There was a sort of "travel" documentary thing on Channel 7 last night that I watched, largely because of David's comments in this thread. Some English chap went and lived in the exclusion zone for a week and went to various places. So, eg, he went and stood in the control room of reactor 4 (the one that blew) and then went and stood on the fuel rods in reactor 3. I got a little bored at the end but I think he went down somewhere else that he thought was spectacular (maybe under or near reactor 4?). Anyway, if you can get hold if it, you can basically see lots of possibly interesting stuff inside the exclusion zone and not die from radiation poisoning or radiation-induced cancer. On the other hand, you might be lucky if you do go - the narrator spoke to a policeman who had been near the reactor when it blew and stayed to supervise the clean up - he was told, then, that he wouldn't survive 5 years (so he's 30 years past his use-by date, as I type).doriswilgus wrote:Thanks for the explanation,David.You’re obviously a lot more adventurous than I am.That’s something I would never want to do myself,but I can see how it would appeal to other people.Just make sure it is absolutely safe before you do go over there though.You can never be too safe with things like this.David wrote:I love abandoned buildings and towns in general, and always have. There’s something beautiful about seeing an urban landscape in the midst of being returned to nature. With regard to Pripyat, there is some lingering radiation in areas, but as long as you stay away from dangerous spots and keep track of your geiger meter, it’s fine.doriswilgus wrote:Why David?What’s the attraction for you?And wouldn’t you be worried about any lingering radiation in the area?
The bit that captured my attention was the tiny bit at the end - the creation of the exclusion zone has apparently enabled wildlife to return - wolves, lynxes, bears and various other things they showed/mentioned. Not a single 27-eyed flying walrus with radiation breath to be seen, either.
I imagine this can be seen on some streaming service if anyone is interested (the doco I mean - I am confident you won't get live footage of any such walrus).