ey_tony
Established Member
I used to visit Russian friends regularly when they lived in the South Urals/Siberia region of Russia about 20 years ago.
The first time I arrived in Moscow in winter it was snowing and a few inches deep but when I got on the second flight to the provincial airport in the Urals and it landed, there was over a foot of snow or more on the edge of the runway where we disembarked. We had to plod through it to get to the terminal building.
While out there the temperature never got warmer than about minus 12 C and dropped to about-15 to -22 in the evenings though I was reliably informed by the local elders that it often dropped to -30 most winters so I was the lucky one.
The most striking thing I noticed was that transport wasn't affected and everything just ran as usual with no one complaining...they just got on with it.
The first time I arrived in Moscow in winter it was snowing and a few inches deep but when I got on the second flight to the provincial airport in the Urals and it landed, there was over a foot of snow or more on the edge of the runway where we disembarked. We had to plod through it to get to the terminal building.
While out there the temperature never got warmer than about minus 12 C and dropped to about-15 to -22 in the evenings though I was reliably informed by the local elders that it often dropped to -30 most winters so I was the lucky one.
The most striking thing I noticed was that transport wasn't affected and everything just ran as usual with no one complaining...they just got on with it.