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Thread: Life in Russia

  1. Link to Post #261
    Avalon Member Ravenlocke's Avatar
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    Default Re: Life in Russia

    Russians with Attitude

    The news that actually matters: the new Federal Motorway M12 "Vostok" now reaches my city in the Urals

    A car trip to Moscow is now 16 hours (used to be 30), Kazan in 8 hrs (was 15)

    Westward road trips now take HALF the time - and it owns so hard.

    https://x.com/RWApodcast/status/1954963478768427367




    🇷🇺 Russia’s M-12 “Vostok” Highway: A Game-Changer for Eurasian Connectivity

    The new 275 km Dyurtyuli–Achit section completes a 2,500 km nonstop, high-speed corridor from St. Petersburg to Chelyabinsk, slashing travel times between Moscow and Yekaterinburg. Engineered for efficiency, the M-12 features automated tolls, a 3 km Volga River bridge, and zero traffic lights—bypassing congestion entirely.

    By 2026, the highway will reach Tyumen, forming the backbone of a 12,000 km route stretching to Vladivostok. The Moscow–Kazan segment alone has logged 24 million trips in under a year, proving its transformative impact.

    China has responded swiftly, pledging deeper transport cooperation as Putin pushes extensions toward China, Kazakhstan, Mongolia, and North Korea. This isn’t just infrastructure—it’s strategy: Russia’s road upgrades and China’s rail expansions are turning borders into economic gateways.

    The bottom line: Eurasia’s connectivity map is being redrawn—and these projects ensure both nations sit at its center.

    https://x.com/apocalypseos/status/1954983580293271561

    "Hope is the thing with feathers that perches in the soul and sings the tune without the words and never stops at all."
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  3. Link to Post #262
    UK Avalon Founder Bill Ryan's Avatar
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    Default Re: Life in Russia

    Copying this post by mountain_jim on the Animals are Magical thread:



    ~~~

    Only in Russia

    https://x.com/ClownWorld_/status/1955447918372196648

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  5. Link to Post #263
    Avalon Member norman's Avatar
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    Default Re: Life in Russia

    Quote Posted by norman (here)
    Entering Russia's "Most Dangerous Region"
    Matt and Julia - Jul 30, 2025

    Travelling through 'the most dangerous region' in Russia. Join us as we travel through Dagestan, Chechnya (Chechen Republic) and Ingushetia in the North Caucasus. This part of Russia, on the crossroads of Europe and Asia, is often feared by outsiders. Join us, as we attempt to hitchhike across this wild region of southern Russia and learn more about what life is really like here in 2025.




    Part 2 has been posted


    ENTERING CHECHNYA (Russia's Most Infamous Region)

    We're entering Chechnya, the most infamous republic in Russia, but what is life really like?

    Part 2 of our hitchhiking journey across the Russian North Caucasus takes us from Dagestan into Chechnya, crossing a remote high mountain pass few outsiders ever see. We explore isolated villages, meet locals in the rugged Chechen mountains, and eventually hitchhike all the way down to Grozny, the capital of Russia’s most infamous region. Before heading onwards to Ingushetia, the smallest republic in Russia.

    Chechnya is a place most people only know from headlines, but we want to show you the side you won’t see anywhere else. Join us as we traverse Dagestan, Chechnya and Ingushetia, share the stunning landscapes, and moments of connection with people who call this remarkable region home.

    This is what real life in Chechnya is like, and what it’s like to travel through the North Caucasus without a plan, relying only on the locals.


    ..................................................my first language is TYPO..............................................

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  7. Link to Post #264
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    Default Re: Life in Russia

    Seems in Russia thay are pushing more for censorship of internet like in west .
    Odd how similar it is . Lock-step just like it was with covid...

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  9. Link to Post #265
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    Default Re: Life in Russia

    Alaska Resident on Returning from Russia: Most of the people in the United States are brainwashed. They watch the news on television, and they believe that it’s true.

    I’ve had experiences when I come back from Russia and they say, “Is it true that the Russian economy is in shambles and that the Russian people are suffering?”

    And I always tell them, “No, they’re doing okay. They’re strong, and they’re doing okay, and you’re watching too much television.”

