About the Project | Project Coordinator | Contact Us | Partners |  
Home News Region Info Events Way of Life People Yellow Pages Gallery E-shop Blog Bookmark and Share
Destinations
Vacations by interest
Things to do and see
Hotels & places to stay
Reviews & stories
Useful info
Opinions & Comments
Home :: Travel tips :: Reviews & Stories :: Going to Extremes: Cold
TRAVELLERS ABOUT YAKUTIA
Rout Map of the Expedition
Going to Extremes: Cold
What's that? A part of TV Show.
Synopsis: Going to Extremes is a four-part series in which writer, presenter and Oxford geography don Nick Middleton visits the world's hottest, coldest, wettest and driest inhabited places. Going to Extremes: Cold is dedicated to Oymyakon (the chilly distinction of being the coldest permanently inhabited place on Earth) .
Activity: Nick Middleton wandered across the Oymyakon area with Even reindeer bredeers, recognized Siberian nomads.
View trailer [1.3MB Quicktime Movie]
Time of production: 2003.
Comment on the book of the same name:

Reviewer Bexie, of United Kingdom:

- I hadn't even heard of, let alone seen, the series mentioned by some reviewers. I picked up the book as I was intrigued by the barron landscape on the cover.

This book is about the author's travels to find the coldest, dryest, hottest and wettest habited placed on earth. The opening chapters about his travells in Siberia fascinated me so much that I have since gone on to read further books about the place. The minute he gets off the train in Siberia and it is so cold it physically hurts to breathe, I was transported to the journey with him. I thoroughly enjoyed this section as it was interwoven with history about the region as well as tales of jumping through ice in minus 40 degrees!

I found the other three sections interesting, although I did feel that after Siberia it didn't quite have the same appeal curiosity wise. I almost felt as though they were an afterthought. Having said that, I did enjoy this book immensly and would recommend it.

Reviewer S LEE, of Saintfield, Co. Down United Kingdom:

Read also:
Pole of Cold Info
Pole of Cold Annual International Festival

- After watching Nick Middletons 2 series, I dithered as to whether the book would be worthwhile. However, the series totally compliments the book. You get the feeling you are with him as he narrates his stories. I sat on a beach in County Cork on a blistering day as I read about the coldest place on the planet, and started to shiver!!! His descriptions are excellent and his wit is sharp. He manages the almost impossible in presenting geology as user-friendly. Go on, treat yourself.

INTERVIEW:

Life Is a Chilling Challenge in Subzero Siberia

Going to extremes is a way of life for Nick Middleton. Middleton splits his time between teaching geography at Oxford University and venturing to remote, extreme locations—the hottest, coldest, wettest, and driest places on the planet—to investigate how indigenous people have adapted to harsh environments.

In an interview with the National Geographic Channel, Middleton recalls his trip to Oymyakon, in Siberia, which holds the chilly distinction of being the coldest permanently inhabited place on Earth.

Oymyakon sits just a few hundred miles south of the Arctic circle, about 500 miles (800 kilometers) east of Yakutsk, an industrial center on the banks of the river Lena in northeastern Russia. Temperatures here have plummeted to a record low of -96.16 degrees Fahrenheit (-71.2 degrees Celsius).

Why would people choose to live in such an inhospitable place?

Before the 1920s and 30s, Oymyakon was a seasonal stop for reindeer herders. But the Soviet government, in its efforts to settle nomadic populations—claiming they were difficult to control and technologically and culturally backward—made the site a permanent settlement.

What is there to eat so far north?

All people eat is reindeer and horsemeat. Medics say the reason they don't suffer from malnutrition is that there must be lots of micronutrients in their animals' milk.

There is a short summer season during which people can grow things. But for the most part people don't eat fruit or vegetables.

How do people keep warm?

Fur. Fur is considered a luxury in the West but it is the only thing that keeps you warm. Most of my crew wore synthetic fibers, and they were cold and miserable. My hat was raccoon, my coat was made from the skins of a flock of sheep, and I had knee-high reindeer boots. Reindeer fur is particularly good at keeping you warm, because the shaft of each hair is hollow, and the air [in the shafts] has an insulating effect.

You had a pretty icy introduction to Siberia when you arrived. You became a member of the Walrus Club [a group of people who swim in rivers and lakes in winter, sometimes called polar bear clubs in other parts of the world]. How did it feel to take an ice bath in the frozen river?

It was short and sweet, but my biggest concern was that I would have a heart attack. It isn't so much the water but getting out that is the worst—that brief moment between the water and contacting the air, which is about -22 Fahrenheit (-30 Celsius).

I lost it within minutes of getting out—it was as if I went into a state of shock. I began to lose feeling in my body and, for about 24 hours, walking was tricky and I felt out of it. It was difficult to think and remember, and I felt groggy, as if I had a bad hangover. I have no doubt that if the walrus club had not been there, I would have frozen to death.

