Another Day at Minus Sixty

extreme cold in Russia 1

Yet another day of minus sixty (-50C) in Russia, but life doesn’t stop!





extreme cold in Russia 2

extreme cold in Russia 3

extreme cold in Russia 4

extreme cold in Russia 5

extreme cold in Russia 6

extreme cold in Russia 7

extreme cold in Russia 8

extreme cold in Russia 9

extreme cold in Russia 10

extreme cold in Russia 11

extreme cold in Russia 12

extreme cold in Russia 13

extreme cold in Russia 14

extreme cold in Russia 15

extreme cold in Russia 16

extreme cold in Russia 17

Tags: ,

Tip: To get daily entertaiment news like this one, bookmark englishrussia.com or get if it's more convinient for you.


Our friends publish:




Bloggers, send your links!

See more of English Russia:

      An Ice Palace in St. Petersburg

      Bathroom Barbeque

      Russian Anti-Coca-Cola Calendar

      Russian Siberia at Winter

      Highway Holes

      Diet in a Russian Way

      Russian Gazprom Building

      WW2 Memories

      The Bus Misses Stop

      Russian at Northern Pole, 1950s-1960s

      Bears Come to Camp

      Bus Stop

    Back to English Russia Main Page for more articles like this


    6:49 pm


    109 Responses to “Another Day at Minus Sixty”

    1. rafal says:

      And Lenin - one of the biggest criminals of the world is present.

      • Nikita says:

        Don’t worry. He is freezing off his ass for sure.
        Nikita.

        • Vandal says:

          So cold that we could whack his testicles and break them off!

        • Kostya says:

          Yes I agree with rafal and nikita, Lenin was a criminal, he was jewish and why were they favouring communism? Because they always found europe a hard place in the history and conflicted, europeans always kind of poked jews for being non-christian, or else too wealthy. So the idea of communism was an idea for them to be equal with everyone else but even more, enabled many of them to take highranking places in Russia, to murder millions of russian christians through gulags (work-prison camps). They also were successfull at destroying and banning religions in USSR.

          http://www.jewwatch.com/jew-occupiedgovernments-USSR.html

          According to Jew Watch website USSR was a “Jewish occupied country”

          http://seanbryson.com/articles/prop_masters.html

          Around 80% of the communist party after revolution was jewish and later in 1970s anti-jewish semitism was born because people figured out we had to have our own people in the party, but not for long, our people finally destroyed in 1991 what they had to put up and live up with before.
          Why did the Nazis hate communism so much? There was a communist revolution in Germany but it soon lost ground, how ever most of the german communists were again Jews.

          • Texas1 says:

            Jew watch? LOL!! …and i thought i had too much time on my hands!

          • Mossad HQ says:

            Fascinating. Please leave your name and address so we can contact you for a follow-up.

          • gregor says:

            Yea the jews are responsible for everything bad that happened in the soviet union. Hell even everyting bad that happens in the whole world are caused by jews.

            Soon you will tell us that Stalin was also jewish. A man that planned to send all jews in Russia into internment camps only to be stopped by his own death. There were jews in the Soviet leadership, Molotovs wife for an example.

            But to blame jews for communism is just pure ignorance.

          • kostya,

            you are a very uneducated man, i guess you fell thru the cracks of soviet education system. working as a furniture mover is the best you can do for yourself with finishing 6 grades and having reading ability of a 6 year old.

            the links you provide are nothing but bullshit propaganda. its all lies and you have to be a really stupid person to believe anything in there.

            anti semetism existed before the revolution and it was always there throughout all the years of communism.

            if jews were all in control of soviet union, why were they not allowed to hold certain types of jobs? if everything was so great for them why did they want to immigrate to other countries?

            • Kostya says:

              I didn’t say all Jews, but it was their idea and at first the soviet government consisted 80% out of them, I am just curious why do you have those websites where it clearly says jews tried to destroy christianity in ussr.