    The United States is a much more dangerous place than Russia.

    https://x.com/apocalypseos/status/1955709380097401036

    "Hope is the thing with feathers that perches in the soul and sings the tune without the words and never stops at all."
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  11. Link to Post #266
    UK Avalon Founder Bill Ryan's Avatar
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    Default Re: Life in Russia

    Quote Posted by Jaak (here)
    Seems in Russia thay are pushing more for censorship of internet like in west .
    Odd how similar it is . Lock-step just like it was with covid...
    Here are just a few more video titles from this guy's YouTube channel. (There are dozens more just like this.)
    • Russian Airports are COOKED
    • Russian AI Slop is insane
    • Russian Influencers are COOKED
    • 'Russia Has No Migrants'
    • Russian Reddit is Insufferable
    • Z Russians are EXTREMELY fragile
    • Russian Real Estate is COOKED...
    • The Psychosis of Russia's Victory Day
    • Even Children are Exposing Russia Now...
    • I Ranked Every Russian Food (2/10)
    • Why Russians Support Putin - The Shocking Truth
    • How Chinese Cars Took Over Russia - And Failed
    • The Russian Society is COOKED...
    • Did a BLACK MAN Create the Russian Language?
    • Russian Pop Culture has hit a new low
    • Putin's Russia vs Trump's America: Who's More WOKE?
    • Russian Propaganda is BEYOND PARODY now
    • Sigma Boy Song Accused of RUSSIAN PROPAGANDA
    • How Russia Jails YouTubers
    He's a Russophobe, and so are you. Here's a good thread for you to read and post on!

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  13. Link to Post #267
    Estonia Avalon Member
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    Default Re: Life in Russia

    Did you bother to watch the video ? Was there anything untruthful in it ?
    NFKRZ is Russian but true , he aint a fan of Putin and mainly talks about things in there he does not like or agree with .
    I post similar things about Trump/USA , EU and England way more than i do about Russia so i guess i have more phobias than one ...
    I do find it interesting that Russia is cranking up on internet censorship and made their own form of ¨digital ID¨ that they are pushing for the public just like it is happening in UK and EU .


    Max Messenger App
    MAX is a Russian messaging application developed by VK, released in 2025, and currently in its beta-testing stage as of July 2025.
    It is designed as a "superapp" similar to China's WeChat, integrating messaging with a wide range of services including electronic government services (Gosuslugi), digital identity verification, electronic signatures, and mobile payments via the Bank of Russia's Fast Payment System (FPS).
    The app is managed by "Communication Platform" LLC, a subsidiary of VK.
    Registration requires a valid mobile phone number, and the use of virtual or substitute numbers is not permitted.

    The app is being positioned as a national digital platform, with plans for it to be pre-installed on all officially released mobile devices in Russia starting 1 September 2025, following the publication of a federal law on 24 June 2025.
    This move is part of a broader government initiative to achieve "digital sovereignty" and reduce reliance on foreign technology.
    The Kremlin has also announced plans to ban foreign messaging platforms like WhatsApp, which is currently used by over 70% of the Russian population, with officials urging citizens to prepare for the transition.

    As of June 2025, the app had 1 million user accounts, and by July 2025, the number of registered users had exceeded 2 million.
    The app features personal and group chats, voice and video calls, file transfers up to 4 gigabytes, stickers, emoji, tools for creating chatbots and mini-applications, and integrates VK's GigaChat neural network.
    It is available on Android, iOS, Windows, and macOS, as well as a web application (web.max.ru) and a desktop client.

    Despite its features, MAX has faced significant criticism regarding user privacy and security. Reports indicate the app collects and stores user metadata, including IP addresses, contact lists, and activity timestamps, with its privacy policy allowing potential data transfer to third parties, including state authorities.
    Security researchers have also documented social-engineering attacks where impersonators trick users into revealing SMS verification codes to gain unauthorized access to government service accounts.
    Furthermore, the app incorporates open-source libraries from countries designated as "unfriendly" by Russia, and some telemetry data is routed to foreign servers, raising concerns about surveillance and data security.
    Last edited by Jaak; 14th August 2025 at 15:24.

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  15. Link to Post #268
    UK Avalon Founder Bill Ryan's Avatar
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    Default Re: Life in Russia

    Dear Friends, here's an extraordinary (and developing) story which I do think belongs here, because it's all about Russian character, strength and resolve. (@Jaak, this is to a great extent what this thread is about.)

    Russian mountaineers are the toughest in the world, equaled only by their Polish cousins. I posted this story on the All Sports thread back in 2021, and was so captured and astonished by it that I asked Mashika to please check the translation.

    It was the briefest account of an extraordinary, and extraordinarily moving, high drama on a huge, dangerous mountain in the Tien Shan range called Khan Tengri, where a woman called Natasha flatly refused to leave her husband and mountaineering partner Sergei, who had had a stroke.

    Here's the radio transcript. Do take a moment to read this. It may be impossible not to be greatly moved.

