What amazes me the most is how despite of living in the most extreme climate in the world you Sakha people has such an ecofriendly and sustainable way of life. Just taking, very respectully, what you need from nature
Wow, the quality of the meat and fish looks amazing. You can tell that they were healthy animals raised naturally. I would love a video on Yakutsk folk beliefs you learn growing up. Every culture has so many interesting little stories or reasons for doing certain things, like for example they eat more lamb meat in Mongolia in the winter as they believe it warms the body (and I agree with them!). Sakha people must have many interesting methods for surviving the cold like this!
of course it's amazing because the temperature is extremely cold most of the time of the year that it's very difficult for animal protein to decompose. the climate on the average is colder than the temperature inside your freezer.
Hi Maria! I'm from Moscow and I love your videos) Living in central Russia we don't get so much information about other regions of our huge country, so your channel is a real find. I hope I'll get a chance to visit Yakutia one day :)
I'm from India and we feel we are so blessed to have everything, but we people don't use it in proper way and safeguard our Mother Nature, but the other hand, you guys save food and water for whole year, we bow our head with great respect to you all..looking forward to see many more such inspiring videos from you.. Thank you🙂
Hello. I am Japanese. I always enjoy watching videos. I recently learned about Yakutia. Culture, people, nature, food and lifestyle are very attractive and interesting to me. I want to travel to Yakutia someday. Please continue to distribute a lot of videos🤗
Якутия очень большая. Интересней всего в Южной Якутии. Зимой очень красиво. Можно проехать на поезде от Хабаровска почти до Якутска. От Нерюнгри до Якутска поезд идёт почти по дикой тайге.
Hi! I am from Canada. I love your videos as they remind me of the life my parents lived when I was growing up. I experienced that life as a child, my parents did all the hard work needed to keep their kids alive (ie my brothers and sisters).
I love yakutia and the whole Siberian region living,and the people who are living there are so cool like the temperature, looking forward for more videos on this winter season...👍🏕️🙏🇮🇳
2 things blew my mind - that pram which had skis instead of wheels! And the fact so many people were there bare-handed! I can barely cope with 0 degrees with bare hands, I'd be in so much pain at -20, I don't know how they do it! Fantastic video as always :)
Hi Maria, I enjoy 😉 your videos, because it makes me think how other people live. Your presentation voice is calm and confident. Greetings from Switzerland 🇨🇭
Fascinating 🤩 great to see also you know exactly where your meat s coming from. And no wastage - all parts of the animal seem to be eaten. I would love to try your favourite dish - the dried fish. That’s does look a tasty treat.
If we were all eating this way... fresh, in season, local foods, meat, dairy, fruits and vegetables - much of humanity’s disease would probably be eliminated. ❤️
Hello Maria, I'm just wondering what yakut looks like during the summer?I'm from a tropical country Philippines and I wish to to experience your weather.
Excellent video Maria! I am impressed that the vendors have such a wide variety of meat and they they present their products to look appetizing to the customers.
I'm curious about the nature of why the markets change their location. Also, I think it's woven in your way of life, but in your own experiences, are there any aspects of living there you find still challenging or limiting?
I became a vegetarian because in the U.S. I feel so uncomfortable with the levels of exploitation (animal and worker) in the food chain. I thought this would make me uncomfortable to see so much meat, but it didn't. Thank you for sharing this with us! I feel so happy to know that there are still traditional ways of farming animals that seem to respect both the animal but more importantly the people.
I am not American, I am Canadian. It is a bit more expensive (Unfortunately) but I can regularly find well raised, quality meat products where I live. If you are ok eating meat that is ethically sourced, it is possible, albeit pricey. If you are so inclined, try it out a few times. I am not vegetarian, but I can respect somebody who makes that choice for this reason, and not because of the diet fad of the year, or similar reasons.
when you live in a climate like yakutsk. it's very difficult to be a vegetarian because the climate is at freezing temperature most time of the year and therefore grains and vegetables can't grow there.
@rumplemusic there are PLENTY of options here in the US, for sourcing meat/animal products other than a grocery store. That’s a very shallow way of thinking, and that mindset is the very REASON the US food system is the way it is!