            • Kostya says:

              Comrade Mossad HQ, if you wanted to arrest me you wouldn’t ask me for my adress, my IP gives it all out anyway. As for you Kostya is dumb, oops!, did I just call meself dumb? So yes.. I just want to say that what I said may be the exaggerated but it’s roots are somehow based on truth, some kind of a holocaust did take place directed against Russian Christians and a lot of Jews were in charge until and even though Stalin also sent Jews to gulags, there were still jews that were in the party and who murdered people under Stalin. So to say that Jews murdered Soviets is not entirely true but there were many many more Russians who suffered from this than Jews. So should we just call Stalin and all those people including those Jews who executed the gulag system “Devils of the twentieth century” and send them all to hell?

              • Mossad HQ says:

                “Comrade Mossad HQ, if you wanted to arrest me you wouldnt ask me for my adress, my IP gives it all out anyway.”

                Yeah but, you know, like, this is the NEW Mossad and, we’ve had lots of down-sizing and turnover at HQ, and we spend most of our time in sensitivity and sexual-harrassment training and, like, we really don’t have TIME for all that “gathering” thing, so if you could just, like, send us your address, it would be a big help.

                Peace out,
                Mossad HQ
                “We’re looking out for you.” (new motto”

              • kostya,

                nado menshe pit i bolshe mozgami dumat!

                you get your information from a website that is based on hatred and not on facts. just because you see something on the internet doesnt make it true.

                i read some of the stuff on that page and i never seen so much lies and bullshit in my life. here are a few dumb things it had to say and many of you will agree that its false:

                1) russian revolution was financed by a american banker
                2) there is a part that describes that during WW2 in vinnitsa, ukraine they found mass grave of 9000 people. the website blames jews for killing them but thats typical since the website blames jews for everything. the website says that germans the nice guys that they are (its a known fact that they burned hundreds of villages in ukraine / belarus along with all the residents) they decide to determine the cause of death and even call for experts from France, Netherlands, Belgium and Sweden. sounds pretty fishy to me, why would military get involved in crimes that happened in the past when they have a war going on. why would they call so called experts from other countries (which germany occupied and whose citizens were not on good terms with germans)? if it would be today then UN would get involved and get independent experts to examine the bodies but 60+ years ago people did not do that.

                • You think “jewwatch” is bad? - try living in Latvia or Estonia, where anti-Semitism and xenophobia are not only condoned, but are in fact government-financed. In which other country would you find newly-erected monuments devoted to the SS butchers, or see public marches in honour of Waffen SS Legion?

                  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BdT9UR7QL8U

                  http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/679716.stm

                  http://www.independent.co.uk/news/europe/estonia-accused-of-antisemitism-after-memorial-is-erected-to-ss-executioner-564715.html

                  http://content.answers.com/main/content/wp/en/c/c5/Lihula_monument.jpg

                  Very disturbing, to say the least.

                  • Review says:

                    (Regarding the article: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/679716.stm)

                    Article provides correct facts served in biased wrapping.

                    While author obviously has tried to maintain some objectivity, it is obvious that he has drawn mainly from the Russian-language sources both in Latvia and in Russia, who generally are despising to Latvia.

                    Wording is largely taken from Russian media. Also the current title “Latvian NAZI-ERA veterans march” seems to have been taken from a typical Russian original “Latvian NAZI veterans march” and softened a bit.

                    “Hundreds of Latvian Waffen SS veterans have marched through the centre of Riga” - intends to create a vision of men in black SS uniforms, Nazi standards in the air, singing Nazi songs, marching through the city.

                    “Russia, Jewish groups and Red Army veterans” - explains it all. (Note: Correction needed - “Soviet Jewry” instead of “Jewish”. Tragically, almost all of local Jews were killed in Holocaust, so the ones we see here basically are strangers, many of those enthusiastic Soviets, who came from USSR after WWII.)

                    “…one sign in Russian…” - in Russian? In Latvia? Interesting…. See above.

                    “Aleksandr Sokurov” - Russian name. Ditto….

