Journey to Vorkuta - The Most Depressing Town in Russia

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  • Опубликовано: 7 фев 2025
  • In 2020, I visited the town of Vorkuta and some of the nearby urban localities for the first time. I was able to witness absolutely surreal views of the Russian Arctic in form of neglected settlements with dozens of abandoned buildings in the middle of tundra. I decided to create a video in form of a short documentary about this incredible area. Enjoy!
    Railway Journey from Vorkuta to Labytnangi across the Arctic Urals: • Полярный экспресс: на ...
    Riding freight trains to Vorkuta: • Video
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Комментарии • 414

  • @MrClassymassy
    @MrClassymassy 3 года назад +446

    “He and us are not so different... We are all soldiers, without an army. Betrayed. Forgotten. Abandoned. In Vorkuta, we are ALL brothers!” -Viktor Reznov

    • @badgerden7080
      @badgerden7080 3 года назад +7

      To be honest, Alex Mason trusted Reznov a hell of a lot more than he ever did Jason Hudson. I always thought Hudson was a snake.

    • @Usuariosyrian
      @Usuariosyrian 3 года назад +1

      En Vorkuta de hecho se contruyó un gulag

    • @danicadegooijer2219
      @danicadegooijer2219 3 года назад +4

      I agree I am Serbian from Belgrade hoe live in Holland for 35 years and my son wit Dutch huisband all 32 years marid...as sin finish master internationaal en Russian langvige...we had als I war years 90i we are same part firgatton to

    • @danicadegooijer2219
      @danicadegooijer2219 3 года назад

      Forgatton....

    • @certified1075
      @certified1075 2 года назад

      Yeah lol

  • @brett8680
    @brett8680 3 года назад +85

    Your dedication is admirable. Thank you for sharing this with us.

    • @buxtehude123
      @buxtehude123 Год назад

      WHAT dedication. To present a censored view of the town to get more views from gloating Americans?

  • @Madetha2301
    @Madetha2301 3 года назад +109

    I really enjoyed this video! The landscape with the flowers and empty blocks in the Arctic summer is actually pretty. And I appreciate the information 👍👍

  • @rajjie100
    @rajjie100 3 года назад +11

    I watched the winter video last night and wondered what it looked like without the snow, thank you!

  • @Fico214
    @Fico214 3 года назад +115

    I loved them wild purple flowers !! They're everywhere! With the abandoned buildings and landscape and these arctic flowers blend together.. is just beautiful aesthetic.
    It's like a world of post-apocalyptic video game.

    • @Itapirkanmaa2
      @Itapirkanmaa2 3 года назад +11

      In Finnish "Horsma" also known as "Rentun ruusu" or "The Vagabond's Rose" (Fireweed in English).

    • @valkrsk
      @valkrsk 3 года назад +5

      @@Itapirkanmaa2 in Russian it is Иван чай, or Ivan's tea.

    • @wtcnl
      @wtcnl 3 года назад +1

      Dutch: "Wilgenroosje" (Willow rose), latin: Chamaenerion angustifolium

    • @MyKharli
      @MyKharli 3 года назад

      @@Itapirkanmaa2 Rosebay willow herb is called fireweed because of its ability to quickly inhabit areas of previous fire..(.Scotland ).

    • @indiferent0
      @indiferent0 2 года назад

      It's not that aesthetic if u live there u prob weren't even to Russia

  • @bold810
    @bold810 3 года назад +12

    My heart grieves for your beautiful country.
    Such promise, but so much pain.

  • @kierontemnov2452
    @kierontemnov2452 Год назад +2

    The vibe of this place is so bittersweet in a mesmerising way. A source of pure inspiration. 🖤🖤🖤🖤

  • @b3sTus3r
    @b3sTus3r 3 года назад +82

    Wow, thank you for this video.
    My great grandfather, born in the US in 1903 immigrated to Lithuania somewhere in 1930s and started a business. In 1945 the Soviets saw in his birth certificate the he was an American citizen and on top of that a business owner and a large property owner. Since you cannot have individual success under communism, they sent him to Vorkuta to work in a coal mine. He came back in 1955 ill and weak, after about two years died of lung cancer.

    • @namenl2205
      @namenl2205 3 года назад

      So he had a colonizer family in te US who didn’t give two shits about black people 🤡 karma will serve every white person and their family for STILL in 2022 suppressing us. Cry me a river

    • @dickmcgee9627
      @dickmcgee9627 2 года назад

      Wonder what your peepaw did in nazi occupied Lithuania to end up in a soviet prison 🤔 oh wel, must be because of his succes, nothing fishy there!