Hello maria! I am from the philippine which is located in south east asia. Ours is a tropical country that consists of 700 Islands and islets. Our topography is much different from yours. Almost everything you see is green with variety of trees and plants. We are sorrounded by sea water which in the east is the pacific ocean and on the west is china sea that is why we are abundant of sea foods. We have only 2 season - rainy and summer. I dream to vist and experience to live in a very cold country like yours which looks everything is white bcoz of the snow. You speak in a soft voice which i like to hear. I like all your videos and describe your country. Thank you and God bless you always.
I got to say Maria without videos like this we would never know what it would be like living in Siberia. now I never ate horse before but it looks interesting.
It is so nice to see you explaining life survival in Yukutia. They have to have jobs to get money to get things there. What do they do ? Interesting videos.
Wow thank you for shating your life maria! A warm wave from Philippines... i dream in living where u are right now! Thank u for a glimpse of what life will be in ur country. Stay safe!
Maria! I love your videos! One question: where do people store such big meat amounts later at home? During winter I'm sure it's not a problem as long as you have a balcony or something, but then for summer? Do you have like extra big freezers at home? I would never be able to fit so much food into mine!
Hi! Yes, people have big freezers at their houses/apartments to store big amounts of meat. We normally start to use them in spring, when it’s impossible to store meat outside and there is less meat than in autumn since some part of it is already consumed.
Конечно, зимой на балконе, у многих морозильные камеры и лари. Летом на даче в леднике - булуусе храним мясо и рыбу. У кого дом, там вообще нет проблемы.
hello! How long does the open-air meat market usually last? just for the whole month of November? As someone who grew up in a tropical country, it’s so interesting to see how people from colder climates get their meat like this, and the culture/tradition behind it. Thank you so much for sharing this! I love watching your videos and look forward to more uploads in the future ☺️ P.S. it’s my first time seeing a baby being dragged around in a stroller/sled hybrid (with the orange blanket by the end of the video)! It makes so much sense but it’s so fascinating for me to see since I’m not used to seeing one.
It works almost whole year, but the products change depending on a season. In summer and autumn more fresh vegetables, in winter and spring normally meat and fish and other frozen products 🤗
We don't get much snow in my country anymore (climate change 😥) but when I was a kid, everyone in my kindergarten had a sled and our parents would pull us on it to the kindergarten.
@@SvobodovaEva the weather is changing in not a good direction now, but at least you have those good memories to remember by! That must have been a fun experience to have 😊😊😊
Sad You didn't add how you made straganina and if I good remember the second one was a deer met. It was served to me cold still frozen. I remember we deep it just in some fat. This sun-dried fish was cool also I was eating a smaller one and the host shows me how you cracked them using a table. The 'salo' also was good and some fat on the skin from a whale. About this place, I was impressed that people stand all day long ( I was in January and I could not stand more than 45 min outside.)Och adding when I was the market was close to the frozen pond Is it still in the same place?
How are you, Maria, I am from Yemen. I follow you. I and my four children all love you. I hope to visit your country, especially a city. BERDIGESTYAKH I hope you make a loop on this city, the best thing is its people.
I am an American and I’m so thankful to see such a beautiful woman share her country, family and friends to the world. What a wonderful corner of the world. Her ancestors were mighty strong people to thrive in such a cold place with only primitive surroundings. I applaud your spirit and beauty!
Another awesome video thank you. May I just suggest you move your lighting so its not in your eyes? It make your eyes look a little strange. I hope you don't mind me mentioning this?
Hey, yeah, I make my videos in a very short period of time, and that day I had to choose good sound or good picture. I chose the first one😅 I hope one day I will get to the level when the picture and sound both are fine.
So interesting to see how you live in such cold extremes! I was wondering how you prepare and cut up food in very cold weather especially when you can't really defrost meats.
I am curious about how much meat would a family of 3-4 people buy to last them the year if they only buy it once? I absolutely love your videos by the way, I wait for them every week :)
Hey! Thanks! It depends on every family, some people eat more, some less meat, but on average family of 4 people needs around 100 kilos of beef and 50 kilos of horse meat for one year.
My family of five buys meat once a year (autumn-winter). We usually buy beef leg and horse meat. This is enough, as during the year we sometimes get chicken, fish or turkey from the usual shops. 40-50 kg
@@awkawkawkx I kind of guessed that. You have the same shopping list. 😉 So roughly 1 kilo of meat a week plus fish and birds to five persons? And what do you eat to that? Rice and potatoes? If you don’t mind me asking?