                    It is not a secret (obvious even from the article) that protesters are mostly Red Army (the conquerors), people who used to hold positions in Communist Party and Soviet Occupation Authorities, and leftist and Russian nationalist extremists.

                    Article mostly focuses on how assumingly embarrassing the event is and what “protesters” think, without providing in-depth insight of what exactly happened in Latvia before, during and after WWII and what exactly all this is about.

                    “..many of whom marched with their families..” - is not entirely correct, as quite the opposite was more common - many elder family members were carrying flowers to commemorate their fathers and brothers who died in war sixty years ago.

                    “It’s a nightmare from the state’s point of view.” Yes. From the point of view of Public Relations. With Russia hanging over you.

                    Alternative name of the article, a little bit closer to the fact, could be - “Leftist Russian extremists harass Latvians moaning their WWII dead”.

                    P.S.
                    Horrible Year, 1940-1941 : http://www.lettia.lv/en_a_legionari-nirnberga.html
                    Latvian legion soldiers at Nuremberg Tribunal : http://www.lettia.lv/en_a_baigais-gads.html

                  • Review says:

                    Estonia and Amnesty

                    An excess of conscience
                    Dec 14th 2006
                    From Economist.com

                    Estonia is right and Amnesty is wrong

                    Get article background

                    AMNESTY International used to be an impartial and apolitical outfit, focused on the single burning issue of political prisoners. Your correspondent remembers its admirable letter-writing campaigns during the cold war on behalf of Soviet prisoners of conscience such as Jüri Kukk, an Estonian chemistry professor. He died in jail 25 years ago with the hope—then not widely shared—that his country’s foreign occupation would eventually end.

                    It did. Since regaining independence in 1991 Estonia has become the reform star of the post-communist world. Its booming economy, law-based state and robust democracy are all the more impressive given their starting point: a country struggling with the huge forced migration of the Soviet era. The collapse of the evil empire left Estonia with hundreds of thousands of resentful, stranded ex-colonists, citizens of a country that no longer existed.

                    Some countries might have deported them. That was the remedy adopted in much of eastern Europe after the second world war. Germans and Hungarians—regardless of their citizenship or politics—were sent “home” in conditions of great brutality.

                    Instead, Estonia, like Latvia next door, decided to give these uninvited guests a free choice. They could go back to Russia. They could stay but adopt Russian citizenship. They could take local citizenship (assuming they were prepared to learn the language). Or they could stay on as non-citizens, able to work but not to vote.

                    Put like that, it may sound fair. But initially it prompted howls of protest against “discrimination”, not only from Russia but from Western human-rights bodies. The Estonians didn’t flinch. A “zero option”—giving citizenship to all comers—would be a disaster, they argued, ending any chance of restoring the Estonian language in public life, and of recreating a strong, confident national identity.

                    They were right. More than 100,000 of the Soviet-era migrants have learnt Estonian and gained citizenship. In 1992, 32% of the population had no citizenship. Now the figure is 10%.

                    In 1990, before the final Soviet collapse, your correspondent tried to buy postage stamps in Tallinn using halting Estonian. The clerk replied brusquely, in Russian, “govorite po chelovecheski” (speak a human language). That was real discrimination. Estonians were unable to use their own language in their capital city. Now that’s changed too.

                    Reasonable people can disagree about the details of the language law, about the right level of subsidies for language courses, and about the rules for gaining citizenship. Nowhere’s perfect. But Estonia’s system is visibly working. It is extraordinarily hard to term it a burning issue for an international human-rights organisation.

                    Yet that is what Amnesty International has tried to make of it. It has produced a lengthy report, “Linguistic minorities in Estonia: Discrimination must end”, demanding radical changes in Estonia’s laws on both language and citizenship.

                    Amnesty’s report echoes Kremlin propaganda in a way that Estonians find sinister and offensive

                    The report is puzzling for several reasons. It is a bad piece of work, ahistorical and unbalanced. It echoes Kremlin propaganda in a way that Estonians find sinister and offensive. But most puzzling of all, it is a bizarre use of Amnesty’s limited resources. Just a short drive from Estonia, in Belarus and in Russia, there are real human rights abuses, including two classic Amnesty themes: misuse of psychiatry against dissidents, and multiple prisoners of conscience. Yet the coverage of these issues on the Amnesty website is feeble, dated, or non-existent.

