Life goes on even at that coldest place...
Oymyakon Is One of the Coldest Places on Earth, But People Live There
Reuben Westmaas
February 26, 2018
Oymyakon is located deep in the heart of Siberia, and it's not a place you visit on a whim. Ttheir average winter temperature is less than 50 degrees below zero Fahrenheit (46 degrees below zero Celsius), but there's a difference between seeing the numbers and learning the effects. So here are some quick facts:
Your eyelashes freeze over. Your saliva turns into icicles in your mouth. You have to run your car 24 hours a day or the battery will die. It's pretty much impossible to dig into the ground at all, so you don't have plumbing either. If you ever do have to dig a hole in the ground, say, to perform a funeral, you have to first light a giant bonfire to soften the first few inches of soil, dig it away, then light another one, and so on. It's not for the faint of heart.
And Oymyakonians are anything but faint of heart. That's right, people actually live here all year-round. The city has a population of about 500, and they've adapted to their surroundings in some pretty unusual ways. For one thing, there's the diet. There's no such thing as fresh veggies in Oymyakon because you sure can't grow anything. Almost every meal consists only of meat, and a lot of times, that meat is uncooked and frozen. Frozen cubes of horse or reindeer blood are considered a delicacy, as is stroganina, a type of frozen fish cut into long, thin slices. But that's just for a special treat — everyday dinners consist of meat stew, emphasis on the meat.
As if the temperature wasn't enough, the seasonal sunlight is also extreme. The city gets only about three hours of sunlight per day during the winter, and 21 in the summer. Honestly, we're not sure which one is worse. Its residents are doing okay, but you'd be forgiven for thinking that it sounds like a pretty miserable place to live — you certainly wouldn't be the first to think so. Although Oymyakon was originally a waystation for traveling reindeer herders, the region grew in notoriety in the mid-20th century when it became known as "Stalin's Death Ring."
Oymyakon Is One of the Coldest Places on Earth, But People Live There
Reuben Westmaas
February 26, 2018
Oymyakon is located deep in the heart of Siberia, and it's not a place you visit on a whim. Ttheir average winter temperature is less than 50 degrees below zero Fahrenheit (46 degrees below zero Celsius), but there's a difference between seeing the numbers and learning the effects. So here are some quick facts:
Your eyelashes freeze over. Your saliva turns into icicles in your mouth. You have to run your car 24 hours a day or the battery will die. It's pretty much impossible to dig into the ground at all, so you don't have plumbing either. If you ever do have to dig a hole in the ground, say, to perform a funeral, you have to first light a giant bonfire to soften the first few inches of soil, dig it away, then light another one, and so on. It's not for the faint of heart.
And Oymyakonians are anything but faint of heart. That's right, people actually live here all year-round. The city has a population of about 500, and they've adapted to their surroundings in some pretty unusual ways. For one thing, there's the diet. There's no such thing as fresh veggies in Oymyakon because you sure can't grow anything. Almost every meal consists only of meat, and a lot of times, that meat is uncooked and frozen. Frozen cubes of horse or reindeer blood are considered a delicacy, as is stroganina, a type of frozen fish cut into long, thin slices. But that's just for a special treat — everyday dinners consist of meat stew, emphasis on the meat.
As if the temperature wasn't enough, the seasonal sunlight is also extreme. The city gets only about three hours of sunlight per day during the winter, and 21 in the summer. Honestly, we're not sure which one is worse. Its residents are doing okay, but you'd be forgiven for thinking that it sounds like a pretty miserable place to live — you certainly wouldn't be the first to think so. Although Oymyakon was originally a waystation for traveling reindeer herders, the region grew in notoriety in the mid-20th century when it became known as "Stalin's Death Ring."
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