World's Coldest Way To School, Oymyakon Part 1 | FD Bites

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  • Опубликовано: 20 сен 2024
  • World's Coldest Way To School, Oymyakon | Short Documentary
    The average temperature in winter: Minus 40° Celsius. The children of the Siberian Oimjakon have the world`s coldest way to school. The extreme living conditions are completely normal for the residents of Oymyakon. This is also true for the Tariks family and their son Aljosha. He is 8 years old. The children of his age group are only excused from attending school on account of the cold at temperatures below minus 54° degrees.
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Комментарии • 21

  • @Anonymous.52
    @Anonymous.52 Год назад +46

    This is basically a documentary on how our parents used to go to school

    • @anonoanon1198
      @anonoanon1198 Год назад +4

      My mom used to walk 5 miles to school every day and carry a full gas canister on the way back each day. 😂😂

    • @samuelsilverio5557
      @samuelsilverio5557 Год назад +3

      it's a documentary about how blessed we are, because it's just a matter of being born in the right place.

  • @corb9459
    @corb9459 Год назад +5

    WOAH this needs to be seen more I cannot believe this has this few attention!!! This is a wild place I can’t even properly look up to see where it is! Would Longyearbyen be even more northern/Colder of a settlement? Love neat content like this showing the edges of humanity. Makes me want to explore

  • @wichanee932
    @wichanee932 Год назад +2

    Imagine having your car broke down on the way to your friend village and that’s when you realize that you are going to die.

  • @stephaniegray3083
    @stephaniegray3083 Год назад +3

    Man they're tough! They're extremely lucky to have the bus driver. Someone needs to buy the bus tires. Wth their children are on it daily!

  • @bns2105
    @bns2105 Год назад +6

    Mother Russia 🇷🇺 ❤

  • @jonasarnesen6825
    @jonasarnesen6825 Год назад +2

    This makes me wanna live as an Inuit.

  • @asencyel
    @asencyel Год назад +1

    i remember watching this one many years ago. would like to know which youtube channel/production this documentary belongs to. anyone?

    • @C4yne
      @C4yne Год назад

      I would like to know if anyone knows (:

  • @madlinerose5038
    @madlinerose5038 Год назад +2

    Wonderful and revealing life in places most Americans would find unacceptable. My question is where is the wood coming from?😊. What do most do to earn a living.😊

    • @dangername6996
      @dangername6996 Год назад +3

      Wood is coming from near forests)
      The most villagers are doing animal husbandry, hunting to earn money, and some of them are going to the bigger town and work there.
      In Russia we have a special allowance plus to salary when living and working in a noкth regions. Allowance can be from 20% up to 100% of main salary depending on region.

    • @mr.maclaud
      @mr.maclaud Год назад +1

      @@dangername6996 And the prices for everything are usually also x2... I'm from Yakutia myself

    • @dangername6996
      @dangername6996 Год назад

      @@mr.maclaud Да не, я лично был в Якутске, цены в среднем на 30% выше московских, не в два раза. Зато зарплаты, особенно вахтовиков удивляют даже москвичей. Хотя, всё, конечно, индивидуально.

  • @Moonlislav
    @Moonlislav Год назад +2

    Lots of bad translations. Here is one 10:05 of the examples on which I could not stand it and went into the comments. The man says that those who do not work cannot withstand the cold, this has nothing to do with survival. Then he says that they just leave. The one who does not work does not live - This shows the Soviet upbringing in him.

    • @vfrbnf24
      @vfrbnf24 Год назад +2

      By work he means arranging firewood, food, hunting and fishing. Daily heating of the house in winter, etc. They normally live there, they tell scary stories for journalists)))

  • @mikey2time484
    @mikey2time484 Год назад

    What do these horses eat during the winter months? Everything is pretty much frozen or dead

    • @konradkarlovich5801
      @konradkarlovich5801 Год назад +3

      "The Yakut horse breed is the most frost-resistant, having an undercoat and a coat of 8-15 centimeters long. Even in winter, she can feed on grass from under the snow, raking it with her hooves - to freeze. In Yakutia, horses live outdoors all year round (at temperatures up to +40 ° in summerWith and in winter up to -60 ° C) and look for food on their own. Each leader keeps his own herd: from 18 to 24 mares and foals, animals graze with such a family. In 1988, a herd of Yakut horses was released on a 160 km2 tundra site, which successfully took root, it is used to test the theory of the possibility of partial restoration of the ecosystem of the "mammoth tundrasteps" of the Pleistocene (see Pleistocene Park)."

    • @ganjinfly
      @ganjinfly Год назад

      Frozen people, mostly ))

  • @stephaniegray3083
    @stephaniegray3083 Год назад

    Why is it an unpopular necessity? Oh the kids r hot due to being bundled. Poor things should be taught to take off a few layers?