                    Amnesty seems to have become just another left-wing pressure group, banging on about globalisation, the arms trade, Israel and domestic violence. Regardless of the merits of their views—which look pretty stale and predictable—it seems odd to move to what is already a crowded corner of the political spectrum. To save Jüri Kukk and other inmates of the gulag, people of all political views and none joined Amnesty’s campaigns. That wouldn’t happen now.

                  • Review says:


                    Bronze meddling
                    May 3rd 2007
                    From The Economist print edition

                    Russian hypocrisy and heavy-handedness towards a former colony

                    CLUMSINESS on one hand, unprecedented bullying on the other. That is the story of Russia’s reaction to Estonia’s decision to move a Soviet-era war memorial and 12 unmarked graves from a prominent position in the capital, Tallinn, to its international military cemetery.

                    Handled better, the move might have ruffled fewer feathers. But Estonia’s prime minister, Andrus Ansip, first raised the issue for party advantage. He wanted his Reform party, founded by zealously free-market ex-communists, to pinch some patriotic votes from other centre-right parties in the March parliamentary elections. His country is now paying a colossal political, social and diplomatic price.

                    After the Estonian authorities sealed off the monument last weekend, hundreds of people, mostly from the 300,000-strong ethnic Russian population, rioted in Tallinn. They attacked the main theatre and the Academy of Arts, chanting “Fuck Estonia”, and “Russia, Russia”. Secondary-school pupils unfurled a banner outside parliament reading “USSR forever”. The supposed aim was to protect the war memorial—a bronze “liberator” that Estonians see as a symbol of their country’s decades-long enslavement by the Soviet Union. But the main activity was looting. Dozens of shops were raided. The police, initially overwhelmed, made 1,000 arrests. One man was stabbed to death—in a row with another looter, Estonia says.

                    The rioting was not wholly spontaneous. Russian embassy officials had previously met leading protesters in curious places such as a botanical garden, according to pictures leaked by local spy-catchers. After the riot, another front opened: state websites were swamped by attacks from computers with Kremlin IP addresses.

                    That was swiftly followed by a blockade of Estonia’s embassy in Moscow by protesters from Kremlin-run youth movements; they have attacked it with eggs, stones, paint and deafening music, ripped down the flag, and jostled the ambassador. They now threaten to demolish the embassy on May 9th, a public holiday that marks Soviet victory in Europe. Estonia has protested. So has NATO, mildly. Russia says it has stepped up security and blames Estonia for “stoking tensions”.

                    Then on May 1st Russian oil and coal exports to Estonia stopped, pending railway “repairs”. Freight transit through the country is lucrative for Russian business. But like other threatened boycotts, the move will not hurt Estonia much. Previous Russian sanctions have forced Estonian firms to trade chiefly with the West. Still, gas supplies are truly vulnerable, while the thriving tourism industry is nervously counting cancelled bookings.

                    Russia’s rhetorical onslaught has been ferocious. Ignoring the looting, media there claim that “anti-fascist schoolchildren” trying to stop Estonians “demolishing” the memorial were “tortured” by the “inhuman” police. Russia’s foreign minister said Estonia was behaving “disgustingly”. A delegation of Russian politicians, invited to see that the monument had been moved, not demolished, called for the government’s resignation before setting off. On arrival, they repeatedly insulted their hosts, while demanding that “political prisoners” be freed.

                    This has scary echoes for Estonians. In 1940 a Soviet delegation issued similarly phrased demands. Weeks later, Estonia was wiped off the map. The protests also sit oddly with the ruthless way that entirely peaceful and purely political protests are squashed in Russia, as well as with the often casual treatment of war memorials there.