    • @gintaraslinkus138
      @gintaraslinkus138 2 года назад +5

      My friend mechanic by profession is born in that town Vorkuta.Little story about how he popped to local police commissariat for driving issue at the times already of independent Lithuania:
      He was strictly beaten by independent Lithuania policemen only for that-that he said he's born in Vorkuta...
      Strange but sad truth

    • @jozseftoth9368
      @jozseftoth9368 2 года назад

      You talk like mining coal was a death sentence. Like they infected your grandpa with cancer intentionally

    • @impaugjuldivmax
      @impaugjuldivmax Год назад +4

      there was a revolt of lithuanian prisoners in Vorkuta in 1953 and all of them have been killed at once, maybe police had some feeelings about that.

  • @jdhinckley1954
    @jdhinckley1954 3 года назад +48

    Yes, it depressing, and a sad commentary, but it also helps us to not forget our history. Thank you for your effort!

    • @Th3Snipe
      @Th3Snipe Год назад

      Yet Russia seems to have forgotten many parts of history... Invading Ukraine and emberassing themselves how weak their army actually is.
      I always thought Russia had a great army untill now, all their power relies on the weak excuse of nuclear bombs... Without nukes Russia would be nothing.
      Sad, they could've been a great country our modern times, now totally isolated and repeating the wrongs they made in history but now.

    • @newyoutubenamesareretarded
      @newyoutubenamesareretarded Месяц назад

      @@Th3Snipe weakling, a little war makes russia bad? lol u should tell that to palestine and israel too then, or better yet USA
      russia can be whoever it is to you but if u think anything like israel or usa is better ur as braindeed as ur comment kid :D

  • @Th3W0rst0n3
    @Th3W0rst0n3 Год назад +1

    These kind of videos of such places makes me feel emotions that I can't describe. It's eternally beautiful and lonely, melancholic at the same time. Thanks for these great videos!

  • @anemonenemorosa9299
    @anemonenemorosa9299 3 года назад +68

    Must have been surreal walking around these empty places. I wouldn’t mind going there myself.

    • @jozseftoth9368
      @jozseftoth9368 2 года назад +5

      For an outstander, yes. For someone who saw the place in its prime, a tragedy

    • @ВалентинаАсовина
      @ВалентинаАсовина Год назад

      @@jozseftoth9368 не надо говорить о расцвете ,люди оставались зарабатывали деньги,и так проходила жизнь,но деньги не все,лишили природы ,нормально климатического условий,себя и своих детей,или я сейчас живу в окружении красивого пейзажа на берегу моря или в замерзшей тундре полгода,да ещё и с угрозой для себя и детей ,когда бывает чёрная пурга,и нехваткой кислорода.

  • @adolfobama3601
    @adolfobama3601 3 года назад +38

    There is just something strange and beautiful seeing some of these massive concrete building in a field of bright flowers.

  • @mariohnyc
    @mariohnyc 3 года назад +29

    Thanks for the well put together video. It's amazing how huge of an impact coal production was in the not so distant past, and how entire towns and cities that were built around coal went from prosperous to desolate in a relatively short period of time. Same has happened here in the US, and i'm sure other places throughout the world.

    • @petecollins4925
      @petecollins4925 3 года назад +2

      Absolutely. Here in the UK it's the same. Also I toured New Zealand back in 2018 and ended up staying in an old mining village pub which had been converted to backpacker accommodation. Sad to see these once prosperous and thriving places fall by the wayside.

  • @13donstalos
    @13donstalos Год назад +2

    I've learned so much about Russian geography from this channel. You rock brother, keep up the good work.

  • @dieseltinus6680
    @dieseltinus6680 3 года назад +7

    Thank you for showing us this. Must have taken some persistance. Greetings from the Netherlands.

  • @albertoredolfi3981
    @albertoredolfi3981 2 года назад +1

    this places are surreal and have some sort of magnetism u can't find anywere else. Great video, thanks

  • @lesuspect450
    @lesuspect450 3 года назад +19

    keep adding bro your going to the millions soon or far with your content!

    • @Joe-jg6zz
      @Joe-jg6zz 3 года назад +1

      He should change the channel name from starting with “en.” It’s impossible to find in the search box. “Vagrant train hopper” or something would be good so people could randomly come across it.

    • @lesuspect450
      @lesuspect450 3 года назад

      @@Joe-jg6zz true!

