Chernobyl and Prypiat

On the last day of the trip to Kyiv (pictures here) we went Chernobyl and Prypiat. The Chernobyl area is just two hours by car from Kyiv and it’s not hard to get a guided tour there, including transportation from Kyiv and back again.

If the name “Chernobyl” doesn’t ring a bell you’re either too young to know anything about it or you’re just ignorant. The Chernobyl disaster is the most devastating nuclear accident - so far. On April 26th 1986, reactor 4 at the Chernobyl power plant exploded, sending a massive amount of radioactive fallout into the atmosphere. The fallout drifted over extensive parts of the western Soviet Union, Eastern Europe, Western Europe, Northern Europe, and eastern North America.

Over 336,000 people were evacuated or resettled and the overall cost of the disaster is estimated at $200 billion USD, taking inflation into account.

Why do one venture voluntarily into Chernobyl, through three checkpoints to an area where it’s not safe to live and where the people working there are only allowed to stay for 15 days before they have to leave? I guess it’s a combination of curiosity, being an idiot and a need to see with my own eyes what happened. I was only 8 years old in 1986, but I still remember the first news cast about the accident. I’m not sure if I even knew what nuclear power was, but I understood that what had happened was not a good thing.

So, it is safe to go there as a tourist now? Short answer: Yes. Probably. Maybe it’s a bit naive to think that they would not let people in for a short time if it was not safe, but that’s what I think. Here’s also a snippet about Chernobyl safety from Wikitravel:

A lethal dose of radiation is in the range of 300 to 500 roentgens when administered within an hour. Levels on the tour reportedly range from 15 to several hundred microroentgens an hour. A microroentgen is one-millionth of a roentgen.

You should not, however, play in the grass but keep to the paved roads and if it rains it’s a good thing because you will not breathe contaminated dust. The highest level I saw on our guide’s measuring equipment was about 500 microroentgens, except for when we drove through The Red Forest and the meter went totally off the scale and only showed “Error”. I didn’t actually see this myself, though, but a video should exist and I’m trying to dig it up.

Allrightythen.

Chernobyl reactors 5 and 6. According to our guide, these are reactors 5 and 6, but it might be a bit hard to see in the fog.
Chernobyl reactors 5 and 6. According to our guide, these are reactors 5 and 6, but it might be a bit hard to see in the fog.
Chernobyl reactors 3 and 4. The sarcophagus covering the remains of reactor 4 in the foreground, reactor 3 in the background.
Chernobyl reactors 3 and 4. The sarcophagus covering the remains of reactor 4 in the foreground, reactor 3 in the background.
Road to Prypiat.
Road to Prypiat.
Welcome to Prypiat.
Welcome to Prypiat.
In April it’s 23 years since a gardener did any work in Prypiat and it shows.
In April it’s 23 years since a gardener did any work in Prypiat and it shows.
If you’ve played CoD4, you know this place.
If you’ve played CoD4, you know this place.
Prypiat’s population was about 50,000 before the accident. The city was evacuated in a few hours and the people was told to drop everything and get out for what was supposed to be a temporary evacuation.
Prypiat’s population was about 50,000 before the accident. The city was evacuated in a few hours and the people was told to drop everything and get out for what was supposed to be a temporary evacuation.
One of the many apartment buildings that were ’temporarily’ evacuated.
One of the many apartment buildings that were ’temporarily’ evacuated.
Inside one of the apartments. I think used to be a kitchen.
Inside one of the apartments. I think used to be a kitchen.
Inside what was supposedly a store of some kind.
Inside what was supposedly a store of some kind.
Stalker.
Stalker.
Bumper Cars.
Bumper Cars.
The famous Prypiat ferris wheel. It was due to open for the public a couple of days after the accident and has never been used, or at least so the story goes.
The famous Prypiat ferris wheel. It was due to open for the public a couple of days after the accident and has never been used, or at least so the story goes.
Moss was without doubt the thing I saw with the most vibrant color in Prypiat. I would not be too surprised if it glows in the dark.
Moss was without doubt the thing I saw with the most vibrant color in Prypiat. I would not be too surprised if it glows in the dark.

Feedback

Do you have any thoughts you want to share? A question, maybe? Or is something in this post just plainly wrong? Then please send an e-mail to vegard at vegard dot net with your input. You can also use any of the other points of contact listed on the About page.

Caution

It looks like you're using Google's Chrome browser, which records everything you do on the internet. Personally identifiable and sensitive information about you is then sold to the highest bidder, making you a part of surveillance capitalism.

The Contra Chrome comic explains why this is bad, and why you should use another browser.