    ~~~
    Base: What is your current location?
    Natasha: Just below the summit. We are above 6800m.
    Base: How is he at this time?
    Natasha: He can't stand, he's lying on his side, he's very confused and he can't speak clearly.
    ...
    Base: Natasha, please reply.
    Natasha: I can hear you.
    Base: Help is coming your way, but they're nowhere near you yet. They're not going to be there until the morning. Natasha, you need to come down, there is nothing you can do to help him. Will you do that? Over.
    Natasha: I will not leave him.
    ...
    Base: Natasha, this is the doctor calling you, can you hear me?
    Natasha: Yes, I hear you.
    Base: Natasha, do you have children?
    Natasha: Yes, we have a baby.
    Base: You have to think about your baby. If you stay there through the night, he may be left without either of you. Can you understand me?
    Natasha: I understand everything. But I will not leave him.
    ...
    Base: Natasha, are you there?
    Natasha: I'm listening.
    Base: You need to go down, the weather is turning bad and soon it will be night.
    Natasha: I will not leave my husband. He can't take care of himself. I'm giving him water.
    Base: Will you stay there with him during the night?
    Natasha: Yes.
    Base: You need to dig a snow hole and shelter inside. Do not unclip from the rope. Don't fall asleep. Don't go to sleep. Keep moving all the time. Can you understand me?
    Natasha: Yes, I understand everything.
    ...
    (next morning)
    Base: Natasha, it's us.
    Natasha: I'm here.
    Base: Could you build the snow hole and shelter?
    Natasha: No, I could not, there is very little snow.
    Base: Natasha, keep hanging in there. Help is on the way, but they're going slowly. Please keep waiting.
    ...
    Base: This is base, please answer.
    Natasha: I can hear you. My husband is very bad. He is starting to freeze because he can't move, and he is delirious now.
    Base: Keep holding on, Natasha. Keep moving. Do not fall sleep. Keep on moving your legs.
    Natasha: Yes.
    ...

    6 a.m. August 9
    Base record: The two were found on the North face. Both were alive. Natasha could descend, but her husband was not able to, and he could not be moved.
    ~~~

    I never knew their full names, and never heard what happened after that. But I also never forgot the extraordinary radio exchange that was reported.

    ~~~

    Now, the story has resurfaced, because Natasha (her full name Natasha Nagovitsyna) is herself in a desperate, life-threatening situation, stranded high on a mountain called Peak Podeba. She has a broken leg and cannot move, and the entire Russian mountaineering fraternity is mobilizing to try to rescue her, a daunting and near-impossible task.

    What I'd not known was that after the incident on Khan Tengri (see the radio transcript above), Natasha became a national hero for her defiant refusal to leave her dying husband, in which she survived two nights out in the open in the bitter cold without any shelter, food or water. She became revered and greatly respected by even the toughest and strongest Russian climbers.

    And there's a touching story which she later told in a documentary film that was made about her ordeal. She and Sergei often used to enjoy a drink of kvass, which I'd not heard of before. Here's fun web page about it, in which it's compared to kefir or kombucha, a very mild alcoholic drink with a delicious fruity flavor.

    Sergei's last dying words to Natasha, high on Khan Tengri, were:
    I'd so much like a drink of kvass...
    One year after Sergei's death, Natasha climbed the mountain again, with two bottles of kvass and a brass plaque which she fixed to the mountain in Sergei's honor. She said:
    I'm not saying goodbye, because he is always with me.
    Here she is:











    ... and opening a bottle of kvass:





    But now, Natasha is in a truly desperate situation on Peak Pobeda. She's been alone on the mountain, with a broken leg, and has survived 7 days in a tent with no food, unable to move. Russia's strongest mountaineers have mobilized to try to rescue her. A team of eight of their very best will reach her in two more days, with medical supplies, food, spare clothing, and everything she may need. They'll certainly be able to get to her, hoping against hope that she's still alive.

    But then they have to bring her down. And she cannot even walk. The terrain is extremely steep, difficult and dangerous. No-one has ever been rescued from Peak Pobeda from such a height — 7150 meters/ 23,450 ft, which is where she is.

    Everyone in the Russian mountaineering community is praying for some kind of miracle. If anyone can rescue her successfully, her Russian colleagues can. If they somehow manage to do this, it'll be one of the most epic rescues (and most epic stories) in all of Russian climbing history.

    Last edited by Bill Ryan; 21st August 2025 at 00:19.

