boris Gorokhov

Polar bears are becoming common in the northern part of the Republic of Sakha-Yakutia, Russia’s Siberia and Far East. They are coming to Yakutia’s Arctic seashore regularly and it is not an extraordinary event anymore.

A decade ago, people considered polar bears’ delving into the region as the sign of bears’ curiousity. Now they come to the mainland for food apparently. Is it the global warming forcing them to penetrate Siberia’s Arctic?..

Take a look at exclusive pictures of polar bears, who recently approached to the weather station in Yakutia, Siberia/ Russia. Initially, the author, Boris Gorokhov, published on the OhotaSakha.ru website dedicated to hunting and fishing in Yakutia… Oh, don’t worry. The photographer is not a hunter and nothing bad happened to Arctic wild animals.

(more…)

Tagged with:
 

Russian winter in Moscow. Photographs by Olga Boiko.

Moscow is celebrating New Year and Orthodox Christmas now. How does the major Russian city look in winter? It is festive, snowy and… Well, you’d better look at Olga Boiko’s splendid photographs of the magic Russian winter. (more…)

Tagged with:
 


Friendship. By Tatiana Matveeva.

The Best of Russia is the online photo contest. People are asked to submit their best photographs and show their own Russia. Eventually all collected pictures show the country as it is seen by ordinary citizens, and what they see is the best.

Enjoy more winter photographs.

(more…)

Tagged with:
 

A winter photo of the Siberian city of Yakutsk. By Bolot Bochkarev.

What type of winter are we, residents of Yakutsk, going to have in a month? Temperatures around minus 40 and 50 degrees Centigrade are for sure. Thick fog. Extreme cold weather is a essential part of the daily winter life of the Siberian city of Yakutsk, the world’s coldest city. Some says it is the same, if living in a freezer. Well, maybe. Never been in a freezer :)

Words won’t be enough to give you a precise feeling. Perhaps, the following winter street photographs I took the last winter will provide you with some ideas. Take a look. (more…)

Tagged with:
 

Longyearbyen

This year Philips has launched a pretty interesting experiment project. The company gave Philips Wake-up Lights to all residents of Longyearbyen, the world’s northernmost town, in order to see, if its clinically proven claim of ‘waking you up feeling refreshed’ is still true in the extremes of an arctic winter.

Longyearbyen is the centre of Svalbard on the western coast of Spitsberge and considered also as the largest island of the Svalbard archipelago in southern Adventfjorden.

Well, frankly saying, I have no idea of what cold weather extremes they’ve got in Longyearbyen, but apparently they experience the same lack of sun lights in winter as Yakutia’s Arctic settlement of Tiksi… in the course of four long months. So it is worth to follow the project via its facebook fan page or Flickr pool.

By the way, enjoy more fantastic Longyearbyen pictures! (more…)

Tagged with:
 
Resource development has only led to more misery for northern Russia's indigenous peoples, Larissa Abryutina from the Russian Association of the Indigenous People of the North, tells a Laval university conference on the challenges of sustainable development and sovereignty in the Arctic on May 18.

Resource development has only led to more misery for northern Russia's indigenous peoples, Larissa Abryutina from the Russian Association of the Indigenous People of the North, tells a Laval university conference on the challenges of sustainable development and sovereignty in the Arctic on May 18.

Pollution, alcoholism, poor health care reduce life expectancy to between 40 to 45 years.

QUEBEC CITY — Many of the 280,000 indigenous peoples of Russia’s north are watching their communities and cultures teeter on the brink of extinction as economic hardships force them to leave their homelands and migrate in droves to the city.

Many of those who remain behind have abandoned traditional values and become “profit-driven in their search for compensation for their traditional lands,” Larissa Abryutina of the Russian Association of the Indigenous People of the North said May 18 in a presentation to a conference at Laval University on sustainable development and sovereignty in the Arctic.

Like other speakers, Abryutina revealed a striking irony: that it’s much easier to find bad examples of development and self-determination in the Arctic than good ones.

Abryutina, a Chukchi, is herself a casualty of the desperate choices facing northern Russian indigenous people: a doctor of radiology, she left her home region of Chukotka due to its declining standard of living.

(more…)

Page 1 of 212»

2009 - 2011 (c) ColdUnited.com
The project is powered by AskYakutia.com & eYakutia.com