    • @nickfasfasd
      @nickfasfasd 3 года назад +1

      The commentary would be better on camera, the voiceover over lacks the energy of the place.

  • @hiker64
    @hiker64 Год назад +1

    The fireweed and other flowers make such an interesting contrast with the desolate, decaying buildings all around them.

  • @el6178
    @el6178 3 года назад +20

    Thank you for sharing this. Its in a weird way, very beautiful. I would love to visit. I would have felt very uncomfortable sleeping in the empty buildings though.

    • @milenastr4385
      @milenastr4385 3 года назад +3

      You are not along, I find it weirdly mesmerizing and peaceful too.

  • @michaelepstein423
    @michaelepstein423 3 года назад +3

    I really like and appreciate your videos. Your photography work is my favorite part, but the entire effort that you put in to be able to produce these videos is beyond impressive. Your works will endure as beautiful and unique chronicles of places that time forgot and few people will ever see.

  • @chiimumango3979
    @chiimumango3979 3 года назад +31

    Imagine Being an Sub-zero City in the middle of Nowhere in Russia just to be Remembered by Gen Z as a Level in a Video Game

    • @MalleeMate
      @MalleeMate 5 месяцев назад

      I gotta ask, what video game?

    • @joe61292
      @joe61292 4 месяца назад

      ​@@MalleeMate Call of Duty: Black Ops

  • @kpb96m
    @kpb96m 3 года назад +12

    You are doing a great job on these videos. Thank you for speaking English so we can follow your adventures!! Maybe do Volgograd one day too.

  • @markhussey9406
    @markhussey9406 3 года назад +14

    Excellent stuff, mind blowing to think of what it was like in its prime.

  • @annewandnageln1598
    @annewandnageln1598 2 года назад +1

    Absolutely love this video!!! Thank you for filming it!

    • @Hephasto
      @Hephasto 2 года назад

      Wanna have a trip there?

  • @Crystalspanda
    @Crystalspanda 3 года назад +1

    Oh, I just Love the Fireweed, I have a patch across my driveway. Blooming colors are Awesome,
    O This is so
    Interesting ☃️

  • @breadandcircus1
    @breadandcircus1 Год назад +1

    I liked that town, the flowers are so beautiful. Nature is taking over

  • @macmackay8579
    @macmackay8579 3 года назад +1

    Very informative and graphical - thank you. Your command of the English language is very good.

  • @watson4683
    @watson4683 3 года назад +2

    Even in summer, it looks so different to west europe. The plants, your culture.Its so interesting. I live close to the northsea. You summer, is my winter , lool

  • @TMAN-iq2kz
    @TMAN-iq2kz 2 года назад +1

    Thank you for sharing a small part of History with us. I really wish the world was more peaceful and people from the world could see and visit the beautiful Vast Lands in your country.

    • @baabun-ssd
      @baabun-ssd 2 года назад

      Peaceful russia is a oxymoron

  • @neptunevibe
    @neptunevibe 3 года назад +1

    This is so blick... Love it!

  • @marcinkaczor8311
    @marcinkaczor8311 3 года назад +2

    I love your productions. Keep up the good work!

  • @p_noc
    @p_noc 3 года назад +1

    Very cool way to experience such a remote place. I enjoyed hearing the history of these towns too!

  • @randyneil6161
    @randyneil6161 3 года назад +44

    I would love to live in that place. I never had any friends when I was a child and I managed to be happy by myself.

    • @mihailmorozov3456
      @mihailmorozov3456 3 года назад +6

      There,s no work now... capitalism so ineffective, that cause situation shown in this vid

    • @lotsofthisandthat9791
      @lotsofthisandthat9791 3 года назад +5

      I would also! Nobody to bug me. Where get info on real estate in this Vorkuta?

    • @here_we_go_again2571
      @here_we_go_again2571 3 года назад +6

      @ Randy Neil,
      Those apartment complexes are heated by huge central-heating steam plants. You would
      have to live in one of those apartment blocks with neighbors to have heat, electricity and
      water. Unless, you were able to find a way to heat your home; you would not be able to
      survive the Russian winter in Vorkuta, that lasts nine months of the year.

    • @MeMyself_andAI
      @MeMyself_andAI 3 года назад +13

      @@mihailmorozov3456 youre blaming the failed unprofitable city on capitalism? Lmfao

    • @milenastr4385
      @milenastr4385 3 года назад +5

      Introverts entered the thread!🙌
      I would do too. I am currently in NY, and leaving my apartment seemed like a big feat to me these days. I need need my privacy, which is impossible in NYC.

