:rofl:The vehicles are all buried under enormous snowdrifts.
Those icicles look beautiful but dangerous, too
:rofl:The vehicles are all buried under enormous snowdrifts.
At least it's not a hot desert. I could use some rain.You guys are lucky. All I have here is rain, rain, rain... and no snow. It's been raining non-stop here today. Last year it snowed for the first time in 10 years (maybe more) in Lisbon, and it didn't even reach 3 cm.
At least it's not a hot desert. I could use some rain.
It hit 27C two days last week (and 28 one day), record temperature. And it's been a few degrees hotter than usual.
Damn me for sitting here without any camera. It's buran outside!
Until you get heat all year; 45C is a common occurrence in the summer months.![]()
TROUT OF JEALOUSY!!
Last night and today it was raining while still minus 6 and everything is covered with layer of ice now. Snow soaked with freezing rain is turned into firn. I had to showel a pathway clear and I had to attack the frozen snow with metal shovel to break it up and remove.
A power line failure shut down Moscow’s largest airport yesterday as unseasonably warm weather produced hail storms that wreaked havoc with the city’s traffic and left shoppers slipping on ice.
Domodedovo International Airport, which handles a daily average of more than 55,000 travellers, reported a total power outage at around 8 a.m.
An emergency power supply unit allowed the airport to receive the approaching traffic but all arrivals and departures were ended two hours later, Itar-Tass reported.
Some 16,000 people were left stranded at the facility and airport officials said they did not expect the problems to be resolved before the evening.
The city’s second-largest airport Sheremetyevo was operating according to scheduled and expecting to pick up some of Domodedovo’s arrivals, a mouthpiece told RIA Novosti.
Various news reports said that similar outages had affected some 150 settlements around the city and other parts of central Russia, with more than 100,000 people left without electricity by midday.
Temperatures in Russia’s capital hovered around the freezing point throughout the weekend, producing unseasonable rain showers that turned the city into what one television station described as a “concrete skating rink”.
Moscow officials advised the city’s 10-million-plus inhabitants to stay at home, with a mayor’s office spokesman telling Interfax that people should not venture outside “unless there was an extreme emergency”.
The freezing rain also damaged power supply lines used by the city’s trams and trolley buses, with officials ordering 96 extra buses out onto the streets to cover the affected routes.
Further problems were reported on Moscow’s suburban train routes. A traffic spokesman told Interfax that there were delays throughout the region “affecting almost all the destination points”.