You are amazing, your channel is amazing, your voice is lovely. Your channel is the best. I have been watching it for two days now. It really makes me want to come to see this place. I also find it hilarious that you say with a straight face things like "in November it is not so cold yet". Yeh right, ONLY -25 🤣🤣🤣
I love this!! That’s a pretty good price for meat too. I live in a big dairy and cattle ranching area and have to pay twice that for good cuts of meat.
You are such a nice person and we love your voice ...is so relaxing watching your videos and learning more and more about this region wich i knew nothing before...all the best from us. Montreal😘👏🍁🍁🍁
Thanks for showing this video Also amaze me how people live And enjoy such a great and wonderful Place Blessings and best wishes From beautiful California
I have a question about vehicles, how the car starts its engine on -20,30,40,50? :D What techniques people there use to keep their car moving in such a cold conditions?
They don't turn the engine off.. escpecially at temperatures lower than -30°C it would be fatal because the water would in the system would freeze instantly and you can't turn your engine on without any problems. Also they have Special fuel there, that has a lower freezing point. One time I saw someone turned a fire under his engine to heat it up until he started it again.
@@MrMocren I kinda knew for the special fuel you're saying about, but they really like leave their car turned ON over night at parking lot? Really? I can imagine this if a person has a garage or something, but on public parking lot...?
@@FreedomFighters89 we have few options: preheated garages (most preferred), electric oil heaters, autonomous oil heaters like Webasto, special warm blankets for cars. Cover your car with insulated blanket, turn on the auto start by temperature on your car alarm and leave it like that on a parking. Car will autostart when engine's temperature fall to -5C, it works for 20..30 minutes then shuts down. When it's -45C outside car autostarts from 2 to 3 times during the night. P.S. we don't use water in cooling system, we use antifreeze that can hold -50C. And 0w40 motor oil.
Hi Maria. How do you have fresh fruit and vegetables brought in during the cold months without it freezing in the delivery trucks? I guess they would have to use heated trailers to transport them?
Ok this was a fascinating video, but just as another example of the simple differences between Yukutia and most other places, there was a pram sled at the end! I never would have thought that would be necessary but what's the point in pushing something with wheels when there is snow on the ground most of the time!
I see a lot of plastic usage for selling. Just wanted to ask since all if the meat is in hard and dry form wouldn't using paper bags as a method would be good for the place?
Dear Maria, I am new to your videos but have watched several of them in the last couple of days. Thank you for all your insight and information. I find your way of life interesting and though a bit secluded and autonomous it is certainly earth friendly. I believe our entire earth would be better off if we all lived in the manner in which you live. Harder? Yes. Better. Yes. Less population is a good thing. We could speak volumes. But I’ll just leave it at me saying, I really respect and enjoy watching your way of life. Thank you.
there is no any relation, it's just coincidence. We call ourselves Sakha, but Tungusic people can't pronounce it so they call us Yaka. During the conquest of Siberia Russians meet Tungusic people before they meet Sakha people. And from them Russians learn about Yaka people that live on the east and breed cows and horses. Russians transform Yaka to Yakut, and through Russian language Sakha are known in the world as Yakut.
many years ago I saw footage of someone carrying home their milk, not in a bottle or carton but tucked under their arm in a frozen slab. Is this actually true?
Hi maria i live also in cold as (ofw) (not at all snowy) country before but your city is huge of snow and zero visibilty...keep it up its not easy to live in icy city my lips is start to dry and bleeding also no water supply to take bath.in everyday. God bless maria keep safe...
I wish I could still go to the farmers market. I am now disabled and I miss talking to the farmers and buying great meat and vegetables. I used to go to places like the Ithaca farmers market here in NYState, USA.
@@XmanSully nerve and vein endings shrinking, need oxygen continually. And I am heading toward 80, but stress and heartache has contributed to bad health. The advice I can give is never clean out chicken coups and such without a mask, never lift too much weight, take it easy at least once a week and calm down. Take up meditation and yoga. Eat a balanced diet. Enjoy the body you live in and alway think " I am beautiful".