                    Estonian nerves are jangling. The riots punctured the illusion that local Russians were integrating smoothly. Meanwhile a country that was for long a European darling has been left pitifully exposed by its allies’ muted and belated response.

                  • Review says:


                    Baltic borders and the war

                    May 5th 2005
                    From The Economist print edition

                    THE fighting stopped 60 years ago, but the war still produces lively rows. Estonia and Lithuania are boycotting next week’s shindig in Moscow. Latvia’s president, Vaira Vike-Freiberga, is going only to question Russia’s interpretation of history. This is as follows. The Baltic three were annexed in 1940 by the Soviet Union “according to international law at the time”; then conquered by the Nazis; and then liberated by the heroic Red Army.

                    For the Balts, this is topsy-turvy. Far from being legal, their annexation stemmed from the 1939 Nazi-Soviet pact, which divided Europe between the two. The Red Army’s arrival in 1945 was less a liberation than the replacement of one murderous occupation by another. If anything, the Soviet one was worse (though not for Baltic Jews). The re-establishment of pre-war independence in 1991 was a miracle, not a catastrophe.…

                  • Dima says:

                    Come down man, do you know, that there are more skinheads today in Russia than in Europe and USA? Estonians and latvians are not nazis, and if some of our ancestors did fight against communists in the WW2, they did it because Stalins regime sent innocent women children and men to death in Siberia. Newly erected monuments are for those men who had the guts to fight back the agressor, thay had no other option than to join the german army, because during the first Soviet occupation the soviets destroyed our army.

                    peace!

            • Kostya says:

              Maybe the soviet system was good at telling a biased perspective but it wasn’t bad at teaching and making good solid mathematicians and physicists.

          • Well well well, yet more anti-Semitism from baltic Nazis :) Don’t you guys ever get tired? :)

      • bushka says:

        BIG MISTAKE surely from an uneducated ignorant young American (where basic education is nintendo type war games and internet porn) not Lenin but DickCHENEY and RUMSFELD are the biggest serial killers and war criminals who even standardised torture even more criminals than Ghengis Khan

    2. Dixieland says:

      Those temperatures would be hard on a car. I wouldn’t think you could get one to start at that temp without warming the block first. Anyone know?

      • artursp says:

        When it was -30 C had no problem, started as good as in summer. As far as I know it’s harder for diesel engines, especially old ones.

      • Nikita says:

        On lorry, we used to open the hood, lit newspapers and hold them under the engine.

      • Nikita says:

        On lorry, we used to open the hood, lit newpapers and hold them under or near the engine.

      • wooshkaboom says:

        As a general rule, no, you can’t start a car on it’s own at that temperature - especially not if it’s a diesel engine.

        Although I doubt that it’s that cold in all of these pictures… -50 C tends to “peel” skin from your face and hurt your respitory tracts (even if you’re used to it), so I doubt that even Russians would be outside at -50 without something covering their faces.

        • Dixieland says:

          Seems like your eyelids would freeze to you eyes.

        • Premas says:

          I’d challenge your doubts. The lowest I experienced was -48C. It wasn’t a big issue to withstand that being outside for reasonably short periods (like half an hour or so). One just needs keep his mouth shut, use nose for breathing and better through woollen scarf or mitten (see a woman on photo 9).

          • wooshkaboom says:

            I’ll answer your challenge:

            Half an hour isn’t a very long time - if you’re out on your regular work-day, and you have to either rely on public transportation or take the chance of your car not starting, I think that you would prepare yourself for a longer time outside than just half an hour…

            And since that one woman is the ONLY person in these pictures that’s covered their mouth/nose at all, I’d bet that it really isn’t -50 C, at least not in the pictures that have pedestrians in them.

            • Good answer. You have a lot of knowledge about effects of extreme cold climate. I’ll be leaving Texas and going for a visit in Russia next month to look for a bride, but I suffer from a condition that requires me to “go” often. What if I’m walking along in the park with my potential fiance and have an emergency and have to stop for a “poopy”? If I expose my anus to the extreme cold air, could it freeze shut?

              Thanks for any advice.

