Villagers React To Visiting the COLDEST CITY in the World (-71°C, -96°F) YAKUTSK / YAKUTIA ! Tribal

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  • Опубликовано: 10 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 1 тыс.

  • @esinohio
    @esinohio 3 года назад +614

    The older man is just the sweetest person ever. In each video, he seems to always be worried about the safety of others. Good man.

    • @atharvm708
      @atharvm708 3 года назад +16

      thats just how indians are( especially the ones from the older generations)

    • @kamaloca
      @kamaloca 2 года назад +8

      Yeeah!! I have watched some videos and I absolute adore Babu!!!

    • @michellesouders2627
      @michellesouders2627 2 года назад +6

      He is a nice caring!!

  • @NameNik223
    @NameNik223 3 года назад +990

    My dad was born in Yakutsk. He told me once that his teachers said one day: "If the temperature falls to -47°C tomorrow, you won't go to school". It fell to -46°C and everyone had to go to school :D

    • @idontevenknow5021
      @idontevenknow5021 3 года назад +44

      Happened to me all the time when i was at school. But most of january in my school was usually quarantine season anyway so thank god

    • @adam346
      @adam346 3 года назад +12

      there is no floor to the temps they would send us to school it was all about ice or their inability to clear it in time for the school trip... if you could walk, odds are you went to school.

    • @LyricsProduction1
      @LyricsProduction1 3 года назад +32

      It`s the same in northern part of Norway. If the temperature reach close to -50°C the students can stay at home. Coldest temperature I have experienced so far is -30°C, that was freaking cold! We had a rule when I went to school, that we could spend recess inside if the temperature were -20 °C.

    • @marc789
      @marc789 3 года назад +8

      coldest we got here in canada quebec was -47C. we still needed to go to school

    • @Fedorevsky
      @Fedorevsky 3 года назад +9

      @@LyricsProduction1 -50 in Norway? I don't think that's happened since the 1880's. -40 or a bit lower is more likely in Karasjok and on Svalbard.

  • @theniftycat
    @theniftycat 3 года назад +1145

    I'm from Yakutsk and it was amazing to see my place through somebody else's eyes. It's amazing how quick we, people, can relate to each other on spiritual level through the Internet. We'd never meet in real life, but we all live similarly. And the song at the end showed it perfectly.

    • @elena-lc4uk
      @elena-lc4uk 3 года назад +29

      I'm fascinated by that part of world I'm American I enjoyed the extreme cold of Alaska Extreme cold hits on a whole different level

    • @jaromor8808
      @jaromor8808 3 года назад +15

      cheers from CZ 👌🏻
      you people are crazy BTW 😆😆😆

    • @_Lumiere_
      @_Lumiere_ 3 года назад +51

      Lmao you're from Yakutsk and your last name literally means "of Mammoths," that's amazing.

    • @theniftycat
      @theniftycat 3 года назад +22

      @@_Lumiere_ lmao, yes, talk about appropriate!

    • @jaromor8808
      @jaromor8808 3 года назад +1

      @@theniftycat wouldn't "of mammoths" be without the "n"?

  • @ciccipuccy
    @ciccipuccy 3 года назад +866

    Sarru: how can people live there?
    Raeen: he was wearing gloves
    K, then 😂👌

    • @thebandplayedon..6145
      @thebandplayedon..6145 3 года назад +7

      lol

    • @Neonblue84
      @Neonblue84 3 года назад +11

      good answer^^

    • @jasmijnariel
      @jasmijnariel 3 года назад +5

      Oh i like your profile picture , queen🥰

    • @ciccipuccy
      @ciccipuccy 3 года назад +6

      @@jasmijnariel aw, thank you 💖

    • @jasmijnariel
      @jasmijnariel 3 года назад +3

      We have a lot of common interests. Like handpan music, or liking aurora or jonna jinton for example🥰 id like to know you better

  • @IzakYKT
    @IzakYKT 3 года назад +426

    Hi there. I live there, yep. Also i saw my home in this video lol.
    Its cold here, but we somehow ok with it. In summer we usually have +35 +40, so we have our dose of warm :D

    • @game-f-un-limitedgamer8958
      @game-f-un-limitedgamer8958 3 года назад +82

      That is cool man. Literally haha.
      From -70 C to +40 C !!! That's a jump of 110 C.
      You guys are the toughest.

    • @TzOn79
      @TzOn79 3 года назад +3

      Why did they say 19 degrees in the video then?

    • @MsLhuntMartinez79
      @MsLhuntMartinez79 3 года назад +8

      That's amazing! We wear layer of clothes here in Texas or you'll see us in a sweater and flip flops. Our temps can swing 25 to 30 degrees in a day. But you guys get TripleOG status!💪 lol

    • @SHAURYA181
      @SHAURYA181 3 года назад +21

      @@TzOn79 its average temperature .

    • @dicknr1
      @dicknr1 3 года назад +7

      @@game-f-un-limitedgamer8958 Its not 40c he is talking about thats around the center of the planet. He probably meant it in fahrenheit not celcius. Although only a handful countries in the world use that messurement. 98% of all countries uses celcius. 40+ clearly cant be celcius. So it must be fahrenheit

  • @Marty4650
    @Marty4650 3 года назад +429

    There is some good things that happen when the weather is so cold. Yakutsk is among the SAFEST cities in the world, and crime is extremely rare. It might be too cold to steal!

    • @Neceros
      @Neceros 3 года назад +92

      If you have nothing you die there. There are no homeless for obvious reasons.

    • @theh2oshark32
      @theh2oshark32 3 года назад +18

      Explains how people confidently keep their cars running there, here in America I wouldn't dream of doing that lol.

    • @AmogusAbobusAutobus
      @AmogusAbobusAutobus 3 года назад +41

      Sry mate, it isn't safest... not even close... ( yeah, there is less crimes in winter season. But... still many drunks, crazy ones and some "bandits" (mambets, gopniks). Oh, and the arising nationalism, small, but still growing.

    • @AmogusAbobusAutobus
      @AmogusAbobusAutobus 3 года назад +21

      @@Neceros there are many. Just chilling in technical rooms in apartments, in heated bus stops and some living in social dormitories (only for winter season, bcs they have to work there XD)

    • @toolbaggers
      @toolbaggers 3 года назад +12

      The cure for homelessness is deadly cold.