@@marjoriejohnson6535 Sorry to hear that. Would you say you have lived a satisfying life? I am 53 and I can honestly say I did a good job destroying my health. Too much weed, too much stress, too much chocolate. But it's never too late to change, isn't it? Btw, thank god for youtube
@@XmanSully probably the thing that is most disturbing now is not only the worry I have for my children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren but the state of the world. I do wish I had taken better care of myself and had not saved the fun things to do when I retired. Now I look at my studio ,packed with things I was going to do...and wish I had done them then.
What amazes me the most is how despite of living in the most extreme climate in the world you Sakha people has such an ecofriendly and sustainable way of life. Just taking, very respectully, what you need from nature
ecofriendly.......cars are turned on 24/7 in the winter.......
@@johnyseimah229 Yeah, they have to make choice: die or burn some fuel. No subway there, mate.
So interesting! I'd like to hear the local language...I'll keep looking!
Wow, the quality of the meat and fish looks amazing. You can tell that they were healthy animals raised naturally. I would love a video on Yakutsk folk beliefs you learn growing up. Every culture has so many interesting little stories or reasons for doing certain things, like for example they eat more lamb meat in Mongolia in the winter as they believe it warms the body (and I agree with them!). Sakha people must have many interesting methods for surviving the cold like this!
They looked like a block of wood
most of the fish is poached
of course it's amazing because the temperature is extremely cold most of the time of the year that it's very difficult for animal protein to decompose. the climate on the average is colder than the temperature inside your freezer.
Hi Maria! I'm from Moscow and I love your videos) Living in central Russia we don't get so much information about other regions of our huge country, so your channel is a real find. I hope I'll get a chance to visit Yakutia one day :)
....like about others cointries, too?
3:04 whoever pulls the knife out of that butter will be the next king/queen of dairy!
😂
Mahal ko na siya!
any update whose finally crowned????😁😁😁
You know when you live in a cold climate when -20 is a nice day 😆
I love learning about your culture!
I'm from India and we feel we are so blessed to have everything, but we people don't use it in proper way and safeguard our Mother Nature, but the other hand, you guys save food and water for whole year, we bow our head with great respect to you all..looking forward to see many more such inspiring videos from you.. Thank you🙂
Caucasian people, too
can't agree with you more.... From India as well and we are exploiting nature like anything
You don't speak for the whole country
@@divyadash2906 You very well know how corrupted........things are, I don't need to explain more and I don't wanna debate more on this
Please keep making these. These videos are so educational. I didn’t even know about Yakutia.
Sun dried fish in Aleutiq (Alaska coastal Native) language is also Yukala! ☺👍
Hello.
I am Japanese.
I always enjoy watching videos.
I recently learned about Yakutia.
Culture, people, nature, food and lifestyle are very attractive and interesting to me.
I want to travel to Yakutia someday.
Please continue to distribute a lot of videos🤗
I wonder how those big buildings were made...
Its incredible 😳😳😳
Якутия очень большая. Интересней всего в Южной Якутии. Зимой очень красиво. Можно проехать на поезде от Хабаровска почти до Якутска. От Нерюнгри до Якутска поезд идёт почти по дикой тайге.
@@igorserdyuk2061
Thank you for teaching me!
@@newbie1590
I am also interested too🤔
Hi!
I am from Canada. I love your videos as they remind me of the life my parents lived when I was growing up. I experienced that life as a child, my parents did all the hard work needed to keep their kids alive (ie my brothers and sisters).
I love yakutia and the whole Siberian region living,and the people who are living there are so cool like the temperature, looking forward for more videos on this winter season...👍🏕️🙏🇮🇳
There is a very earthy feel to your videos. Like I am there myself. Love it.
2 things blew my mind - that pram which had skis instead of wheels! And the fact so many people were there bare-handed! I can barely cope with 0 degrees with bare hands, I'd be in so much pain at -20, I don't know how they do it! Fantastic video as always :)
Humidity matters too
Love seeing markets in different countries!
From USA California , thanks for such an informative channel I love your country and life style -would love to visit !
In the US We call those “Farmers Markets”. Every town has one in summer. Never seen one in winter with frozen meet!
