Oymyakon village is in eastern Siberia is closer to the Arctic Circle than it is to the nearest city. A monument in the town square commemorates the day in 1924 when the temperature fell to a record 96 degrees below zero Fahrenheit. Oymyakon, north of the Sea of Okhotsk, is the coldest permanently inhabited place on earth. Oymyakon is a rural locality (a selo) in Oymyakonsky District of the Sakha Republic, Russia, located along the Indigirka River, 30 kilometers (19 mi) northwest of Tomtor on the Kolyma Highway. By winter average temperatures, it is the coldest permanently inhabited settlement on Earth.
It is named after the Oymyakon River, whose name reportedly comes from the Even word kheium, meaning "unfrozen patch of water; place where fish spend the winter". However, another source states that the Even word heyum (hэjум) (kheium may be a misspelling) ,which means "frozen lake", may be where it gets its name. Oymyakon has two main valleys beside it. These valleys trap wind inside the town and create the colder climate. The temperatures here are extremely cold throughout the year, and it snows frequently. Schools are closed if it is colder than −55.0 °C (−67.0 °F).
The tall concrete statue of a huge bull in the center of town marks the coldest temperature to be ever recorded in any inhabited place on earth. Ironically, the meaning of Oymyakon in Russian is “water that doesn’t freeze.” The settlement was established in the 1920s when the winter herders would water their reindeer at a thermal spring over there and thought it would be ideal for them to settle in.
Over the last few decades, the population of Oymyakon has shrunk significantly. The village had a peak population of roughly 2,500 inhabitants, but that number has decreased to fewer than 900 in 2018. With an extreme subarctic climate, Oymyakon is known as one of the places considered the Northern Pole of Cold, the other being the town of Verkhoyansk, located 629 km (391 mi) away by air. The ground is permanently frozen.
There is a monument built around the town square commemorating a reading in January 1924 of −71.2 °C (−96.2 °F). This was shown on the Australian program 60 Minutes in a 2012 documentary.On 6 February 1933, a temperature of −67.7 °C (−89.9 °F) was recorded at Oymyakon's weather station.This was the coldest officially recorded temperature in the Northern Hemisphere. Only Antarctica has recorded lower official temperatures (the lowest being −89.2 °C (−128.6 °F), recorded at Vostok Station on 21 July 1983).
The weather station is in a valley between Oymyakon and Tomtor. The station is at 750 m (2,460 ft) above sea level and the surrounding mountains, at 1,100 m (3,600 ft), cause cold air to pool in the valley: in fact, recent studies show that winter temperatures in the area increase with altitude by as much as 10 °C (18 °F).
Some years the temperature drops below 0 °C (32 °F) in late September and may remain below freezing until mid-April. In Oymyakon sometimes the average minimum temperature for December, January, and February remains below −50 °C (−58 °F). Sometimes summer months can also be quite cold, but June, July and August are the months where the temperature has never dropped below −14 °C (7 °F). Oymyakon and Verkhoyansk are the only two permanently inhabited places in the world that have recorded temperatures below −60.0 °C (−76 °F) for every day in January. The climate is quite dry, but as average monthly temperatures are below freezing for seven months of the year, substantial evaporation occurs only in summer months. Summers are much wetter than winters.
Temperature in Oymyakon goes down below zero during most part of the year and the average temperature in the town falls to -58 degrees Celsius in the winters. There comes a time when the temperature reaches a point where the brain goes numb, people keep the engines of their vehicles running 24/7 and eat heavy meat products to stay alive! But human brains work quite differently; they have come up with myriad tricks to survive the cold in their town.
Residents here use outhouses as indoor plumbing freezes most of the time. Pipes freeze, leading to outhouses. The cold sometimes gets so unbearable that your eyelashes and saliva will freeze into painful little needles on your face as you walk down the street. This happens only very rarely and is not of a concern if you are not wandering about the town for long hours. Even vodka or any alcohol for that matter will freeze if a bottle is left outside.They have heated garages to keep the cars. Farming is not possible on the frozen land so folks mainly survive on a carnivorous diet. If you ever plan to visit this place, you’ll get reindeer meat and frozen fish as local delicacies. Another prominent cuisine of the place is ice cubes made using horse blood served with macaroni. All these are absolutely must have to survive in this cold place.
But then at the end of every dark winter completed, the town hosts the “Cold Pole Festival,” which is hosted by Chyskhaan which is a pagan spirit that the Yakutians celebrate. He invites the whole world into his frigid domain every year in March for reindeer races, dog sledging, ice fishing, and other merry activities that all local participate in. But since Oymyakon is a two-day long drive from Yakutsk, the nearest airport, the prospect of reaching the place can be tiresome for some but for the adventure hearted, it will be exciting and fun.
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