  • @МихаилСкрыбыкин-л4м
    @МихаилСкрыбыкин-л4м 3 года назад +343

    Нормально живем! Не переживайте. Привет из Якутска!

    • @МихаилСкрыбыкин-л4м
      @МихаилСкрыбыкин-л4м 3 года назад +37

      @Jeff Gordon играют. Есть детская команда "полярные волки".. Играют в крытом стадионе. А так бегает детвора. Сам играл когда маленький был.))))

    • @blyax
      @blyax 3 года назад +4

      @@МихаилСкрыбыкин-л4м а в пляжный волейбол играют? :-D

    • @МихаилСкрыбыкин-л4м
      @МихаилСкрыбыкин-л4м 3 года назад +12

      @@blyax как и везде. Но специальнвх команд нету. Так... Выехал на природу, на берег речки. Мяч " Покидают".покупаться поразмяться. А команд по пляжному волейболу нету.

    • @nikolaytekuchev136
      @nikolaytekuchev136 3 года назад +8

      @@blyax Зимой холодно, а летом жарко. ;)

    • @andrewevanoff1192
      @andrewevanoff1192 3 года назад +14

      Я родился и вырос в России. Тогда еще зимы были холодные а лето прохладное. Всегда обожал холодную, зимнюю погоду. Жару плохо переносил.
      Уже 30 лет живу в США. Замечательная страна и очень хорошие люди но к жаркому климату так и не смог привыкнуть. Даже 7 лет пожил в Аризоне, где летом в тени жара доходила до 50 градусов (по Цельсию,разумеется). Надо поставить памятник тому кто изобрел кондиционеры! Без них, я бы уже давно переехал на Аляску.

  • @game-f-un-limitedgamer8958
    @game-f-un-limitedgamer8958 3 года назад +426

    It is really cool to see how people have adopted to and developed the tech for living in extreme cold like this.

    • @madeincda
      @madeincda 3 года назад +10

      It's true, many of us wouldn't even be here had we not adapted like this in the distant past.

    • @toomanyaccounts
      @toomanyaccounts 3 года назад +6

      @@madeincda lots died. nature thinned a lot of the unfit out.

    • @madeincda
      @madeincda 3 года назад +10

      @@toomanyaccounts Many more died than survived at this point, I'm sure of that. Lucky for us it wasn't one of our ancestors. Which is probably why we can adapt so quickly in today's environments.

    • @neogeo1670
      @neogeo1670 3 года назад +3

      @@madeincda offcourse it would be one of our ancestors what else would they be

    • @madeincda
      @madeincda 3 года назад +10

      @@neogeo1670 There's a good chance that the people who died didn't leave a lineage. Therefore the ones who adapted and survived continued to pass on their genes of survivability. Hence, your existence. I should have maybe added the word 'direct' in front of ancestors. But, the fact remains the ones who don't survive become long detached to our existing lineage. The Neanderthals and Denisovans are examples.

  • @hdufort
    @hdufort 3 года назад +468

    I live in Canada and while the temperatures don't go as low as in Russia, I've seen -35 to -40ºc. The air becomes incredibly dry. When you go out, the first few breathes feel like the air will burn your lungs. It's better having a cloth (scarf) in front of your mouth, but then the moisture from your breathing creates a layer of frost on the scarf.

    • @Vooda88
      @Vooda88 3 года назад +39

      Spent half of my childhood in the Urals region of Russia. Normal temperature was about -35c in winter, I remember snot freezing inside my nose as soon as I left the house

    • @SuperAndrey152
      @SuperAndrey152 3 года назад +28

      Really depends on place tbh. Where I currently live in Russia, we have a large water reservoir nearby, so -40 c is cold as hell. 10-15 minutes maximum on the outside, with your face quickly covered with frost. But I was also living in Ural's south, and there -40 c wasn't that bad, I was even able to walk outside and play with other kids (I was 7 back then).

    • @paddington1670
      @paddington1670 3 года назад +26

      Yea ive seen -40 a few times, it's bad, but you just dress for it, every building has central heating, every parking lot has block heater plug ins, it's fine. Wouldnt want to be homeless on the street in -40 though.

    • @hdufort
      @hdufort 3 года назад +6

      @@SuperAndrey152 Yes indeed. And I was speaking about the area where I currently live, not about the whole of Canada. I used to live further north where it could get colder in February.

    • @SuperAndrey152
      @SuperAndrey152 3 года назад +13

      @@hdufort I meant that not only temperature by itself affects your perception of the cold. Humidity, wind etc are also important. In one place -20 c is felt like nothing, but in the other it's freezing to bones.

  • @carriemacleod2241
    @carriemacleod2241 3 года назад +199

    I started laughing when the gentleman said he saw sunshine like it was a good thing. I grew up in Northern Ontario and I remember everyone hating the sunshine in January and February because a nice sunny day also meant that it was brutally cold out. The clouds might not look as pretty as the sun sparkling on the snow and ice but at least you could breathe without your lungs feeling like you were sucking in daggers with every breath.

    • @i.i.iiii.i.i
      @i.i.iiii.i.i 3 года назад +4

      If there is no wind I actually like sitting "in" the snow in a tshirt when sun is out...
      It can actually get kinda warm, but the temperatures also don't get too far below 0° C here in Germany :P

    • @ТэяЯнта
      @ТэяЯнта 3 года назад +17

      Yes it is! In extreme cold, the air is transparent like a tear. The sky is high and clear like Heaven. And when the temperature reaches over 40, in complete silence, you can hear the "Whisper of the Stars". This is when you exhale warm air, and it crystallizes in the air with a barely audible rustle.
      Greetings from Tyumen. This is the South of Siberia. We are certainly not Oymyakon, but it can be cold here too))) +35 and -30 are absolutely normal temperatures here. Nothing special.

    • @вячеславВагин-к4т
      @вячеславВагин-к4т 2 года назад +8

      у нас есть шуточная поговорка ЛУЧШЕ ЛЕТОМ У КОСТРА , ЧЕМ ЗИМОЙ НА СОЛНЦЕ ))

    • @gabrielesolletico6542
      @gabrielesolletico6542 2 года назад +1

      I live in Trieste, Italy, and I know that too!