I really appreciate your work. And Respect you people who lives in extreme conditions. Love from India
Just found your channel… beautifully done! Very positive and uplifting to see such a different culture, language, and traditional society
Есть в ваших роликах что-то "настоящее". Это как сидя вечером с другом возле камина, говоришь с ним "за жизнь". Спасибо Вам!
That dried and salted fish looks amazing! But so did the rest. Thank you for showing us!
Waiving from Sweden to Yakutsk!
This is so interesting Maria ... I have Learnt so many new things about Yakutia ... pls keep posting more and more ... love your channel 😍
Thanks again Maria
Lovely video as always.
Well done on your question and answer video also your a natural.
Best wishes
Tom in Ireland
What a sight to see everything perfect and frozen like that!
Hi Maria, I enjoy 😉 your videos, because it makes me think how other people live. Your presentation voice is calm and confident. Greetings from Switzerland 🇨🇭
I love the music you put in your videos. it’s so peaceful and gives me hope. is there a way you can share your playlists please...! much much love.
Fascinating 🤩 great to see also you know exactly where your meat s coming from. And no wastage - all parts of the animal seem to be eaten. I would love to try your favourite dish - the dried fish. That’s does look a tasty treat.
that is how it works. where i come from we consume all parts of animals that we kill including its blood, except for its feces and urine.
Глазами все купила бы)) Всего захотелось!
is the nobody gonna talk about 3:08? is the customer helping the vendor cut the butter? if so that is hilarious.
If we were all eating this way... fresh, in season, local foods, meat, dairy, fruits and vegetables - much of humanity’s disease would probably be eliminated. ❤️
Why diseases? People used to eat like this for centuries and diseases were very much present.
So much variety! That's amazing. Will you share with us some more meat recipes from your region in the future? I'm quite curious:)
Hi cute😍😘😋😜🧐
no, only give you vegetable and fruit
@@inderjeetsingh2831 why is it always you guys?
Hi
Hello Maria, I'm just wondering what yakut looks like during the summer?I'm from a tropical country Philippines and I wish to to experience your weather.
Excellent video Maria! I am impressed that the vendors have such a wide variety of meat and they they present their products to look appetizing to the customers.
Very interesting. Thank you for giving us an insight into life in your beautiful country.
I don’t think I can survive such a cold environment. Hats off to them for withstanding this weather.
Being a meat cutter from the USA it is really interesting seeing this market with the meat. Do the farmers cut it themselves then take it to market?
I'm curious about the nature of why the markets change their location. Also, I think it's woven in your way of life, but in your own experiences, are there any aspects of living there you find still challenging or limiting?
How’s the corona virus situation in Yakutia? I saw people with masks in your video.
The frozen fish is what I too would have bought. Thanks for the video. Keep up the good work!😍
I became a vegetarian because in the U.S. I feel so uncomfortable with the levels of exploitation (animal and worker) in the food chain. I thought this would make me uncomfortable to see so much meat, but it didn't. Thank you for sharing this with us! I feel so happy to know that there are still traditional ways of farming animals that seem to respect both the animal but more importantly the people.
🤍
I am not American, I am Canadian. It is a bit more expensive (Unfortunately) but I can regularly find well raised, quality meat products where I live. If you are ok eating meat that is ethically sourced, it is possible, albeit pricey. If you are so inclined, try it out a few times. I am not vegetarian, but I can respect somebody who makes that choice for this reason, and not because of the diet fad of the year, or similar reasons.
when you live in a climate like yakutsk. it's very difficult to be a vegetarian because the climate is at freezing temperature most time of the year and therefore grains and vegetables can't grow there.
At the temperature there is hard just with salade
@rumplemusic there are PLENTY of options here in the US, for sourcing meat/animal products other than a grocery store. That’s a very shallow way of thinking, and that mindset is the very REASON the US food system is the way it is!
Salted fish looks good!!
Hello maria! I am from the philippine which is located in south east asia. Ours is a tropical country that consists of 700 Islands and islets. Our topography is much different from yours. Almost everything you see is green with variety of trees and plants. We are sorrounded by sea water which in the east is the pacific ocean and on the west is china sea that is why we are abundant of sea foods. We have only 2 season - rainy and summer. I dream to vist and experience to live in a very cold country like yours which looks everything is white bcoz
of the snow. You speak in a soft voice which i like to hear. I like all your videos and describe your country. Thank you and God bless you always.