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  17. Link to Post #269
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    Default Re: Life in Russia

    A 47-year-old Russian climber has been stranded for a week at an altitude of over 7,000 meters on Pobeda Peak in Kyrgyzstan after breaking her leg during descent

    Identified as Natalia, she’s been without food since August 12, according to Mash online outlet. Her partner gave first aid before heading down for help. Attempts by two foreign climbers to rescue her failed due to exhaustion and bad weather. She was wrapped in a sleeping bag and left in place

    A helicopter rescue attempt also failed when turbulence forced a hard landing. Another mission is planned for Tuesday (Aug 19), weather permitting, but conditions remain grim with heavy snow and near-zero visibility. Drone footage shows Natalia alive inside a torn tent

    Pobeda or Victory Peak is also known as Jengish Chokusu, standing at 7,439 meters (24,406 ft) above sea level – it’s the highest mountain in the Tian Shan mountain system in Central Asia and 16th most prominent peak on Earth

    Natalia is no stranger to danger at altitude — four years ago, her husband was paralyzed on nearby Khan Tengri. She stayed with him until he died, only being evacuated herself. She later returned to place a memorial plaque in his honor

    #VictoryPeak #PobedaPeak #JengishChokusu #Kyrgyzstan

    https://x.com/re_flex_world/status/1957726567141941739



    A Russian mountaineer with a broken leg has been stranded for a week on Pobeda Peak in Kyrgyzstan.
    For seven days, Russian mountaineer Natalya Nagovitsyna has been at an altitude of 7,200 meters near Pobeda Peak in Kyrgyzstan. She broke her leg on the descent and was unable to continue.
    According to the Ministry of Defense of Kyrgyzstan, rescue operations have been aborted twice due to severe weather, including heavy snowfall and zero visibility. One of the helicopters made a hard landing, and the rescuers themselves needed assistance.
    Drone footage shows the mountaineer is alive and located in a damaged tent. She has almost no water and no food. Her climbing partner administered first aid and went for help, while foreign climbers who tried to evacuate Nagovitsyna only managed to wrap her in a sleeping bag and leave her at the site.
    The situation is complicated by the fact that several mountaineers have recently died in the mountains of Kyrgyzstan, including Russians Nikolai Totmyanin and Alexey Yermakov. Previously, in 2020, during an ascent of Khan Tengri, Nagovitsyna's husband suffered a stroke and died on the mountain at an altitude of about 6,900 meters. Rescuers offered to bring Natalya down without her husband, but she refused. She later returned to the summit and placed a memorial plaque there in his honor.
    Photo: social media

    https://x.com/sotanews/status/1957826746469802377

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  19. Link to Post #270
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    Default Re: Life in Russia

    From SOTA,

    Eight rescuers have been dispatched to search for a Russian woman on Pobeda Peak in Kyrgyzstan.

    A group of eight rescuers has been sent to Pobeda Peak in Kyrgyzstan to search for Russian mountaineer Natalya Nagovitsyna. The athlete has a broken leg and is located at an altitude of 7,200 m, TASS reports, citing a source in the Kyrgyz Ministry of Emergency Situations.

    According to the agency's source, the rescuers have almost reached the 5,000 m mark. The evacuation of the injured woman will take at least 6–8 days. The operation is complicated by severe weather conditions in the area of the peak. The group includes mountaineers from the Kyrgyz company "Ak-Sai Travel."

    We previously reported that a Russian mountaineer with a broken leg has been waiting for help for a week at an altitude of 7,200 m. Her situation is exacerbated by the lack of food and water, as well as bad weather, which is disrupting rescue operations.

    https://x.com/sotanews/status/1958176785591398479

    "Hope is the thing with feathers that perches in the soul and sings the tune without the words and never stops at all."
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  21. Link to Post #271
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    Default Re: Life in Russia

    https://x.com/meduza_en/status/1957897612054442385



    https://meduza.io/en/feature/2025/08...ns-turn-deadly

    Kyrgyzstan’s mountains turn deadly Russian climber is stranded in Kyrgyzstan with broken leg and no food as weather thwarts rescue attempts

    Meduza11:27 am, August 19, 2025

    47-year-old Russian mountain climber Natalia Nagovitsina is stranded on Pobeda Peak in Kyrgyzstan, the highest point in the Tian Shan range, after breaking her leg. She reportedly has little to no food and water, and weather conditions have hampered multiple rescue attempts. Nagovitsina’s husband died on a different mountain in Kyrgyzstan in 2021 during a climbing trip with her. The next rescue attempt is scheduled for August 20. Here’s what we know about the situation.