    • @LJBSullivan
      @LJBSullivan 2 года назад +1

      Agreed, from Minnesota in US. Some winter days just take your breath away.

  • @luisostasuc8135
    @luisostasuc8135 3 года назад +66

    I thought it was interesting that they were able to see the other people's beliefs and be able to accept it rather than arguing that they were wrong. It's rather refreshing

    • @Shashank.singh1993
      @Shashank.singh1993 2 года назад +2

      Indians are like that ☺️. remember we have a cold god also. so it's easy peasy to understand.😊😊

  • @freespirit2194
    @freespirit2194 3 года назад +259

    Watching from tropical Australia where I don't even own a coat or a heater. I was shivering just watching. Very brave strong people. Much blessings :)

    • @sherbetgod3066
      @sherbetgod3066 3 года назад +4

      Some of my friends said that it’s warm in Estonia and I shouldn’t be exposed to cold to much… but they visited Estonia only during the summer…

    • @PavelSikun
      @PavelSikun 3 года назад +4

      @@sherbetgod3066 I visited Estonia in early april couple of years ago and weather was definitely not pleasant, though mostly because of baltic wind from the sea.
      I assume it's freaking miserable in the winter. And quite awesome in the summer as these sea breeezes should balance out the heat.

    • @fridolfgranq
      @fridolfgranq 3 года назад +8

      I find it funny that people "shiver" from watching extreme cold. There comes a point in temperature where you stop shivering the colder it gets. I find that I shiver the most at between 2 - 4 degrees celcius while at -5 to -20 I shiver considerably less. It's genuinely more comfortable at -10°C than at +2°C

    • @HenSt-gz7qj
      @HenSt-gz7qj 3 года назад +6

      The coldest climate I've ever experience is the winter in Tokyo (around November-December), which is around -2°C dawn to 8°C midday (sometimes it goes up to 16°C).
      Meanwhile, in my home (Indonesia), we usually get 24~35°C depends on the weather and season. But on average, we get around 28~33°C all year long.
      So I can't really imagine how it feels to live in that extreme cold... I think the colder it is, you actually felt burning instead, and the opposite also mysteriously works that way... the hotter it is, the more freezing it felt.

    • @Robertz1986
      @Robertz1986 3 года назад +4

      I've been all over Australia, and the weather was reasonably nice, but excessively hot and the sunburn was real.
      As someone who lives in a colder climate, I'll tell you that I don't mind the cold, it is the snow that you need to worry about. It constantly gets in the way of driving anywhere, in the way of walking everywhere, makes everything dangerous, and requires a lot of time and effort to remove that can leave you sore for days if you shovel it manually (and your car will get stuck in your driveway if you don't). Then your car is dirty and rusting from all the salt on the roads that the government puts to keep ice from forming (which is exceedingly dangerous if you slide on it and can cause serious accidents). It is the gift that never stops ending.
      If you've never found yourself in below freezing weather helping to push a car out of a snowdrift, or you've never found yourself doing some mundane task outside barefoot in the snow wearing pajamas or shorts and a t-shirt because it is a ridiculous effort to get dressed every single time you want to walk to your mailbox or leave garbage for collection or grab a package, then you have totally missed out on the splendors of living in the colder climates.

  • @papapalpatine8513
    @papapalpatine8513 3 года назад +48

    Im from Russia and for those curious about Emergency Services, most of our emergency vehicles there are Diesel. Even regular petrol powered Ladas are switched to diesel instead. It handles better, also the Policemen have to carry their gun inside of their trench coats because otherwise it will stick onto the officers gloves or be rendered useless.

    • @Barmaley80x
      @Barmaley80x Год назад

      Ты только не сказал что солярка обязана быть арктической. А как замерзает в степи летняя соляра это то еще испытание. Полдня отогревали дизельную делику чтоб запустить двигатель. Ребята отправились домой, а мы за них переживали, чтоб у них не померзли трубопроводы.

  • @dmschoice2571
    @dmschoice2571 3 года назад +146

    That was a wonderful video choice. Now, hearing about the temperatures at the three's place (which didn't surprise me much), ice and cold in general could be an interesting topic for them. So you could show them experiments with liquid nitrogen (and maybe mentioning Absolute Zero), ice and snow sculptures, and maybe ice hotels.

  • @Gantzz321
    @Gantzz321 3 года назад +34

    my coldest was -45c. froze my diesel tanks on my truck even with anti-gel in them. Got stranded for 4 hours waiting for a wrecker to pull me back to his garage. Almost died that night.

    • @thebandplayedon..6145
      @thebandplayedon..6145 3 года назад +6

      Glad ya made it, Cheers

    • @douglascampbell9809
      @douglascampbell9809 3 года назад +3

      I've seen -40c a lot in my years in Wisconsin and Minnesota.
      I won't even go into wind chill numbers.
      I saw car batteries freezing at night on third shift. People had quick disconnects so they would bring the bat inside.

    • @Gantzz321
      @Gantzz321 3 года назад +2

      @@douglascampbell9809 I have seen it so cold that without a engine block heater the oil gets so thick that starters cannot turn over engines fast enough to get ignition

    • @spaceman9599
      @spaceman9599 3 года назад

      Crazy thing was I spent time in Antarctica (admittedly summer) and it only just got under -30. -71 is madness

  • @SharksAttack
    @SharksAttack 3 года назад +58

    8-10C is a warm spring/fall day. It rarely goes under -30C here in west coast of Finland. Gulf stream keeps weather warmer than in inland.

    • @KossolaxtheForesworn
      @KossolaxtheForesworn 3 года назад

      supposedly its going to stop because cold ocean water wont no longer sink and warm rise from the bottom to create a stream of water.
      but I dont really believe in all that. times when something like this have happened have been apocalyptic, like permian extinction when siberia literally blew up and oceans turned into toxic mess. it doesnt look to me like we are living in similar times of apocalypse no matter how much environmentalists would want to believe so.

    • @Cassxowary
      @Cassxowary 3 года назад

      @@KossolaxtheForesworn it's not apocalyptic and they're not saying that, just that it's getting increasingly bad real quick. And if you don't use your heart and brain you're part of the problem not the solution. (You being you or anyone)

    • @ls200076
      @ls200076 3 года назад

      @@KossolaxtheForesworn right.....