              Hook ‘em horns!

              • wooshkaboom says:

                Yes, that knowledge comes from experience.

                And as to your question:

                The freezing of the anus is the #2 cause of death here in Finland during winter. I would advise you to eat a lot of fiber so that if you have to go, you won’t have to expose your rectum to extreme temperatures for prolonged periods. Although from a social perspective I don’t think taking your potential fiance to walk outside in -50 Celsius weather makes a very good impression…

                But (a little more) seriously, I don’t think that you’re in any trouble unless you’re going to spend more than half an hour taking that dump. Unless of course the Russian police happen to show up, which is another story entirely - although I kind of suspect that your ass would be at risk in those circumstances too. :D

            • Premas says:

              Wooshkaboom,

              I don’t disagree with you - it’s perfectly possible it’s not actually -50C on those photos. What I just want to say from my past experience living in South Siberia life in the cities doesn’t stop at temperatures below -40C. Not so many as usual but there still are people and cars on the streets outside. Moreover, I recently saw a TV reporting about low temps (-50C and below) from that region - the picture didn’t differ from what we see on the photos here.

              By the way, climate in Finland (now I live nearby - Pietari) is a bit milder than in Siberia due to sea proximity. However, in Finland it is harder to withstand low temps due to higher humidity. It is much drier in Siberia. Subjectively -50C in Finland and -50C in Siberia would be felt differently. In Finland it would be killing, in Siberia - hard but doable.

            • Premas says:

              Wooshkaboom,

              I don’t disagree with you - it can perfectly be possible that it’s not -50C on the photos. What I want to say is that from my past experience living in South Siberia life doesn’t stop in cities at temps below -40C. Not so many but there still are people and cars outside.

              Moreover, I recently saw TV reporting about low temps (-50C and below) from that region and the picture was not different from what we see on the photos here.

              By the way, climate in Finland (now I live nearby - Pietari) is milder than in Siberia due to sea proximity. In Finland it is harder to withstand low temps due to higher humidity. It is much drier in Siberia. Subjectively, -50C in Finland and -50C in Siberia would be felt differently - killing in Finland, hard but doable in Siberia.

            • Premas says:

              This is third time I’m trying to post same comment - didn’t work out previous two times. So I’m sorry if it appears three time later on.

              Wooshkaboom,

              I don’t disagree with you - it can perfectly be possible that it’s not -50C on the photos. What I want to say is that from my past experience living in South Siberia life doesn’t stop in cities at temps below -40C. Not so many but there still are people and cars outside.

              Moreover, I recently saw TV reporting about low temps (-50C and below) from that region and the picture was not different from what we see on the photos here.

              By the way, climate in Finland (now I live nearby - Pietari) is milder than in Siberia due to sea proximity. In Finland it is harder to withstand low temps due to higher humidity. It is much drier in Siberia. Subjectively, -50C in Finland and -50C in Siberia would be felt differently - killing in Finland, hard but doable in Siberia.

            • Premas says:

              This is forth attempt.

              This is third time I’m trying to post same comment - didn’t work out previous two times. So I’m sorry if it appears three times later on.

              Wooshkaboom,

              I don’t disagree with you - it can perfectly be possible that it’s not -50C on the photos. What I want to say is that from my past experience living in South Siberia life doesn’t stop in cities at temps below -40C. Not so many but there still are people and cars outside.

              Moreover, I recently saw TV reporting about low temps (-50C and below) from that region and the picture was not different from what we see on the photos here.

              By the way, climate in Finland (now I live nearby - Pietari) is milder than in Siberia due to sea proximity. In Finland it is harder to withstand low temps due to higher humidity. It is much drier in Siberia. Subjectively, -50C in Finland and -50C in Siberia would be felt differently - killing in Finland, hard but doable in Siberia.

      • Rarely does one find a block heater on a car here. Why? I’m told it’s because some people will steal the electrical extension cord that connects the car to the power grid.

        It is more common to see people building small fires underneath their cars or trucks engines on cold days.

