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Chernobyl and Priypat trip report 2017


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Jesus Christ Firth you need to be writing a blog !.

 

Really awesome pics and Priypat is on my list ever since I played MW3 on the Playstation.

 

Excellent pics, I always settle in with a large mug of tea and pack of biscuits before reading and looking at your pictorials, usually saving them for the weekend as a bit of a "treat".

 

Thanks for posting mate, they are truly appreciated and really interesting. Absolutely worthy of a damn few SM's if we ever meet.

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Jesus Christ Firth you need to be writing a blog !.

 

Really awesome pics and Priypat is on my list ever since I played MW3 on the Playstation.

 

Excellent pics, I always settle in with a large mug of tea and pack of biscuits before reading and looking at your pictorials, usually saving them for the weekend as a bit of a "treat".

 

Thanks for posting mate, they are truly appreciated and really interesting. Absolutely worthy of a damn few SM's if we ever meet.

Cheers Butch. A lot more to come soon.

 

Just had 2.5 weeks spread out across the Ukraine as well as Georgia in the Caucasus region. Now that's truly a beautiful part of the world.

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What were your feelings as you were venturing into the exclusion zone, knowing that you were going to be exposed to high levels of radiation? Did it scare you?

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What were your feelings as you were venturing into the exclusion zone, knowing that you were going to be exposed to high levels of radiation? Did it scare you?

I didn't really know too much about the town of Priypat before I left for Ukraine. Luckily, on the bus on the way in, they showed a load of different videos on before and after of the town. To see all those families enjoying life, and not knowing what was happening was a little disturbing to hear. After all, it was Russian propaganda at its best, and not releasing any news whatsoever of the explosion.

Did you know, that the whole population of Priypat, that's 50,000 citizens, were evacuated from the town in less than 3 hours!!!! Quite an impressive feat. These people left everything behind, and could only take whatever they cold carry.

 

As for my own safety, I wasn't overly bothered by that. A little research told me that you would have to be here for a seriously long time for the radiation to affect you now, or you would have to roll around the in the dirt like a dog to be effected by the radiation.

 

My girlfriend flatly refused to come with me on this day trip. She was scared of the long lasting effects of radiation poisoning. Needless to say, she and her family and friends were scared for me, but she stayed behind in Kiev and went shopping!!

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Hi,

 

I see Mr Fox is not deterred either. The way things are going this could be us all, soon.

A lot of wildlife has now returned to the area. Lots of foxes and Deer too.
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As for my own safety, I wasn't overly bothered by that. A little research told me that you would have to be here for a seriously long time for the radiation to affect you now, or you would have to roll around the in the dirt like a dog to be effected by the radiation.

 

 

A classic case of look, but don't touch.... Did you get checked to see if you picked up any contam during the tour.

 

Nice to see statues commemorating the fire and rescue workers that lost their lives.

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I watched a documentary recently.......I'll try and find it..........

 

It calibrated radiation counts into the amount there is in one banana.......and went from place to place describing the risks. Pretty high on the list were long haul flights..........2nd from the very top was the hospital basement at Priypat. That was where the brave men who cleaned up at the reactor were treated and the basement was where they discarded all their protective clothing. The top soil around the reactor has been taken away and the readings were now close to normal.

 

Before you get concerned about any of this......The top spot by far for the amount of radiation in one place was the............?

 

You can see for yourself.......

 

 

 

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I watched a documentary recently.......I'll try and find it..........

 

It calibrated radiation counts into the amount there is in one banana.......and went from place to place describing the risks. Pretty high on the list were long haul flights..........2nd from the very top was the hospital basement at Priypat. That was where the brave men who cleaned up at the reactor were treated and the basement was where they discarded all their protective clothing. The top soil around the reactor has been taken away and the readings were now close to normal.

 

Before you get concerned about any of this......The top spot by far for the amount of radiation in one place was the............?

 

You can see for yourself.......

 

 

 

 

I actually found that video quite amusing at the end.....

 

I'm a smoker and I also work in a certain industry which requires me to wear a dosimeter, undertake routine biological sampling and every so often I am given a whole body monitor. Surely they would be able to measure the dosage I receive by being a smoker, but my dosage measurements are no different to non-smokers that I work with.

 

A whole body monitor is performed in a room shielded by steel from a warship built prior to WW2 and the advent of nuclear weapons for the purpose of reducing background radiation. It is used to detect if any radioactive material has entered your body.

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