  • @Doraemon-o8f
    @Doraemon-o8f 2 года назад +11

    Babu being the eldest,
    He speaks first in every show and the others wait patiently for their turn.
    This is the silent respect we also have in our nation.
    Much love from Tokyo, Japan 🇯🇵

  • @Xcris_crosX
    @Xcris_crosX 3 года назад +47

    YAY finally something else besides USA stuff. I remember waiting for a bus and heard strange crackling noises like Pop Rocks candy. It took me a while to realize it was the moisture and nose hairs in my nostrils freezing up

  • @TheNismo777
    @TheNismo777 3 года назад +27

    As a finn I know alot about cold weather ^^ Yakuts are nicest ppl on earth

    • @toolbaggers
      @toolbaggers 3 года назад

      And then the Russian Europeans came.

    • @myopicthunder
      @myopicthunder 3 года назад

      @@toolbaggers thank the Mongols for that

  • @julieneff9408
    @julieneff9408 3 года назад +154

    In the northern tier of the US, Alaska, and in all of Canada, we can get polar vortices which bring extreme cold and wind. -50s Fahrenheit and with 30-40 mph wind = nearly -100 F. But in the Great Lakes that only last 2-3 days, then we get back to normal cold, like 0-40 F with variable wind and snow Then again in summer we can go over 100F with 75-85% humidity. I'd personally rather handle cold than heat. You can always put on more cloths, but once you're naked and soaking wet you can't take anything else off LOL. My genetics came from far northern Europe too, but Siberia is really something completely different.

    • @MsLhuntMartinez79
      @MsLhuntMartinez79 3 года назад +2

      WOW! That's amazing. As I'm sure you know, Texas didn't fare to well in the snow storm this year ( -10 to -20F). We can handle 120F (49C) with very few issues - maybe a few rolling blackouts

    • @joantrotter3005
      @joantrotter3005 3 года назад +2

      @@MsLhuntMartinez79, north of Houston we only got to 7*. I don't think any of our blackouts were longer than 5 hours, but some areas near us didn't have power for days. We thawed every afternoon except one. Lots of people with broken pipes.

    • @MsLhuntMartinez79
      @MsLhuntMartinez79 3 года назад

      @@joantrotter3005 I had power but I think thts because I'm near a military base. But no water for days. It was fun for the first 2 days. Smh

    • @runningfromabear8354
      @runningfromabear8354 3 года назад +4

      I moved to northern Ontario in my late teens from London, England for a couple of years. On average the temperature in the summer in London is 20 C and winter is 7 C. Northern Ontario the average in the summer was 24 C and the winter was -38 C. I was used to damp cold but this very damp and cold. The coldest it reached was -46 C while I was there. As a young woman, it was an interesting lesson in fashion. When it's that cold, fashion isn't a thing and snow can be the most exhausting shit to deal with on the planet. In movies it's light and fluffy. The reality I saw was most of the time it was so incredibly heavy. It compounds and collects under the soles of your boots like platforms, so that every few steps, you try to get some of the snow off the bottom of your boot. Shoveling a path around the front door is like trying to shovel wet clay or concrete. When you get really cold and walking alone for some distance, it becomes tempting to just find a spot and curl up and take a nap.
      It was an experience but I don't think I'd move somewhere that cold again.

    • @toolbaggers
      @toolbaggers 3 года назад +2

      @@runningfromabear8354 There are many types of snow from the super heavy wet clay type to the fine fluffy stuff that doesn't even sit on the ground because the wind blows it around because it is so light and airy.
      Clay is good for snowballs fights (okay, it's like an ice ball) to fine powder that skiers and snowboarders love.

  • @FlyinBrian777
    @FlyinBrian777 3 года назад +24

    Babu: "It's possible that if we go there we will not come back alive". I love this man. LOL

  • @KuroiHato69
    @KuroiHato69 3 года назад +57

    I love the cold but Yakutsk is too much for me! LOL Happy that the gentleman are learning about new places around the world! Have you ever shown them a map of human migration? Showing how humans spread around the planet... They might find that interesting....

  • @olgavasileva3636
    @olgavasileva3636 3 года назад +11

    I have been living in Yakutia since birth. The Yakut is not the one who does not freeze, but the one who dresses warmly. many Indians worked for us, incl. and in winter. None died 😄

  • @user-wr9ej6xe4j
    @user-wr9ej6xe4j 3 года назад +9

    So glad you always dub it for them. You're a great guy for everything you do for them,, Especially off camera. We can tell. Hope u all stay safe!

  • @elenorin4707
    @elenorin4707 3 года назад +11

    I am from Russia, and where I live, it is -35 degrees in winter (sometimes), so I understand how to freeze my ears and fingers. Although -50 would be already unbearable, but at least I understand something. It's amazing how people who have not even seen snow look at it! You need to visit at least -35 degrees to understand what frost is. Not just cold, but frost. My favorite painting is when everything is white in front, as if you are on the edge of the world.

  • @aaa00705
    @aaa00705 3 года назад +21

    Since it's about Siberia. I'd like you guys to show them about some traditions from Siberia, like Tuvan throat singing. I believe this could really surprised them of how fascinating their arts are.

    • @spaceman9599
      @spaceman9599 3 года назад +1

      Another great suggestion, I think they will love the power in the voice then.

  • @danielphendarko2651
    @danielphendarko2651 3 года назад +10

    nice choice of video of them to watch!

  • @dudermcdudeface3674
    @dudermcdudeface3674 3 года назад +18

    Cold nightmare is better than hot nightmare. You can layer up in cold, but not much you can do about heat. Ice can melt, but ashes never unburn.

    • @catmancatplan4933
      @catmancatplan4933 3 года назад +1

      Ashes don't burn to begin with. Ashes are the result of something burning. :D
      (just being a Duder, dude.)

  • @TheHermitTeller
    @TheHermitTeller 3 года назад +8

    Your videos are always so enriching to watch! Thank you for all your efforts!