    3. Hui Lee says:

      We want more freeze

    4. Radu says:

      can you do 50 with the car at -50?

    5. Chuck Carr says:

      car would take some work like heating block or water/antifreeze from fairbanks, ak

    6. in Alaska, they park all the cars with the engins on in from of the house the whole day

      I saw a report once, there is sometimes -70 Celsius, once you stop the engine, you never start again outside, only in heated garages

      but, there no one will steal your car, not like in Russia

    7. GYUSZI BACSI says:

      that is terribly cold brrrr if we have -22 Celsius, everyone says it is the end

    8. Katooshka says:

      Но, где это в России?

      В Санкт-Петербурге, Москве или Сибире?

    9. crazy vodka says:

      “Although I doubt that it’s that cold in all of these pictures… -50 C tends to “peel” skin from your face and hurt your respitory tracts (even if you’re used to it), so I doubt that even Russians would be outside at -50 without something covering their faces.”

      in the army we had one camp which last about 3 days, it was steady -42 celsius basicly all the time… man that was so friggin’ cold,hrr. yeah esp. after some running around ( carrying back-bag full of supplies + stuff ). I could say that my lungs really hurt.
      I don’t about freezing your eyes, but you have to keep moving all ( no sweating, it makes things even worse ) the time or your legs and hands will freeze. I don’t recall feeling any freezing in my eyes ( although it wasn’t windy weather at all, just so friggin’ cold )

    10. Swede says:

      Ice cold.
      Swedish beer commercial with a Siberian theme :)

      Real cold, real beer.

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mk0MEjtib8k

    11. matka_lososi says:

      like katyusha said, what city is that in?

    12. yuri says:

      I remember being in red square one time and it was so cold my camera wouldn’t even work. Plus it sucked trying to get a cab in pre capitalist russia.

    13. Tommy says:

      Well, I guess I wont complain about it being cold here in Arizona! (40F for a low)
      Man, I cant imagine even functioning in weather like that.

    14. Akash says:

      Ah… I live in a country where the average temperature is 25degC, and now, during summer, it peaks to about 30-32degC.

      Heh… try this nice experiment: pour boiling water in a cup, go outside, throw it up in the air as high as you can. What happens? :-)

    15. kim says:

      @Akash : THE BOILING WATER WILL FALL ON YOUR HEAD AND YOU WILL DIE>

    16. sibirsky says:

      в Якутске когда -50 -60 ебнуло трубы отопления полопались, и ни один местный житель не пожаловался на обморожения :)

    17. Chipo says:

      “in Alaska, they park all the cars with the engins on in from of the house the whole day”

      Good to know everybody helps with global warming, so these pics will soon be history gone by.

    18. dr Hadamard says:

      Sixty=60
      Fifty=50

      Or not?

    19. Richard S. says:

      What cities are those photos?

    20. Motown says:

      Strangly enought the date in the first picture is 19. Jan 2006 - that was two years ago!

    21. Kostya says:

      Maybe the soviet system was good at telling a biased perspective but it wasn’t bad at teaching and making genius mathematicians and physicists.

    22. Cooper Green says:

      Those photos might be two years old, but here is the current forecast for Ojmjakon in Siberia, the coldest permanently inhabited place on the planet. It won’t get above -41C in the next week, and it’s -58C right now.

      Why do people live there?

      • On the weather channel website Ojmjakon was -68 deg F today, and the current condition was “Smoke”

        -68 deg F and SMOKE is the current condition! Dear God, that must make it hard to get up in the morning!

    23. Mouse says:

      About cars… it seems that most of them right-handed (from Japan), and the same cars also used in Australia at more high tempratures (I think twice higher)… On second photo you can see Toyota Chaser (or maybe Mark II, that the same series JZX90/GX90, anyway it’s backlight can be found on another photo), and Toyota Estima. On others you can see a lot of models of Russian cars from GAZ, UAZ and VAZ, and right-handed vehicles: Toyota Land Cruiser, Nissan Patrol (maybe not), Toyota Carina three versions (European name was the same, but have different view, at current time produced car for Europe&others named Avensis), and Mazda 626 Japan version. All cars was produced before 2000. Japanese cars was especially made for japaneese (native models), and never export to other countries through official ways.