  • @carloxr9
    @carloxr9 Год назад +1

    thank you for the trip

  • @therealthawjug
    @therealthawjug 2 года назад +4

    who search for this because you randomly remembers reznov ?

  • @Satanszoon
    @Satanszoon Год назад

    Impressive video . Well done.

  • @scoots8519
    @scoots8519 Год назад +3

    Like Detroit, only the buildings are bigger.

  • @SuchContent
    @SuchContent 3 года назад

    Thank you for sharing this video!

  • @RedcoatsReturn
    @RedcoatsReturn 2 года назад +4

    Incredible, huge ghost towns 😲 Traces of thousands of lives and families left inside…where did all the people go…its so sad 😔

  • @alfardachon
    @alfardachon 3 года назад +2

    La primera vez que oí de Vorkuta fue en Call of Duty Black Ops, y a partir de entonces quedé "fascinado" por esa ciudad y su entorno. Muy buen video, y gracias por tu trabajo.

  • @daveconyard8946
    @daveconyard8946 3 года назад

    Thank you For this post Keep Safe and well, 👍

  • @TheRedDevil_NC
    @TheRedDevil_NC 2 года назад

    So glad to be able to see this

  • @kuukeli
    @kuukeli 6 месяцев назад

    just love these videos

  • @Sciambolanja
    @Sciambolanja 3 года назад +35

    It would have been nice to stumble upon Bald & Bankrupt: "look at these Soviet buildings!"

  • @Cnupoc
    @Cnupoc Год назад +2

    my parents lived there in the 60s and 70s

  • @GouganeBarra-u4t
    @GouganeBarra-u4t 4 месяца назад +1

    It's nice to see that nature is flourishing in Vorkuta, when you have nothing but dead trees surrounding Norilsk as a result of the pollution. I wouldn't like staying a whole December in Vorkuta, however.... dark and very cold, and quite depressing..

  • @TajammalBarcelona
    @TajammalBarcelona 2 года назад

    Excellent Video.

  • @farkasgabor4084
    @farkasgabor4084 Год назад +1

    I absolutely love your contents, it is very unique. It would be nice if you could make an insight video about yourself. A bit about your life, what inspired you to start this channel. Difficulties of making these videos, how is to spend nights in the middle of nowhere many times in a tent, and so on…. I would be definitely interested and I am sure I am not the only one. Of course if it’s too personal for you to share I would understand it.
    Thank you for your contents.🎉

  • @fruzzle2012
    @fruzzle2012 3 года назад +8

    generally you have good content, hope you enough income from here for a good 60fps camera. Stay safe, dont go where its dangerous due to enviromental hazards. Hope to see more facets of russia off the beaten path. Kamchatka pls :)

  • @stanojevicnatasa2514
    @stanojevicnatasa2514 3 года назад +1

    This place looks like urban explorer dream come true...

  • @flhxri
    @flhxri 2 года назад

    You have a great channel

  • @catsup27
    @catsup27 3 года назад

    Nice video, thanks for the content 👍

  • @Serendip98
    @Serendip98 3 года назад +5

    5:30 These flowers are called "geitrams" in Norwegian (Chamaenerion angustifolium). They are very common in Norway.

  • @marinr.8062
    @marinr.8062 3 года назад +1

    Your videos are perfection. Hopefully you will bring us yet more exploration videos of Russian cities and landscapes.

  • @OlgasBritishFells
    @OlgasBritishFells 3 года назад +6

    Классный канал! Только обнаружила. Супер интересно! Подписалась. Смотрю взахлёб. Спасибо.

  • @rovhalt6650
    @rovhalt6650 Год назад +2

    The most depressing thing about Russia is all the boring cheap buildings.
    Bring back some beauty to the country.

  • @jnc07res
    @jnc07res 3 года назад +1

    Mul'da - its interesting to learn new words. That is an excellent diagram and description at 1:20. In English we would refer to that formation as a syncline, and in this particular case a 'normal' fault occurred following its formation. Sorry, as a geologist I couldn't help myself :)

  • @brstlmr
    @brstlmr 2 года назад +5

    Был в Воркуте и Воргашоре в 2018 году. Впечатления самые мрачные и угнетающие) НО когда возвращаешься из Воргашора в Воркуту, то кажется будто вернулся в цивилизацию) (одно из моих самых богатых на впечатления путешествий)

  • @christihiatt3459
    @christihiatt3459 2 года назад

    Good eye, camera, and channel. Too bad it's not August all the time, but then I guess it would drive one crazy with all the leaves light...