  • @googleaccount4471
    @googleaccount4471 3 года назад +64

    I find it crazy how they can’t go out in 8C in England I find 8C quite warm and anything above 15 it to hot for me

    • @marioelburro1492
      @marioelburro1492 3 года назад +4

      I can bear up to 33 or 34 but when it hits around 10, then that would be chilly for me. In my state of Texas we had a dangerous cold storm in February where we briefly hit negative temperatures and the power in the entire state would shut off. It resulted in a few deaths along with major road crashes that can be found on yt. Crazy how the people in the video survive in negative temperatures but we are all acclimated to our own specific region

    • @eternokintana52
      @eternokintana52 3 года назад +10

      In my city we have 45-50°C in summer while the lowest is 8-10°C. I can't bear temp lower than 15° but I am fine with 45°.

    • @kenmolinaro
      @kenmolinaro 3 года назад +2

      I spent the past 20 years with my ac set to 12 C. That's an ideal room temp for me.

    • @abhisheknair8437
      @abhisheknair8437 3 года назад +4

      Body tolerance. Mumbai is a rainy region with neither too much cold nor too much heat. So yeah 10 to 40 seems to be the comfort and anything below or above that becomes annoying.

    • @bradkirchhoff3751
      @bradkirchhoff3751 3 года назад +1

      In Illinois we can have negative Farenheit temps one day and it be 60 F the next day. Or 90 one day and some snow the next day. Thats Illinois for ya.

  • @noahr607
    @noahr607 3 года назад +12

    Ooo I had just seen this video myself and was shocked-I’m excited to see their reactions

  • @UliFandoms
    @UliFandoms 3 года назад +11

    I love those educational videos and watch them see and hear new things and widen their horizons. Also I keep learning alongside with them.. Thanks for sharing! Love from Germany 🧡

    • @toolbaggers
      @toolbaggers 3 года назад

      I thought Germany found out how cold Russia can get during the 1940's

  • @1412Bunny
    @1412Bunny 3 года назад +30

    i love the diverse range of topics this channel covers :)
    there is a series called "The Most Dangerous Ways To School" it might be interesting if they react to cuts from that show. it shows the tough journeys some kids have to take to get to their school.

    • @teresas8173
      @teresas8173 3 года назад +1

      Yes, that’s a great video

    • @paddington1670
      @paddington1670 3 года назад +2

      i like those videos. The Peruvians kids who have to row a boat to a floating school 2 hours each way, Yakutsk kids in the bus that may or may not break down, etc

    • @user-3aa6234fh
      @user-3aa6234fh 3 года назад

      There was a video about Yakutian village Oymyakon on that channel too

  • @dayadaroi2808
    @dayadaroi2808 3 года назад +2

    hello from yakutsk! thank you very much for this video. it’s very interesting to see my country from eyes of different people.

  • @adrianavitzileou5198
    @adrianavitzileou5198 3 года назад +14

    Indian spirit: open minded and inquisitive!

  • @taika.melissa2798
    @taika.melissa2798 3 года назад +5

    I'm from Finland and the coldest I have seen is - 42. It can get very cold here but our houses, cars, buses etc. are all well heated so it's not a big problem.

  • @bekind3931
    @bekind3931 3 года назад +23

    Now, show them deserts and also how/why camels can go miles w/o water and can survive sand storms, as well as other animals that live primarily in desert climates.

    • @omega1231
      @omega1231 3 года назад +2

      India is home to the 20th largest desert in the world, i'm pretty sure they know what a desert is. They also have dromedars. The Thar desert is larger than most European countries iirc

  • @KittinPyro
    @KittinPyro 3 года назад +2

    can i just say how much i love and appreciate that these guys just sit respectful and patiently while someone else speaks and quietly wait their turn to speak. They just seem to understand when someone else is finished speaking, Nobody takes long pauses when they speak so the others don’t accidentally start speaking because they think the other is finished only to be interrupted when the other person wasn’t finished after all.
    It seems like other cultures, especially here in the west, need classes or something to learn how to speak properly without interrupting someone and how to give everyone in a large group a chance to contribute to a conservation before moving on to a new topic.
    Being a rather soft-spoken person, I always struggled to get a chance to say my thoughts on a topic being discussed with my friend group. Louder, more outspoken people tend to get to speak without much issue while i’ve always struggled to find a place between one person talking and the next person talking to start speaking and even when i can, i’m often interrupted either by the original speaker who thought of something else to add to their statement or by someone else who was louder and usually seated closer to the original speaker than i was.
    And some extroverts don’t understand why introverts find socializing mentally draining. This is why 😭

  • @GigiAbbi-cu9qn
    @GigiAbbi-cu9qn 3 года назад +14

    God made this world so you would see his wonder and sing to him in praise
    babu always nails it👏👏👏

    • @Cassxowary
      @Cassxowary 3 года назад

      Indeed and make/keep it beautiful and alive but humans are doing the exact opposite with aninal products and stuff

  • @dorianphilotheates3769
    @dorianphilotheates3769 2 года назад +1

    These guys are awesome - just subscribed! Greetings to India from Greece. 🇮🇳🇬🇷

  • @karinac.3378
    @karinac.3378 3 года назад +6

    Good choice of videos!! I love their reactions as always! 🥰🥰💯💯❤️ I have seen the video of this guy last week💪💪

  • @ruhalfoyls
    @ruhalfoyls 3 года назад +26

    i like how saru has learned the tremolo harmonica so fast. seems perfect for him.

    • @JokerInk-CustomBuilds
      @JokerInk-CustomBuilds 3 года назад

      yeah, he caught on how to breathe through that thing real fast...

  • @parapanofff
    @parapanofff 3 года назад +29

    Yay, Russian reaction!
    You, sir, receive a portion of my RUclips premium watch time and a like!
    But please consider showing the evolution of video game graphics or gravity hover suit, I am still not fulfilled, thanks for the consideration!

  • @kavakalynn
    @kavakalynn 3 года назад +6

    That was a really interesting video. And great song at the end!🧡

  • @JonGee420
    @JonGee420 3 года назад +4

    I grew up north of Chicago and now live in Memphis Tn. My friends complain the hate the cold. When it gets cold you put on another shrit. You put on a scarf and a ski mask and gloves. You can withstand the cold but you can not escape the heat.

    • @AcousticGString
      @AcousticGString 3 года назад

      I'm in northern Illinois outside of Chicago and the coldest it got here was winter 2018 we had a polar vortex and it got -50 out. That was insane for this region and I sympathize with people living in these colder region's. I have family in TN, my grandma is from Cookeville and the weather there is nice, not too cold, not too hot.