You say these walrus clubs are becoming pretty popular up there. Is this just a macho tourist gimmick, or are there health benefits?

People really do believe that there are health benefits to bathing in icy water—they believe it is a way to avoid colds and pneumonia. And it's not restricted to the men; women and children also participate. It's a real community event.

There might be some truth to the stories. After all, the one member of [Robert] Scott's last Antarctic expedition who doused himself in icy water every morning was the only member not to get frostbite.

What are some other consequences of living in such a frigid environment?

Dealing with dead people. In permafrost zones, where the top few feet of ground tends to thaw in the summer and then refreeze, large buried objects tend to rise to the surface. This is particularly bad when buried coffins rise to the surface after several years.

The whole tradition of burial is not a Siberian one—it came from Europeans. Siberians used to perform sky burials where they would wrap the bodies in canvas and hang them from the trees, but the Soviet government probably discouraged this.

Sadly, a little girl died from pneumonia while we were visiting. To dig a grave, the townspeople lit a long bonfire for about an hour, which allowed the ground to thaw a little, then dug a couple of inches and repeated the process for a couple of days before they were able to bury the coffin.

Transportation can't be easy in those temperatures. How do people get around?

Cars and trucks housed in heated garages are fine. But diesel freezes at -58 Fahrenheit [-50 degrees Celsius]. It's a pretty common practice to light a bonfire beneath the fuel tank to keep it from freezing. Axle grease also freezes and is warmed with a blowtorch.

What effects did the cold have on your expedition? Did you run into any problems?

Pen ink freezes. Batteries lose power faster. Metal sticks to skin. The first time I tried to take some stills with my camera the metal stuck to my nose.

We had severe difficulties with filming. The eyepiece froze, and you couldn't see through it. The camera lenses did strange things, because the metal casings and screws holding the lenses in place were made of different metals that contracted at different rates and distorted the images—so really we had absolutely no idea whether we were actually shooting anything.

All the electronics in the video camera froze so film was the only technology that worked. But even the film would get brittle and crack.

What adaptations have the people of Oymyakon had to make to live in this environment?

In the last ten years, post-Soviet Union, people have returned to a more self-sufficient lifestyle. Everyone owns some livestock, and they rely on this livestock for food and for barter.

There are times when coal deliveries are irregular and the local power station—which makes indoor life bearable—must burn wood to keep hot water flowing to the homes. If the power ceases, the town shuts down in about five hours, and the pipes freeze and crack.

One of the guys who runs the power station hasn't been paid in nine months, but he keeps doing his job. There is a great sense of community. People do what they need to do to survive. For them, extreme [subzero] temperatures are normal.

Interviewed by Bijal P. Trivedi
Resouce: National Geographic Channel

 
Nick Middleton
Nick Middleton
Supernumerary Fellow in Physical Geography at St. Anne's College, Oxford.

Nick is a firm believer in the steadfastly geographical maxim that travel broadens the mind. So far, he has visited more than eighty countries, with a variety of excuses. He has reviewed industrial development in Mongolia for the UN Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO), and written information boards for a Kenyan National Park. He has taught earth sciences in Oman and investigated whale-watching in Ecuador, assessed educational tours in Ghana and led wildlife expeditions to Namibia.

Foreign travel also provides him with the material for his other geographical passion: writing travelogues - see The Last Disco in Outer Mongolia (Phoenix, 1992), Kalashnikovs and Zombie Cucumbers: Travels in Mozambique (Phoenix, 1994), Travels as a Brussels Scout (Phoenix, 1997), Ice Tea and Elvis: A Saunter through the Southern States (Phoenix, 2000). In 2002, he won the Royal Geographical Society's Ness Award in recognition of widening the public enthusiasm for geography through his travel writing, and his articles appear not infrequently in the travel section of the Sunday Times.

His most recent travelogues - Going to Extremes (Pan, 2003), Surviving Extremes (Pan, 2004) and Extremes along the Silk Road (J Murray, 2005) - have been written in association with three four-part television series.

More about him
at the School of Geography
Copyright © 2006 Sakha World XXI Century's Project.
Backed by the grant of Ministry of Youth Policy of the Sakha Republic (Yakutia).
In Russian & English Yakutia Daily Republic Newspaper. In Russian. Yakutia-Sakha News Agency. In Russian. People Search in Yakutia. English page. Tabyk International Ethno Music Festival. In English. Yakutia.Organized. In English. The Internet Community of Yakutians. Travel Agency. In Russian, English and Japanese.
  Sakha Songs Lyrics Sakha Rock Portal Youth of Yakutia SakhaMarket.com Aldan.Info