I got to say Maria without videos like this we would never know what it would be like living in Siberia. now I never ate horse before but it looks interesting.
It is so nice to see you explaining life survival in Yukutia. They have to have jobs to get money to get things there. What do they do ? Interesting videos.
Wow thank you for shating your life maria! A warm wave from Philippines... i dream in living where u are right now! Thank u for a glimpse of what life will be in ur country. Stay safe!
Maria! I love your videos! One question: where do people store such big meat amounts later at home? During winter I'm sure it's not a problem as long as you have a balcony or something, but then for summer? Do you have like extra big freezers at home? I would never be able to fit so much food into mine!
If you live in an apartment, you're probably buying meat at a supermarket.
Hi! Yes, people have big freezers at their houses/apartments to store big amounts of meat. We normally start to use them in spring, when it’s impossible to store meat outside and there is less meat than in autumn since some part of it is already consumed.
Конечно, зимой на балконе, у многих морозильные камеры и лари. Летом на даче в леднике - булуусе храним мясо и рыбу. У кого дом, там вообще нет проблемы.
@@JJørgensen у меня дома высокий морозильник һ=2м20см. У некоторых лари.
hello! How long does the open-air meat market usually last? just for the whole month of November? As someone who grew up in a tropical country, it’s so interesting to see how people from colder climates get their meat like this, and the culture/tradition behind it. Thank you so much for sharing this! I love watching your videos and look forward to more uploads in the future ☺️
P.S. it’s my first time seeing a baby being dragged around in a stroller/sled hybrid (with the orange blanket by the end of the video)! It makes so much sense but it’s so fascinating for me to see since I’m not used to seeing one.
It works almost whole year, but the products change depending on a season. In summer and autumn more fresh vegetables, in winter and spring normally meat and fish and other frozen products 🤗
We don't get much snow in my country anymore (climate change 😥) but when I was a kid, everyone in my kindergarten had a sled and our parents would pull us on it to the kindergarten.
@@LifeinYakutia ooh, the variety is great to hear. Thank you so much for responding ☺️
@@SvobodovaEva the weather is changing in not a good direction now, but at least you have those good memories to remember by! That must have been a fun experience to have 😊😊😊
I love listening to your voice and music, very relax and soothing, i always watch in bed before sleeping then continue the next night.
Sad You didn't add how you made straganina and if I good remember the second one was a deer met. It was served to me cold still frozen. I remember we deep it just in some fat. This sun-dried fish was cool also I was eating a smaller one and the host shows me how you cracked them using a table. The 'salo' also was good and some fat on the skin from a whale. About this place, I was impressed that people stand all day long ( I was in January and I could not stand more than 45 min outside.)Och adding when I was the market was close to the frozen pond Is it still in the same place?
Those traditional clothes are amazing! Is there a separate meat freezer from the ice (bullis? -I can't remember the word exactly).
🇹🇷🇹🇷🇹🇷👍 Ruhi'den geldik, başarılar. 👍😄🙂🇹🇷🇹🇷🇹🇷
Did anyone catch at 5:17 the baby stroller/sled? Things I never considered since I don't live in the Arctic
How are you, Maria, I am from Yemen. I follow you. I and my four children all love you. I hope to visit your country, especially a city.
BERDIGESTYAKH
I hope you make a loop on this city, the best thing is its people.
Greetings from USA!
Love the way you people live. Just love it.
Sun dried, salted fish in winter. Where is the sun to do the drying? Is it normally prepared in summer and stored for months?
I am an American and I’m so thankful to see such a beautiful woman share her country, family and friends to the world. What a wonderful corner of the world. Her ancestors were mighty strong people to thrive in such a cold place with only primitive surroundings. I applaud your spirit and beauty!
This is your video I liked best so far. What a mood!
Another awesome video thank you. May I just suggest you move your lighting so its not in your eyes? It make your eyes look a little strange. I hope you don't mind me mentioning this?
Hey, yeah, I make my videos in a very short period of time, and that day I had to choose good sound or good picture. I chose the first one😅 I hope one day I will get to the level when the picture and sound both are fine.
So interesting to see how you live in such cold extremes! I was wondering how you prepare and cut up food in very cold weather especially when you can't really defrost meats.