    • @andrewhcit
      @andrewhcit Год назад

      It depends on where you're from. I live in California and consider it too cold -- because I grew up in Dubai. When it's under 60°F, there's no amount of winter clothing that makes it tolerable. On the other hand, I'm perfectly fine playing soccer in 110°F heat.

  • @ОльгаШадрина-д3с
    @ОльгаШадрина-д3с 3 месяца назад

    Мы тоже так удивляемся на их сезон дождей 😂. Нормальная зима. Прохладно немного😊

  • @anangoohns
    @anangoohns 3 года назад +3

    I had two friends in grad school, one was Iñupiaq and one was Athabaskan (both Indigenous Alaskan tribes) and it was incredible to learn more about how their families' lives went about day to day and season to season. Their ancestors learned so much about living in the tundra and ice over thousands of years and I really came to appreciate how much hyper-specialized knowledge is required to make ones life in a place that far north.
    The same with those Indigenous Siberian ladies in the video-- 1) genetically they're better suited to live in a place like that and 2) they/their forbearers learned how to go about life in as safe a way as possible as well as utilize the perks of the are (not needing refrigeration, etc.)

  • @meganh4011
    @meganh4011 3 года назад +3

    Greetings from Minnesota USA. We have a big temperature difference here in Minnesota. During my lifetime the coldest I have experienced was February 2, 1996 when it was -60• F. 🥶The hottest was July 31,1988 when it was 105•F.🥵.. so we definitely have 4 seasons. Lol But the average range of temperatures are 9•-83•F so we must have a variety of clothing & both a way to cool & heat our homes. We also need storm shelters such as basements in our homes because we are the tornado alley of the USA. Love your reactions & adventures. Thank you as always for sharing 💞

  • @turan2815
    @turan2815 3 года назад +6

    Love my Turkic brothers in yakutistan
    from Turkey🇹🇷

  • @sam93931
    @sam93931 3 года назад +2

    I'm canadian and I love winter! -30c and cooler is a bit too cold for me, but -10 to -15C, that's perfect! Feels like you can breath fresh air at last!

  • @01DOGG01
    @01DOGG01 3 года назад +37

    Damn, I used to swim in 8-10C seas. You get used to it after a while. Not so bad if you're moving close to the surface, but if you are vertical you can really feel the difference in surface vs deeper temperature. Once your lips get too blue though, best to make your way back.
    It usually takes me ages to get in the water. I'm a b**ch in that regard. Some people dive right in. Imagine the shock!

    • @kristijangrgic9841
      @kristijangrgic9841 3 года назад

      Yes swiming horizontal is much warmer than vertical. But 16 celsius is lowest I can hold out.

    • @joweydelanota7421
      @joweydelanota7421 3 года назад

      That really doesn't makes much sense as the surface of seawater its always the coldest reason it freezes firsr. You feel colder vertically not because of the water but the circulation of your bloodflow

    • @01DOGG01
      @01DOGG01 3 года назад +1

      @@joweydelanota7421 Damn, it censored a link to thee NOAA. Dumb YT!
      Surface water is warmed by the sun more than water at depth and warmer water is less dense. It floats on top. Hot stuff rises up. This is especially true in calm conditions.

    • @01DOGG01
      @01DOGG01 3 года назад

      @@kristijangrgic9841 Yeah, in Senj, it can be nice and warm but after the Bura blows down from the mountains and cools the water it's hard to bear. I'm like a sloth getting in in the lower temps which only makes it more of a torturous exercise vs just jumping in and getting it over and done with.
      I don't get how the Russians do the ice water dipping. Madmen!

    • @joweydelanota7421
      @joweydelanota7421 3 года назад

      @@01DOGG01 If you are swimming on the surface of the seawater the temperature of the water will be uniform regardless of which orientation you swim at. At freezing temperatures the surface will freeze faster as the salt drops to the bottom. Ice will always be colder than cold seawater but the reason you feel warmer swimming horizontally has everything to do with heat transfer from your body. Vapor increases which is a poor conductoe of heat but as you swim vertically that heat starts transferring that heat through the water. Ironicall, warm water will rise above the cold water given is less dense than the colder sea water so swimming horizontally in that area would feel warmer through time as long tou keep your body moving.

  • @SimonDove666
    @SimonDove666 2 года назад +2

    Babu is the sweetest person. He's so pure and wonderful! We must protect him at all costs! ❤️

  • @Anshulhe
    @Anshulhe 3 года назад +2

    Even in India there's region called ladakh where temperature gets down to -50 as it's high up in Himalayas

  • @lexiwilliams9422
    @lexiwilliams9422 3 года назад +2

    After reading the comments it's very nice to see we come from all over the world 🌎,and we all come together to watch this beautiful trio , love from Scotland ❤️

  • @fridgeanon
    @fridgeanon 3 года назад +10

    in my country (Poland, eastern Europe) it can go down to below - 40C

    • @Maraien
      @Maraien 3 года назад +2

      I searched up "average temperature in poland", and it said
      Poland sees an average daily temperature of 14°C, a fantastic temperature for getting out and exploring. The lows start dropping, reaching an average of 9°C and the highs get up to 19°C

    • @fridgeanon
      @fridgeanon 3 года назад +2

      @@Maraien In winter it's usually between 0C and -20C but I myself experienced -36C
      our summers are warm though :) we get all beautiful seasons

  • @YokoshimaSTAR
    @YokoshimaSTAR 3 года назад +1

    I am going through so much hardship but your channel had breathed joy in me

  • @clementcachico5240
    @clementcachico5240 3 года назад +4

    I don't even live in a cold country but the comment about how the lowest they've seen was 5-8 degree celcius but only at night between midnight and 3am made me chuckle.

  • @christinaify
    @christinaify 3 года назад +3

    It must be incredibly difficult for the older people living in that area. My grandma has terrible joint and bone pain from late fall through spring because of the weather and Chicago is no where near as cold.

  • @ReverendKJ
    @ReverendKJ 3 месяца назад

    The craziest part to me is how non-evergreen trees survive. Like, they need to have leaves once a while right? Is it so cold they just don’t age? Nuts.

  • @balince_media2754
    @balince_media2754 3 года назад +5

    I really like and respect these gentlemen. May they one day reach the plateau of beauty where Haneul reigns.

