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Overheard at National Geographic

The Arctic Story Hunter

Overheard at National Geographic

National Geographic

Science, Society & Culture

4.510.1K Ratings

🗓️ 25 January 2022

⏱️ 23 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

What’s it like to grow up underneath the aurora borealis, on the shores of the Arctic Ocean? Photographer Evgenia Arbugaeva describes leaving—and returning to—Tiksi, a Siberian coastal town that during her childhood slowly became a ghost town in the wake of the Soviet collapse. That experience led her to find beauty in unexpected places—riding reindeer with nomadic herders and watching Arctic storms in isolated weather stations. For more information on this episode, visit natgeo.com/overheard. Want More? See Evgenia’s photos in National Geographic, which include stories of the lucrative “tusk rush” on woolly mammoth bones that have emerged from Russian permafrost as well as the murky world of butterfly trading in Indonesia. Evgenia’s lens also focuses on the wild whimsy of her frigid hometown, Tiksi. See more photos on Instagram @evgenia_arbugaeva and @natgeo. Also explore: Learn how a gigantic offshore oil rig could radically alter the Arctic environment. Listen to a Nat Geo photographer explain in a previous Overheard episode how climate change’s impact on the Arctic is threatening the way of life for Alaskan Natives. If you like what you hear and want to support more content like this, please consider a National Geographic subscription. Go to natgeo.com/explore to subscribe today. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

This podcast is brought to you in part by Geico, proud sponsor of National Geographic.

0:05.1

Geico, 15 minutes could save you 15% or more on car insurance.

0:13.2

Conjure an image of the Russian Tundra, Siberia.

0:17.2

As far north as you can go before you hit the Arctic Ocean.

0:20.5

Your image probably looks like a snowy whiteout.

0:23.8

You might picture stark, forbidding ice-scapes, devoid of color in life.

0:29.0

But through the lands of National Geographic Explorer and photographer Evgania Arboghiva,

0:34.0

it's a wonderland, bristling with people and their stories,

0:38.0

like for example the keepers of the remote weather stations that line Russia's Arctic coast.

0:43.0

When I was a kid, my dad would bring me to visit meteorological station

0:49.0

and I wanted to be in all of them. I just wanted to see how it is to leave there.

0:54.0

So as an adult, she hopped on an icebreaker that brought supplies to those isolated outposts.

0:59.0

I saw this station that was from the 30s that haven't been renovated since then,

1:05.0

and was all surrounded by sand.

1:08.0

And then this man comes out with his bright blue eyes.

1:14.0

Total loner, unable to make connections with people

1:18.0

because he's just too overwhelmed by all of us.

1:22.0

The man's name was Slava. He was in his 60s,

1:25.0

and he lived alone at the weather station,

1:27.0

an hour's helicopter ride from the nearest settlement.

1:30.0

Right away Evgania was drawn to him.

1:33.0

He was kind of trying to hide almost from everyone,

...

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