    Natalia Nagovitsina, a 47-year-old Russian mountain climber, broke her leg while descending from the 7,439-meter (24,400-foot) Pobeda Peak in Kyrgyzstan. She has been stranded at 7,000 meters (23,000 feet) for a week, according to two Telegram channels close to the Russian security services.

    The channels’ sources report that Nagovitsina has little to no food and water. Kyrgyzstan’s Emergency Situations Ministry and Defense Ministry have confirmed that rescue efforts are underway, but poor weather is hampering the operation.


    According to Telegram channels and other media reports, Nagovitsina was injured on August 12. Her climbing partner administered first aid before going to base camp for help. The following day, two foreign climbers attempted to evacuate her, “but it didn’t work — fatigue and poor weather prevented it,” the channel Mash reported. The climbers reached her and wrapped her in a sleeping bag but were forced to leave her on the mountain.

    Mash released drone footage of Pobeda Peak, though it’s unclear when it was recorded. The video shows a torn tent. According to the channel, rescuers concluded from the footage that Nagovitsina is alive and inside the tent.

    The Defense Ministry’s press service said the drone spotted the climber at 7,200 meters (23,622 feet). “She is alive and has been in high-altitude conditions for seven days. Preparations are underway for a rescue operation to transport her,” ministry spokesperson Almaz Sarbanov told Interfax. He added that two Defense Ministry helicopters are ready to fly to the site, but deploying aircraft is currently impossible due to heavy snowfall and low visibility.

    A source at Kyrgyzstan’s Emergency Situations Ministry told REN TV that rescuers last attempted to reach Pobeda Peak on August 16 using a Defense Ministry helicopter. Due to the weather, the helicopter made a hard landing, injuring the pilot and rescuers from a private tourist company. A second helicopter was needed to evacuate them, and the injured were taken to a hospital.

    Kyrgyzstan’s Emergency Situations Ministry said the next attempt to rescue Nagovitsina is scheduled for Wednesday, August 20.

    Nagovitsina’s son, Mikhail, told REN TV about his parents’ hobby of climbing. His father, Sergey Nagovitsin, died on another peak in Kyrgyzstan, Khan Tengri, in 2021.

    According to the Telegram channel 112, Sergey suffered a stroke at an elevation of 6,900 meters (22,637 feet). Despite rescuers’ pleas, Natalia, who was accompanying her husband, refused to leave him on the mountain and descend alone. Sergey died, while Natalia was rescued. A year later, she returned to the mountain and placed a memorial plaque in his honor. Filmmaker Dmitry Sinitsyn later made a documentary about the couple’s story titled “To Stay With Khan Tengri.”

    The Kyrgyzstani Defense Ministry reported that several climbers have been injured or killed in recent days in the country’s mountains. A German and a Russian climber were injured while descending a peak, and an Italian climber died. The exact dates were not specified, but the injured climbers and the body of the deceased were also supposed to be evacuated by the helicopter that made the hard landing on August 16. The climbers’ names were not disclosed.

    Additionally, on August 11 in Bishkek, Nikolai Totmyanin, a Russian climber and captain of the Russian national climbing team, died after summiting Pobeda Peak. On August 16, Russian climber Alexey Yermakov died on Khan Tengri at 6,800 meters (19,000 feet).
    Last edited by Bill Ryan; 21st August 2025 at 00:14. Reason: Added the article's image of Pobeda Peak
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  23. Link to Post #272
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    Default Re: Life in Russia

    I really appreciate all the detailed updates. This new incident had quite an emotional effect on me, having been so struck by her heroic 2021 experience in which in desperate, freezing, exposed conditions high on the mountain she flatly refused to leave her dying husband until the very end.

    Quote Posted by Ravenlocke (here)
    Fthe rescuers have almost reached the 5,000 m mark. The evacuation of the injured woman will take at least 6–8 days.
    With fortune on their side, they may well reach her by the end of tomorrow. If it's humanly possible, they will do it.

    The long, difficult and dangerous descent, if they and she all survive, will be one of the most celebrated in all of Russian mountaineering history. But the rescue team will have everything necessary to take care of her and safeguard the descent. In many stages of that, she'll have to be lowered carefully and slowly as if she were a dead weight — which is why it may take them 6-8 days.

    Natalya ('Natasha' to everyone who knows her) is immensely strong, and once the rescuers reach her that alone will surely be enough to keep her alive through the week-long ordeal to follow. One of the many very negative aspects of the situation she's in is that she has no radio and does not know that rescue is on its way. So in many respects, the next 24 hours is absolutely critical.