  • @PogMcDog
    @PogMcDog 3 года назад +1

    As a Swede I walk to the store in shorts and T-shirt when it is -5C and only wear hoodies at -10 or lower. Only care to use a scar and gloves at -25/-30

  • @Justthepops1
    @Justthepops1 3 года назад +8

    I love hearing about their culture ❤❤

  • @effychase62
    @effychase62 Год назад +1

    Though I'm almost 61, college educated and lived in the USA my entire life, these videos continue to educate and broaden my knowledge of the world. Good stuff.

  • @lindazehnbauer5406
    @lindazehnbauer5406 3 года назад +6

    He went dog sledding not wearing a HAT! Staying warm in the cold 101

    • @LilliD3
      @LilliD3 3 года назад +3

      I saw that and immediately thought that he was an incredible idiot. You don't go out in 0 degree weather without a hat!

    • @Cassxowary
      @Cassxowary 3 года назад

      @@LilliD3 I always do but my hair is very thick and there's a lot of it, I never need to cover my head

    • @toolbaggers
      @toolbaggers 3 года назад

      @@Cassxowary I thought the Germans learned their lesson on Russian winters during the 1940's? Guess not.

  • @AngelArm1110
    @AngelArm1110 3 года назад +2

    I can't get over how empathetic the guy on the left was!! He really hated that people live so cold!!!

  • @opticFPV
    @opticFPV 3 года назад +4

    It's stuff like this that makes me think that even if there was an "apocalypse", humanity would still find a way to survive no matter what.

    • @spaceman9599
      @spaceman9599 3 года назад +1

      No matter how many aresholes getting coverage, the world is full of decent, wise people.

  • @cleo8665
    @cleo8665 3 года назад +2

    Babu is so good with the drum! Love his music!

    • @elena-lc4uk
      @elena-lc4uk 3 года назад

      I think he is so cute and sincere

  • @Asa...S
    @Asa...S 3 года назад +6

    Could you please show them "Coolest Ice Hotels | You must see these Incredible Hotels MADE OF ICE" too
    It would be cool to see their reaction.

    • @toolbaggers
      @toolbaggers 3 года назад

      Or how the Inuit used to live in igloos with no electricity or even fire.

  • @Valentin_I
    @Valentin_I 3 года назад +2

    Greetings from mother Russia! 🇷🇺

  • @MsLhuntMartinez79
    @MsLhuntMartinez79 3 года назад +27

    People laugh when I say that I imagine hell as being an extremely cold and dark place. Think about it. 😆 Be it fire or ice I don't wanna go

    • @Cassxowary
      @Cassxowary 3 года назад +3

      It's neither and you won't if you don'tt want to, don't let religion frighten you. Everyone goes back Home between every life. It's all about using heart and brain and doing the best you can and learning and growing and evolving.

    • @MsLhuntMartinez79
      @MsLhuntMartinez79 3 года назад +5

      @@Cassxowary I don't know what to expect but my niece (31) passed 1 month ago. She told her mom when she was still able to whisper that she saw our uncle (her great uncle) who died 3yrs ago standing in her hospital doorway nt saying anything. The next day she said she saw a bright light. She was completely blind the past 3yrs. 🙏 Gives me comfort. I know drs say it's your brain creating these images, but it means a lot for us. We're more spiritual than religious.

    • @MsLhuntMartinez79
      @MsLhuntMartinez79 3 года назад

      @@Cassxowary And don't our brains "create" everything we see already? Scientists love to say we don't really see with our eyes (it's our visual cortex) 😃

    • @MsLhuntMartinez79
      @MsLhuntMartinez79 3 года назад

      @Leon S. Kennedy I recall hearing about Titan but I never knew about ice volcanos! WHOA!

    • @MsLhuntMartinez79
      @MsLhuntMartinez79 3 года назад

      @Leon S. Kennedy Thank you💕 We had an outdoor fam gathering for this Mother's Day and she was crying from happiness that she was able to be around everyone. We turned down the music to make sure she was okay. Looking back now tht moment was everything. ❤

  • @TheClark1205
    @TheClark1205 Год назад

    My family lived in Faro, Yukon, Canada. -60C. -64C. I know.....not this place but we still had issues. Lol.

  • @greeneyedlady7290
    @greeneyedlady7290 3 года назад +3

    Omg that’s waaaay too cold! I suppose people are naturally accustomed to the climate they grew up in. Here in the NorthEast coastal USA our winter temperature averages around 38°F (3°C), but it’s not unusual for the temp to occasionally drop to around 10°F (minus 12°C). In summer a cool day is 80°F (26°C), and a hot day is 95°F (35°C).

    • @taoist32
      @taoist32 3 года назад

      I remember playing with my cousins when we were kids in Boston. We had a snowstorm for a few days so it was icy cold, but the next day was 40 degrees. It felt like summer. We ran outside in t shirts and shorts despite our parents warning to put jackets on.

  • @Ujuani68
    @Ujuani68 3 года назад +2

    3:59: The teachers in Greenland also do this to explain the freezing process, on cold winter days. But we "only" get -45 degrees Celcius, NOT like in Russia!😱😖😯

  • @toolbaggers
    @toolbaggers 3 года назад +3

    These people would think South Indian summer is like living in a tandoor oven.

  • @Cassxowary
    @Cassxowary 3 года назад +1

    I've been out at -40 ONCE and for a few minutes to take a nice photo of the river steam at sunrise

  • @teresas8173
    @teresas8173 3 года назад +4

    I wish the video they watched had shown how they keep their homes warm 🥶

    • @malfeasance62
      @malfeasance62 3 года назад +1

      pretty much all soviet cities have central heating system in which heat is generated on a cogeneration plant and then that heat is transported via tubes that go through the city. every room has a radiator and i don't know about yakutia but for the rest of russia you often have to keep windows open during winter because otherwise it's gets too hot

    • @teresas8173
      @teresas8173 3 года назад

      @@malfeasance62 thank you for that information. I live in an area that has cold (and snowy) winters but nothing like this.