Не проблема. Когда спешу, можно в микроволновке размораживать.
Why can’t they defrost meat?
Hi Maria,
Thanks for introducing the open market.
How do eat the sun-dried fish❓Do you cook it or just eat it like beef jerky❓
it is cooked by sun already, so - second option
eating it takes time, because you must avoid fish bones and be careful
We just eat it like this, no cooking. Bones are already removed :)
@@LifeinYakutia Sounds so yummy!
Hello maria,thank you for sharing your video ,I was so impressed with your market .
Gracias! Thank you Maria.
I am curious about how much meat would a family of 3-4 people buy to last them the year if they only buy it once? I absolutely love your videos by the way, I wait for them every week :)
Hey! Thanks! It depends on every family, some people eat more, some less meat, but on average family of 4 people needs around 100 kilos of beef and 50 kilos of horse meat for one year.
My family of five buys meat once a year (autumn-winter). We usually buy beef leg and horse meat. This is enough, as during the year we sometimes get chicken, fish or turkey from the usual shops.
40-50 kg
@@awkawkawkx
Are you from Yakutia too?
@@kasperkjrsgaard1447 yes I am
@@awkawkawkx
I kind of guessed that. You have the same shopping list. 😉
So roughly 1 kilo of meat a week plus fish and birds to five persons? And what do you eat to that? Rice and potatoes?
If you don’t mind me asking?
Privet Maria! How much the caviar cost on this market?
Very interesting. All of the meat looked like it was very high quality. Thank you
You are amazing, your channel is amazing, your voice is lovely.
Your channel is the best.
I have been watching it for two days now.
It really makes me want to come to see this place.
I also find it hilarious that you say with a straight face things like "in November it is not so cold yet". Yeh right, ONLY -25 🤣🤣🤣
I love this!! That’s a pretty good price for meat too. I live in a big dairy and cattle ranching area and have to pay twice that for good cuts of meat.
Thank you so much ❤ much love from Cleveland Ohio 👋 do you ever have fresh never frozen food at those markets
Hi Maria, your videos are always so interesting. Thank you. 👍🥰❤️
You are such a nice person and we love your voice ...is so relaxing watching your videos and learning more and more about this region wich i knew nothing before...all the best from us. Montreal😘👏🍁🍁🍁
Wow I love your channel! Much love from Vancouver, Canada!!
More vlogs about life in yakutia, its very interesting im always watching your vlog
just curious about do you people need use refrigerator there to store perishables for longtime? !
Thanks for showing this video
Also amaze me how people live
And enjoy such a great and wonderful
Place
Blessings and best wishes
From beautiful
California
How do you call ice cubes in Yakutsk?
Water.
I have a question about vehicles, how the car starts its engine on -20,30,40,50? :D
What techniques people there use to keep their car moving in such a cold conditions?
They don't turn the engine off.. escpecially at temperatures lower than -30°C it would be fatal because the water would in the system would freeze instantly and you can't turn your engine on without any problems. Also they have Special fuel there, that has a lower freezing point.
One time I saw someone turned a fire under his engine to heat it up until he started it again.
@@MrMocren I kinda knew for the special fuel you're saying about, but they really like leave their car turned ON over night at parking lot? Really? I can imagine this if a person has a garage or something, but on public parking lot...?
Sounds crazy, but yeah. An other option is to let the water run out of the system. On the next day you refill the water again.
@@FreedomFighters89 we have few options: preheated garages (most preferred), electric oil heaters, autonomous oil heaters like Webasto, special warm blankets for cars. Cover your car with insulated blanket, turn on the auto start by temperature on your car alarm and leave it like that on a parking. Car will autostart when engine's temperature fall to -5C, it works for 20..30 minutes then shuts down.
When it's -45C outside car autostarts from 2 to 3 times during the night.
P.S. we don't use water in cooling system, we use antifreeze that can hold -50C. And 0w40 motor oil.
Hi maria, My name is Mert. I'm following you from Turkey
Bu kanal nereden geldin biliyorum ama olsun
Hi Maria. How do you have fresh fruit and vegetables brought in during the cold months without it freezing in the delivery trucks? I guess they would have to use heated trailers to transport them?