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    Default Re: Life in Russia

    I hope they save her, too. And I hope her son will see his mother again..
    "Hope is the thing with feathers that perches in the soul and sings the tune without the words and never stops at all."
    - - - - Emily Elizabeth Dickinson. 🪶💜

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    Default Re: Life in Russia

    Translated text:
    "Alone at an altitude of seven thousand one hundred meters with a broken leg and no communication" — the relatives of mountaineer Nagovitsyna, stranded on Pobeda Peak in Kyrgyzstan, are not losing hope for her return. Authorities are preparing a rescue operation. RIA Novosti investigated the situation

    https://ria.ru/20250820/proisshestviya-2036549727.html

    https://x.com/rianru/status/1958199444614119540

    "Hope is the thing with feathers that perches in the soul and sings the tune without the words and never stops at all."
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    Default Re: Life in Russia

    Translated text:

    Rumors of death are speculation": rescuers are making their way to the Russian mountaineer

    https://rsport.ria.ru/20250821/alpin...7786.html?in=l

    https://x.com/rsportru/status/1958443728265200043

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    Default Re: Life in Russia

    Translated text:

    The Mountaineering Federation called the situation with the Russian climber in the mountains of Kyrgyzstan hopeless

    A group of four climbers has already set out to help Natalia Nagovitsyna. Their journey will take at least 3-5 days.

    Source: "KP" website // Photo: social media
    #news #kyrgyzstan

    https://x.com/kpru/status/1958167915619836042



    RT Russian,

    The operation to rescue Russian woman Natalia Nagovitsyna, who broke her leg eight days ago on Peak Pobeda in Kyrgyzstan, may take a week. The situation is complicated by bad weather https://ru.rt.com/wnu7

    https://x.com/RT_russian/status/1958225221443362861




    Two attempts at rescue have already failed, she has run out of food, and she only has a little water left with her.

    https://x.com/24ur_com/status/1958091474177851634

    "Hope is the thing with feathers that perches in the soul and sings the tune without the words and never stops at all."
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    UK Avalon Founder Bill Ryan's Avatar
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    Default Re: Life in Russia

    Quote Posted by Ravenlocke (here)
    Translated text:

    The Mountaineering Federation called the situation with the Russian climber in the mountains of Kyrgyzstan hopeless.
    That's not quite correct (about what was said), but I am fearing now it may indeed be close to hopeless.

    The story is all over the Russian media. Foreign Ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova has even made a statement about the situation.

    What Eduard Kubatov, President of the Kyrgyz Federation of Mountaineering and Sport Climbing, actually said was this:
    "The probability of Russian mountaineer Natalia Nagovitsyna being rescued from Pobeda Peak does not exceed 10%. I would very much like her to survive, but understand, she has been at an altitude of seven thousand meters for nine days already. Every day at this altitude the body dies by 10-12% from exhaustion, from oxygen deficiency. I believe that she is at the limit of her physical and vital capabilities," Kubatov said in a conversation with RIA Novosti.
    Also reported was this:
    Russian climber Natalia Nagovitsyna, who has been on Pobeda Peak for nine days with a serious leg injury, has stopped showing signs of life, but the rescue operation is still ongoing. The unique complexity of the terrain and extreme weather conditions make evacuation attempts unprecedentedly dangerous and require exceptional measures.

    The rescue team faced enormous difficulties: an altitude of over 7,000 meters, temperatures below minus 23 degrees, snowstorms and the risk of fatal falls into the abyss. An assessment of the last drone flight on August 19 showed that Nagovitsyna was still showing signs of life, but by August 20 she was already motionless, which worsens the chances of a successful rescue.
    ~~~

    I posted above that when Natasha returned to climb Khan Tengri in 2022, with two bottles of kvass and a brass plaque to honor her husband Sergei, she had said:
    I'm not saying goodbye, because he is always with me.
    It has to be possible that after abandoning hope herself she has consciously decided to join him.


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    Default Re: Life in Russia

    Hi Bill,

    This song has been playing in my head all morning after reading your post. Maybe it is just me but the words, “Say it loud say it clear, you can listen as well as you hear” keep playing. I love this song for what it means here is a version of it.

    "Hope is the thing with feathers that perches in the soul and sings the tune without the words and never stops at all."
    - - - - Emily Elizabeth Dickinson. 🪶💜

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    Default Re: Life in Russia

    Mission to Save Natalia Nagovitsyna on Pobeda Peak ‘Hopeless,’ Say Russian Authorities

    Rescuers are on their way. They progressed today:

    https://x.com/KrisAnnapurna/status/1958634597870080375



    https://explorersweb.com/natalia-nag...a-pobeda-peak/

    Mission to Save Natalia Nagovitsyna on Pobeda Peak ‘Hopeless,’ Say Russian Authorities

    The race to save Russian climber Natalia Nagovitsyna, stranded at 7,150m on Kyrgyzstan’s 7,439m Pobeda Peak with a broken leg, grows desperate.