  • @alicamlidere92
    @alicamlidere92 2 года назад +1

    Vorkuta, Reznov told me at the Vorkuta.

  • @timandersen8916
    @timandersen8916 Год назад

    super interesting , thanks for sharing ,greetings from Denmark

  • @Klausisyoutube
    @Klausisyoutube Год назад

    Guter Kanal!👍🏼

  • @steveng8727
    @steveng8727 2 года назад

    Amazing video, buildings remind me of Detroit, MI

  • @jasminakevelj3641
    @jasminakevelj3641 3 года назад +1

    great video

  • @SuperHyee
    @SuperHyee 3 года назад

    Thanks !

  • @deu8894
    @deu8894 3 года назад +2

    This feels to me like an episode of "abandoned engineering". Nice

  • @BeachsideHank
    @BeachsideHank 3 года назад +16

    Start mining again, sell the product as genuine "Gulag boutique coal", westerners love anything labeled as out of the ordinary and hard to get, they will pay a premium price for such a product if it is promoted as "exclusive". This is a serious proposition.

    • @here_we_go_again2571
      @here_we_go_again2571 3 года назад

      Ha! :D

    • @JP-re3bc
      @JP-re3bc 3 года назад

      Don't stop there. Why not "Vorkuta vacations"? Travel and accomodation first-class of course, and you can chose to roleplay a guard or a convict. Taste gulag meals, gulag vodka and try your hand at coal digging.

    • @phillbarnes8513
      @phillbarnes8513 2 года назад

      Yes! ‘Artisan’ coal briquettes, in a tiny wicker picnic style basket 😂

    • @MrDMIDOV
      @MrDMIDOV 2 года назад

      Market it as Green Arctic Coal with some baloney like how it’s around 23% better for the environment than regular coal

  • @ardeneques
    @ardeneques 3 года назад +1

    Great videos thanks from Australia :)

  • @Oscar145able
    @Oscar145able 3 года назад +4

    Step 1: Secure the keys
    Step 2: Ascend from darkness
    Step 3: Rain Fire
    Step 4: Unleash the horde
    Step 5: Skewer the winged beast
    Step 6: Wield a fist of iron
    Step 7: Raise hell
    Step 8: Freedom

  • @dmedlin8118
    @dmedlin8118 3 года назад

    I went to Labytnangi by train 3 times, and we went through Vorkuta on that line.

  • @АлександрМакарович-э7щ
    @АлександрМакарович-э7щ 10 месяцев назад

    Первый раз Мульду упамянули , спасибо.
    1979-1999гг.Воркуа.
    Ш.Аяч-Яга, Заполярная
    Проходчик.

    • @SanSanichSan
      @SanSanichSan 9 месяцев назад

      непомню про какую шахрусказанна глубочайшая но прмойму самое глубокое звлегание вХалмер-Ю

  • @KatonaEditPetra
    @KatonaEditPetra 9 месяцев назад

    Very interesting Place!

  • @74G56
    @74G56 Год назад

    would be nice to see more interviews with local residents. Who operate the schools and hospitals for example.

  • @kevinasp8693
    @kevinasp8693 2 года назад +1

    Such a good project! I’ve been always interested in places like these around the word. Remote areas and “uninhabitable” towns.
    Russia is one of them because of the landmass.
    Would be cool if there’s a documentary on residents lifestyle?
    Teenagers up to young adults lifestyle etc

  • @xenos975
    @xenos975 Год назад

    Vorkuta is so very modern looking. It has potential if can hold on

  • @JK_82
    @JK_82 Год назад +2

    dayz city!!

  • @teachgravity
    @teachgravity Год назад

    great videoi

  • @jcee2259
    @jcee2259 2 года назад +2

    The most depressing town in my life was Detroit,
    Property vales were so low the city gave them
    to anyone who joined public sector services.
    I purchased a former brewery for a vacation
    house. For summer visits. Traded it for land
    beside the Arkansas River. Because the Detroit
    River water was too cold for swimming.

    • @adamkwalczyk
      @adamkwalczyk 2 года назад

      Still winter in Detroit is nowhere near as severe as in Vorkuta.

    • @itsnotme3882
      @itsnotme3882 Год назад

      @@adamkwalczykI bet. It’s probably very white in winter, Detroit is notoriously not

  • @anterometso276
    @anterometso276 3 года назад +2

    There are a lot of people at refugee camps around the world. Sometimes I wonder, if these abandoned towns could be used as temporary shelters? There are places where the buildings could still be restored and the infrastructure sustaining the normal life could be rebuilt. If no-one is living there now, it should be a win-win situation.

