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A traffic police car stands on a road during heavy snowfall in central Moscow, Russia. File
| Photo Credit: Reuters
The biggest snowfall in 60 years on Russia’s Far Eastern Kamchatka Peninsula created vast drifts several metres tall that blocked building entrances and buried cars, according to Reuters visuals and weather monitoring stations.
In some areas more than 2 m (6.5 feet) of snow has fallen in the first half of January after 3.7 m in December, according to weather monitoring stations.

A boy plays atop a pile of snow on Red Square after heavy snowfall in Moscow, on Saturday, backdropped by St. Basil’s Cathedral.
| Photo Credit:
AP
Pictures showed cars almost completely buried in metres of snow and four-wheel drives struggling for traction — or simply blocked by great drifts of snow. Locals were forced to dig out paths to the entrances of apartment buildings.
“I plan to go on a walk around the city tomorrow, though unfortunately the car has been parked in a snowdrift for a month,” said Lydmila Moskvicheva, a photographer in Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky, a port city 6,800 km (4,200 miles) east of Moscow.

People try to push a car during heavy snowfall in Moscow.
| Photo Credit:
AP
Video posted on Russian media showed locals walking on snow drifts alongside traffic lights and great piles of snow several metres tall lining roads.
Some jumped down the drifts for fun.
Published – January 21, 2026 05:28 pm IST
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Record snowfall in Russian far east sows fun, frustration and massive drifts