    For nine days, the 47-year-old Moscow climber has endured subzero temperatures. She is running or has run out of food, water, and fuel, and is lying in a torn tent in a sleeping bag in one of the world’s deadliest high-altitude environments. She has no communication device.

    A four-person rescue team, dispatched by Kyrgyzstan’s Ministry of Defense on August 20, reached Camp 2 yesterday and 5,800m today, according to Anna Piunova of Mountain.ru. Tomorrow, weather permitting, they will continue up to 6,400m.



    The route that the rescuers are currently ascending. Photo: Anna Piunova/Mountain.ru

    Increasing pessimism

    The Russian Mountaineering Federation issued stark warnings today about the slim odds that Nagovitsyna can survive. Vice-President Alexander Pyatnitsyn said, “It will be almost impossible to save her,” he said. “There’s a three-kilometer-long ridge, and it takes at least 30 people in such a situation to rescue a person from there.”

    Elena Laletina from RussianClimb echoed the same thoughts to ExplorersWeb: that four or even eight rescuers aren’t enough to carry out such a difficult rescue, where Nagovitsyna is immobilized and can’t assist.

    Alexander Yakovenko of the Russian Mountaineering Federation told Izvestia, “Today, four people are trying to get there. There’s an avalanche hazard, a big challenge. There is a small chance they will make it. But that means three, four, maybe five more days.”

    Yakovenko added that the rescuers themselves risk being caught in an avalanche, underscoring the perilous conditions on the mountain. Yakovenko even went so far as to describe the situation as “hopeless.”

    “If she’s alive, I’ll believe in a miracle,” he told Pravda Greece. “If she is saved, then I will believe in a miracle twice over.”

    A long way

    One of the closest starting points for climbing Pobeda Peak is the South Inylchek camp, located 3.5 vertical kilometers below. The distance between base camp and the summit is an astonishing 12km.

    The process is further complicated by unfavorable weather, and the terrain where the Russian woman is stranded makes it difficult to bring her down. Her tent lies in the same spot where climber Mikhail Ishutin died 10 years ago. His body has still not been retrieved. Even in ideal weather, specialists would need at least two days to bring the stranded woman down.

    To ascend Pobeda from Base Camp to summit usually takes 5-10 days, or 5-7 days for experienced, well-acclimatized climbers, if the weather is not bad. The descent typically takes 2-4 days. Since Nagovitsyna is at around 7,150m, rescuers could reach her before the weekend.

    Nagovitsyna came to Pobeda, also known as Jengish Chokusu, to pursue the Snow Leopard title. This old honor is bestowed on those who’ve climbed all five 7,000m peaks in the former USSR. By reputation, Pobeda is the hardest, and it marked her fifth summit. But on her way down on August 12, she slipped and fractured her leg. Her climbing partner, Roman, provided first aid, secured her in a tent, then descended to base camp to seek help.

    On August 13, Italian climber Luca Sinigaglia and a German mountaineer named Gunther (no last name provided) reached her, delivering a sleeping bag, stove, and gas canister — supplies critical for her survival. Tragically, on August 16, Sinigaglia died on his way down. His body is now resting in a cave at 6,900m. Gunther, exhausted and battling worsening weather, also retreated, unable to carry Nagovitsyna by himself across the treacherous terrain.

    Complicated rescue

    The three-kilometer-long ridge at 7,000–7,400m on Pobeda demands fixed ropes, anchors, and a stretcher to carry an immobilized climber. This, in turn, requires multiple climbers to rotate duties and manage fatigue. The thin air, -20°C temperatures, and strong winds exacerbate exhaustion and altitude risks. Meanwhile, a large team is needed to share the heavy gear — ropes, medical supplies, food, and gas. Safety backups are critical, as avalanches or injured rescuers could derail the mission. The four-person team, described as insufficient by experts, faces a near-impossible task, with progress slowed by snowstorms and poor visibility.

    Pobeda Peak’s reputation as the deadliest 7,000m peak in the former USSR is well-earned, with at least 70 recorded deaths. No injured climber has ever been evacuated from as high an altitude as Nagovitsyna’s on this mountain.