    • @xequalsy491
      @xequalsy491 2 года назад +1

      That is not a win-win situation. Lmao.

  • @margarita8442
    @margarita8442 3 года назад +2

    Is nice town I live here for 30 years

  • @stankormy5717
    @stankormy5717 3 года назад +4

    Straight Outta Vorkuta

  • @joeporter5971
    @joeporter5971 3 года назад +3

    You deserve so many more subscribers! Great videos.

  • @jcee2259
    @jcee2259 2 года назад

    Not depressing for me. Having seen the mess from the ground floor upward
    I'd go downstairs to see the building engineering plant, tool storage, etc.
    Work-related spaces discourage visiting rogues seeking to despoil families.

  • @Siranoxz
    @Siranoxz Год назад +1

    What are these purple native flowers there?.
    They make the the place a little less desolate and more colorful.

  • @Geographylimitlesschannel
    @Geographylimitlesschannel 3 дня назад

    Russia has never ceased to inspire us, creating content about Russia will have no limits, I am a person who loves Russia very much.

  • @lewismyers2325
    @lewismyers2325 2 года назад

    Every journey begins with a single step this is step one

  • @tulukdek8898
    @tulukdek8898 3 года назад +2

    These place is not as depressing as I though, in fact, I’d travel to Vorkuta rather than a famous destination

  • @Shagyamum
    @Shagyamum 10 месяцев назад +2

    Still not as bad as Norilsk

  • @adalbertobuzzin124
    @adalbertobuzzin124 Год назад

    I was 16 time in sibir always in winter by car, until magadan ...

  • @herceg6772
    @herceg6772 2 года назад +1

    Romantic

  • @scarletttroquille3304
    @scarletttroquille3304 3 года назад

    Coal Demand is going up in the World , Thank God you have it.

  • @johnbrown-rm8kc
    @johnbrown-rm8kc 3 года назад +2

    very interesting Video sad to see all the empty building falling down 😍 greetings from Australia

    • @johnbrown-rm8kc
      @johnbrown-rm8kc 3 года назад +1

      @Thought Criminal what have you been smoking ??

  • @GrnArrow092
    @GrnArrow092 2 года назад

    I just found this channel last night and I find it very interesting. Not a lot of people get to see this part of Russia and it makes me wonder to myself how people can survive living this far north. These towns are in very remote regions of the country and they're very far away from major cities. It must have been very difficult to get food and supplies to this region where the only reliable transportation to this region is by rail. Personally, I really don't think I'd want to live in a place where it's very cold year round. I'm more used to places where the temperatures stay above freezing.

  • @namenl2205
    @namenl2205 3 года назад +3

    The more I see videos of Russia, the more I wonder if the locals were not happier when Sovjet was still ruling the country, since all these cities were maintained and it was not a ghost town like now. Imagine growing up as a kid here… thats no life..

    • @robertkautma2398
      @robertkautma2398 3 года назад +3

      They had no choice. Many were assigned to Vorkuta or other desolate towns after they finished vocational school. They still wanted to live in some big city instead, but had no choice about that. Often these mining towns were abandoned when the mine was depleted of minerals, they were mono functional. There are still villages in western Siberia where people live but it's a tradition for them.

  • @here_we_go_again2571
    @here_we_go_again2571 3 года назад +2

    Thank you for sharing. :) ...... The natural scenery in the summer is gorgeous! :)
    I am curious about how the buildings were built on top of the permafrost and if any of them have
    subsided with the climate change in the Arctic (From the looks of your Vorkuta winter video; one
    would be hard-pressed to believe that global warming is a reality!)
    I noticed that one of the buildings has been transitioned into a church. Is it Russian Orthodox church?
    Please take care of yourself and may God protect you in your travels.

  • @eprohoda
    @eprohoda 3 года назад +2

    You did awesome :)

  • @markvogel5872
    @markvogel5872 2 года назад

    1:36 I'd be coming home with some of those train signs. But I'd offer to buy them.

  • @ismaelattrache4117
    @ismaelattrache4117 3 года назад

    Amazing

  • @weapon131
    @weapon131 Год назад

    Depressing, or a light at the end, for the many that have no other place to exist in this wild world, all perspective.

  • @OsmosisHD
    @OsmosisHD 3 года назад +1

    You have potential! Great shots and narrating the video. You should start a crowdfunding or something for a better camera and a better microphone