      From my own expirience… I can start engine of my Toyota Chaser at -38 degrees Celcium, without any special works before. My friend do the same with US produced Mazda 626, but, he was installed larger accumulator.

      P.S. We are using yours salvage cars… so be careful with them :)

      • cal says:

        Yakutsk is a lot closer to Japan than most of the rest of Russia… I’m guessing they get a lot of used Japanese cars that might otherwise not have re-sold in Japan.

    24. z says:

      everyone’s wearing a mink coat but i can’t see a single peta activist with cans of red paint
      maybe they are not that devoted and it’s only comfortable for them to insult rich ppl on high streets, lol

      • cal says:

        Genuine fur is the only thing that will keep your butt alive at those temps. Also, these people are wearing the fur out of necessity, not just because they’re rich and they think it’s fashionable.

      • cal says:

        These people are wearing the fur coats because they’re a necessity at these temps, nothing else will keep you warmer. People who just wear them strictly for fashion are the ones peta goes after, and rightly so.

    25. Jesus, -50C temp is brutal. I’ve had a couple low temps of -26C or so over the past week. About 10 years ago we had about -50C windchill but the temp was only about -40C. I wonder why it gets so foggy at that cold of a temp. Is that common?

    26. b2 says:

      I can’t even imagine being a WW2 German landser, wearing only a summer uniform under a wool greatcoat in -30 C. Brrrrrr!

    27. Cabron says:

      Wow… I’m in the south american summer right now, I’ll just go to the beach and jump in the sea to compensate these photos.

    28. etarkoo says:

      Sure looks cold, I really wondered whether people could survive in these extreme temperatures..but I was in Bucharest over Christmas with -15 and it actually wasn’t bad.

      So wearing the right clothes would definitely help.

    29. Wow. In Denver -20F is about the coldest I can remember. Those Russians are a sturdy lot.

    30. Eugene says:

      Hey,
      it’s picture of my city named Yakutsk.
      I was born there:))
      cool!

    31. Amely says:

      My god, it’s realy intimidating cold.. But nice pictures, good job. As you can see, visibility is not fair for traffic and warm living, and it is safe to say about this town - exotica with -50C :)
      P.s. Eugene- if you was born there, why are your feet still frozen every time? You should be used to such weather ;P

    32. Nikita, лох ты тупой, патлач, ты с кем снюхался тварь!!! All Americans SUCK MY DICK!!! Джорж!!!! Сраный ковбой!!! Вали на свое ранчо!!!!

    33. Я мигрировал в США здесь классно сосу хуй каждый день и меня ебут в жопу

    34. Earl says:

      Ha Ha Ruskies….too bad so cold, so nice I live in America it is warm here.

    35. Rage Optics says:

      Does any one else like these antispam words?

    36. Bas says:

      The world would be such a better place without the russians in it.

      Threaten Norway to invade it.
      Threaten almost all ex USSR colonies with war and a cut in the gas trade.
      I wish the 3rd WW happened and those Americans wiped you off the world surface in a very nuclear way. At least they go and change regimes with war, not just invade countries and claim it as their own.

      • fuck your gay country norway, where immigrants from albania and another trashy countries are fucking your girlfriends, while you fuck each other in sauna

        go check your sister, albanian fucks her now!

    37. Jason says:

      I am glad I went to Russia in the summer.I was sweting during the day time.I wondered why there are 2 windows and 2 balcony doors to open in the pretty womans apartment I stayed in.Now I know why.

    38. Eugene says:

      well, its really Yakutsk, look on map, its really far from Moscow.

      And yes, its really -50 in winter. Not so bad becase there is little wind. But in summer there is +35c - +40c degrees. Wonderful country,I really miss Yakutia.

    39. niyaz86 says:

      This is Russia California! =)

    Leave a Reply