    On August 16, a Russian Ministry of Defense Mi-8 helicopter crashed at 4,600m, injuring the pilot and a rescuer, while a second attempt failed due to zero visibility. On August 19–20, helicopters evacuated 62 climbers, tourists, and rescuers, including the body of Russian climber Alexey Yermakov, who died near Khan Tengri. Nagovitsyna’s extreme altitude and immobility forced them to concentrate on more accessible parties in distress.

    No news on Nagovitsyna

    A drone flyover on August 19 confirmed she was alive, but unconfirmed reports on August 20-21 suggested that Nagovitsyna is no longer showing signs of life.

    However, according to Kyrgyzstan’s Emergency Situations Ministry, quoted by Pravda, no one can confirm Nagovitsyna’s current status until rescuers reach her, which is estimated to be August 24-25.

    Nagovitsyna’s chances of surviving beyond 10–12 days are slim due to extreme cold, thirst, and thin air. Nevertheless, rescuers continue to race to her, battling harsh weather and treacherous terrain in the faint hope of saving her life.

    Nagovitsyna’s son and her sister, in particular, cling to hope.
    Last edited by Bill Ryan; 21st August 2025 at 23:58. Reason: added the linked image
    "Hope is the thing with feathers that perches in the soul and sings the tune without the words and never stops at all."
    - - - - Emily Elizabeth Dickinson. 🪶💜

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    Default Re: Life in Russia

    Rescue efforts for Natalia Nagovitsyna, stranded for 10 days at 7,150m on Pobeda Peak, were called off today as winds intensified and snow closed in.

    https://x.com/ExplorersWeb/status/1958982049483587934



    https://explorersweb.com/pobeda-peak-rescue-called-off/


    Tragedy on Pobeda Peak: Rescue Called Off as Weather Worsens


    Rescue efforts for Russian climber Natalia Nagovitsyna, who has been stranded for 10 days at 7,150m on Pobeda Peak with a broken leg, were called off today as winds intensified and snow closed in.

    The four rescuers descended to Camp 1, according to Anna Piunova of Mountain.ru. They had wanted to progress up to 6,400m today and also to search for the body of Luca Sinigaglia of Italy. He died on August 16 after trying to rescue Nagovitsyna.

    But bad weather had the last word, and they had to descend, ending the rescue mission. The weather also canceled a planned helicopter flight with Italian pilots. Forecasts show poor conditions through August 23–24. Rescuers may begin a further attempt on August 25, but Nagovitsyna has already been stranded for 10 days above 7,000m, injured. Her few supplies have run out by now, and even today, there is not much hope of finding her alive.

    The rescue team of Vitaly Akimov, Andrey Alipov, Sergey Krasovsky, and Andrey Novikov has been racing since August 20 to reach Nagovitsyna. The leader, Akimov, already has an injury he sustained during an early attempt to rescue Nagovitsyna on August 16, according to Elena Laletina of RussianClimb.

    https://explorersweb.com/wp-content/...8/IMG_5691.jpg

    Natalia Nagovitsyna at the Moscow Marathon in 2024. Photo: Natalia Nagovitsyna/Instagram

    Inexperienced guide

    Nagovitsyna, a 47-year-old Muscovite, was a commercial client, led by a guide named Roman, according to Life.ru. No one knew him at base camp, suggesting that he might have been unfamiliar with Pobeda’s deadly routes. During their descent on August 12, Nagovitsyna fell at the dangerous Black Rock section, breaking her leg while belaying Roman from above.

    Friends called this situation “absurd,” arguing that a client shouldn’t belay an inexperienced guide.

    “This mountain doesn’t forgive such mistakes,” said Denis Kiselev, a rescuer and instructor at the Central School of Mountaineering Instructors.

    Nagovitsyna climbed despite an earlier leg fracture from a hike a year and a half ago. Her late husband, Sergey, who died of a stroke on Khan Tengri in 2021 as she stayed by his side, had warned her against Pobeda, citing its extreme physical demands. According to some sources, Luca Sinigaglia met the Russian couple at Khan Tengri in 2021, and they became friends.

    Boris Dedeshko, a five-time Kazakh mountaineering champion, told KP.ru that in 2024, Nagovitsyna tried Pobeda, but her guide turned her back because she was unprepared. But a friend, Lia Popova, said she had trained hard for the Snow Leopard badge. Pobeda was her fifth 7,000m peak; she had only two left after this one.

    She joined the expedition as the only woman in a mixed group. Life.ru notes Nagovitsyna’s insurance may not cover the $60,000 rescue cost, potentially leaving her 27-year-old son to cover much of the bill.
    "Hope is the thing with feathers that perches in the soul and sings the tune without the words and never stops at all."
    - - - - Emily Elizabeth Dickinson. 🪶💜

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