I saw another video that says that during the winter months there isn’t usually fresh fruits or vegatable. It’s mostly a meat and dairy diet.
Hello 🙋♀️ Hi i like to watch clips in the cold city very much. ❄️❄️❄️
The fish looks great! Everything is so fresh, even if frozen.
Love your videos ! I really want to teach English in Russia and your videos are so informative!!!
Good morning from Riyadh saudi arabia
I am from Bangladesh 🇧🇩🇧🇩
I love yakutia people and culture❤️
So beautiful. Enjoy all the goodies!
I love these videos! The atmosphere is so relaxing
Ok this was a fascinating video, but just as another example of the simple differences between Yukutia and most other places, there was a pram sled at the end! I never would have thought that would be necessary but what's the point in pushing something with wheels when there is snow on the ground most of the time!
The kid's sledge is common throughout Russia. It is difficult to drag the wheels through the snow, so for winter some people use sledges.
@@pennayaelle5417 that is really cool to know, thank you :D
What to do then when it's summer if you only buy meat once in a year? Doesn't it thaw? By the way the price as well as the quality is so attractive!
The only place in the world where A/C salesmen can never justify. :-).. You have a beautiful place Maria.
Türkiye Cumhuriyeti'nin den selamlar 🇹🇷🇹🇷❤️
Thanks for sharing to us , please keep safe always there Love from Philippines 🤗
ang video ito ay mabuti diba?
I see a lot of plastic usage for selling. Just wanted to ask since all if the meat is in hard and dry form wouldn't using paper bags as a method would be good for the place?
Dear Maria, I am new to your videos but have watched several of them in the last couple of days. Thank you for all your insight and information. I find your way of life interesting and though a bit secluded and autonomous it is certainly earth friendly. I believe our entire earth would be better off if we all lived in the manner in which you live. Harder? Yes. Better. Yes. Less population is a good thing. We could speak volumes. But I’ll just leave it at me saying, I really respect and enjoy watching your way of life. Thank you.
Do you travel?
in arabic "yakut" means gems, wonder if there are any relation
there is no any relation, it's just coincidence. We call ourselves Sakha, but Tungusic people can't pronounce it so they call us Yaka. During the conquest of Siberia Russians meet Tungusic people before they meet Sakha people. And from them Russians learn about Yaka people that live on the east and breed cows and horses. Russians transform Yaka to Yakut, and through Russian language Sakha are known in the world as Yakut.
Dump arab his language is inportant, am Somali By the way
Do they have MACDONALDS or JACK IN THE BOX in YAKUTIA?
How sun dryed fish making in coolest city?
No latest video why ? İ joined today the channel is stunning
many years ago I saw footage of someone carrying home their milk, not in a bottle or carton but tucked under their arm in a frozen slab.
Is this actually true?
Haha yes, it’s true, we can buy totally frozen and organic milk without any packaging
Hi maria i live also in cold as (ofw) (not at all snowy) country before but your city is huge of snow and zero visibilty...keep it up its not easy to live in icy city my lips is start to dry and bleeding also no water supply to take bath.in everyday. God bless maria keep safe...
I wish I could still go to the farmers market. I am now disabled and I miss talking to the farmers and buying great meat and vegetables. I used to go to places like the Ithaca farmers market here in NYState, USA.
May I ask what is your disability? Not that I can help, I live halfway around the globe. Just some honest interest in my keen
@@XmanSully nerve and vein endings shrinking, need oxygen continually. And I am heading toward 80, but stress and heartache has contributed to bad health. The advice I can give is never clean out chicken coups and such without a mask, never lift too much weight, take it easy at least once a week and calm down. Take up meditation and yoga. Eat a balanced diet. Enjoy the body you live in and alway think " I am beautiful".
@@marjoriejohnson6535
Sorry to hear that. Would you say you have lived a satisfying life? I am 53 and I can honestly say I did a good job destroying my health.
Too much weed, too much stress, too much chocolate.
But it's never too late to change, isn't it?
Btw, thank god for youtube
@@XmanSully probably the thing that is most disturbing now is not only the worry I have for my children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren but the state of the world. I do wish I had taken better care of myself and had not saved the fun things to do when I retired. Now I look at my studio ,packed with things I was going to do...and wish I had done them then.