  • @chefnedarque
    @chefnedarque 3 года назад +2

    I love that I also learned about this place and its culture alongside the villagers🙏

  • @yashraghav1700
    @yashraghav1700 3 года назад +2

    u should also show them the diversity of their own country that is india, frm rajasthan where temperature goes over 50°c to dras where it drpps to -45 to -50°c

  • @Glattbahner
    @Glattbahner 2 года назад +1

    Hello i send you greetings Form Germany 👍🏻. I Hope your Channel Grow up and get succesfull. I send you Love and happiness

  • @ozisponas1593
    @ozisponas1593 3 года назад +5

    you should show them How One Man Stopped A Nuclear War In 1983
    by coldfuzion
    i think its incredible how one man managed to save the world
    everyone should know about him

    • @toolbaggers
      @toolbaggers 3 года назад

      You mean PREVENTED a nuclear war? The Emperor of Japan is the only person in history to have stopped a nuclear war (there has been only one nuclear war) when he surrendered to the Americans in 1945.
      Remember that one nuke wasn't enough and the second nuke was to show that the first was not a fluke and were posturing that more will drop. The Americans were bluffing because they already used up all their nukes. Japan wouldn't have surrendered if they knew this at the time.

    • @sc1338
      @sc1338 3 года назад

      @@toolbaggers well it only would’ve taken a few more months to build up enough for another bomb, but you’re right we would’ve had to do it the old fashioned way.

  • @joevines8219
    @joevines8219 3 года назад

    These are truly the best reaction videos on RUclips. Love these

  • @andzheloart
    @andzheloart 3 года назад +3

    Hooray! There is content with Russia!

  • @beaub2409
    @beaub2409 3 года назад

    These videos are truly a highlight my son's and my day. Thank you and God's Blessing to everyone of you

  • @pongradmeta9176
    @pongradmeta9176 3 года назад +5

    I would like to see them react to the natural disasters in the movies

    • @Fergunator
      @Fergunator 3 года назад

      Cows in Twister 🐄 🐂 🐃

    • @monke2251
      @monke2251 3 года назад

      @@Fergunator even better, sharks

  • @elena-lc4uk
    @elena-lc4uk 3 года назад +1

    BABU IS SO CUTE I love his reactions

  • @traceythompson3162
    @traceythompson3162 3 года назад +5

    Now this was interesting, I don't know how anyone can survive in such temperatures.

    • @toomanyaccounts
      @toomanyaccounts 3 года назад +1

      people live in Death Valley which is the hottest place on Earth. you adapt or die. something a lot of people have forgotten is that nature doesn't love you, nature hates you and wants you dead.

    • @Shivathedestroyer04
      @Shivathedestroyer04 3 года назад +1

      @@toomanyaccounts Survival of the fittest

    • @Cassxowary
      @Cassxowary 3 года назад

      It's not survival, they live there, having adapted

    • @Cassxowary
      @Cassxowary 3 года назад

      @@Shivathedestroyer04 it's neither... they live there because they have adapted

    • @toomanyaccounts
      @toomanyaccounts 3 года назад

      @@Cassxowary and by adapting they survived.

  • @jmcr71795
    @jmcr71795 3 года назад +2

    I have had to work outside at -40°C and lower, and it's not fun, and metal becomes brittle. Here on the Canadian prairies, we use to get several weeks every year in the -30°C/-40°C temperature range, but those low temperatures are becoming fewer and fewer.

  • @hankhopeless9062
    @hankhopeless9062 3 года назад +3

    Please Sarru, don't ever give up Your job as a carpenter, to play the harmonica... You will starve to death :-)

    • @Neceros
      @Neceros 3 года назад +1

      Friend, he just needs practice. Please give him encouragement.

  • @chriskola3822
    @chriskola3822 3 года назад +2

    As a Canadian who has visited western India in the hot season, +47C was every bit as hard for me as -40C is. Assuming you have a warm home to go to, the winter can be extremely beautiful.

  • @Sue474
    @Sue474 3 года назад +3

    I was horrified to learn that people there keep their cars running all the time causing all that pollution and smog. That's really dreadful for the planet.

    • @Cassxowary
      @Cassxowary 3 года назад +1

      Indeed but animal products are even worse, look it up

    • @joantrotter3005
      @joantrotter3005 3 года назад

      I had neighbours from Alaska that had a plug in warmer for their van. Not sure what parts were kept warm? She gave me a ride to the park and ride at least once when our diesel froze.

  • @edgedg
    @edgedg 3 года назад +2

    Your latest video ideas are so good!

  • @yer_old_pal_Jerky
    @yer_old_pal_Jerky 2 года назад

    Beautiful. A wonderful video. I love these guys!

  • @paulagonzalez7236
    @paulagonzalez7236 3 года назад

    This morning it was 51 degrees Fahrenheit and as always I went to work in shorts and a t-shirt, love the cooler weather autumn brings and am happy winter is coming! Here it gets below zero often and I mostly only wear a light jacket

  • @kayakat1869
    @kayakat1869 3 года назад +2

    I have lived in Minnesota and Iowa, and sometimes it gets colder than an industrial freezer. It's actually similar to Siberia, since the land causes huge swings in temperature. I'd hate to have that weather all winter tho. I couldn't imagine living there.

  • @ManuRomer0
    @ManuRomer0 Год назад

    This channel is very entertaining 😁💪🏽 salute from Spain

  • @jopatterson8712
    @jopatterson8712 3 года назад

    To the Comman Man Show. I love the music at the beginning. It makes you wanna get up and dance.

  • @slantos2668
    @slantos2668 3 года назад +1

    I live in the capital city of Canada, in summer it can get to +40C, in winter -40C, each season has its beauty and I wouldn't change for the world.

  • @Zaalpe
    @Zaalpe 3 года назад +1

    10:34 hey, I know her! I follow her channel Life In Yakutia. She's nice. I like her. Thought I recognized this video. Saw bits of it on her channel when they were filming.
    Also, to be a bummer, the region has been on fire all summer. It's very sad and worrying. Coldest continuously inhabited place on Earth probably shouldn't have wildfires bigger than all other wildfires combined.

  • @The_Crab_Whisperer
    @The_Crab_Whisperer 3 года назад

    Well boys! Another great video. The lady in the video deserves a spot alongside you chaps, with her beautiful view on life. Great stuff 😁

  • @jbeck66
    @jbeck66 3 года назад +1

    Loved the concert at the end!