hello egor I sent you a email and forgot to give you the address its www.bones318v8@yahoo.com you could be my iternet buddy if you would like? don't know if thats okay but I hope so? write or find a way for us to chat to each other sooner than emails?
Hi! Nice pictures you have :) I wonder what the radiaton levels were in Pripyat 1998 compared to 1986. Did you take a dosimeter along? I'm interested in everything that's attached to Pripyat and the zone. Please mail me at: sagyu dot citromail dot hu (I hope you can put that together, I would like to avoid spamming bots) greetings: George
hi there, i think your pictures of the antennaes are great, but don't you think they are build for something more than anti-american radar ? my emaiL is thegreenkrs(A)abv(dot)bg
Thank you, great photos. When all buildings crumble and everything will be covered with grass,these photos will provide info on how the zone looked like. A half-sunk ship... I'm kinda obsessed with that partly-sunk, abandoned ship stuff... It just lies there, rusting... Spooky...
yes, I can see the people !!, first I could not believe it were people when I saw then, but when I read your comment, I realize it really were people, the building of the reactor must be impressive large when you see it in real, thanks for sharing all the impressive photos
Thanks for the information, I've seen photos of these antennes at several sites, but I was allways asking myself why they were so large and why they were build. Now I know. Very interisting photos and comments ! Thanks !!
As an Amateur Radio operator W6PU, in the 70' and 80s, the radio transmissions from the Duga system would badly interfere with all high frequency communications.
The photos and story of Chernobyl are chilling. If you Google "Chernobyl disaster videos" the complete story of the nuclear meltdown,and its radio active hellish aftermath can be seen.
Over fifty tons of highly radio active fallout rained down, and those particles remain deadly in the soil and dust, for thousands of years!
Anonymous
November 10 2006, 08:14:55 UTC 5 years ago
hello
hey dude, i think your pictures of chernobyl are awesome. it mustve been a weird and sad place to gowell anyways, seeya
November 10 2006, 09:45:27 UTC 5 years ago
Re: hello
thanks :)3 years ago
Anonymous
January 9 2007, 02:50:00 UTC 5 years ago
the disaster that will not be forgotten
HEY, email me back at www.bones318v8@yahoo.com so I can talk to you about "the zone" ......chris hester united states.January 9 2007, 08:37:33 UTC 5 years ago
Re: the disaster that will not be forgotten
Chris, emai is invalid - email bounced back.Anonymous
January 9 2007, 23:36:11 UTC 5 years ago
the zone
hello egor I sent you a email and forgot to give you the address its www.bones318v8@yahoo.com you could be my iternet buddy if you would like? don't know if thats okay but I hope so? write or find a way for us to chat to each other sooner than emails?Anonymous
January 20 2007, 21:12:41 UTC 5 years ago
pictures
Hi! Nice pictures you have :) I wonder what the radiaton levels were in Pripyat 1998 compared to 1986. Did you take a dosimeter along? I'm interested in everything that's attached to Pripyat and the zone. Please mail me at: sagyu dot citromail dot hu (I hope you can put that together, I would like to avoid spamming bots) greetings: GeorgeAnonymous
February 15 2007, 05:34:44 UTC 5 years ago
Photos
I'm so fascinated by your photographs. Why are you depressed...you are so beautiful?February 15 2007, 09:06:22 UTC 5 years ago
Re: Photos
Thank you:-)Anonymous
April 2 2007, 02:39:25 UTC 5 years ago
purpose of chernobyl 2?
So, what was the purpose of the grid at "chernobyl-2"? What were those antennas built for?April 2 2007, 05:54:35 UTC 5 years ago
Re: purpose of chernobyl 2?
This is called "phased antenna grid", it's purpose is to watch americal airplanes flying around the world.Anonymous
April 11 2007, 08:56:14 UTC 5 years ago
April 11 2007, 09:23:44 UTC 5 years ago
Anonymous
April 28 2007, 23:32:32 UTC 5 years ago
Hello people
Peace peopleWe love you
Anonymous
May 6 2007, 14:54:52 UTC 5 years ago
hi
hi there, i think your pictures of the antennaes are great, but don't you think they are build for something more than anti-american radar ? my emaiL is thegreenkrs(A)abv(dot)bgMay 6 2007, 15:24:50 UTC 5 years ago
Re: hi
It's certain. They are well-known and their design and purpose are no secret for physics.Anonymous
October 19 2007, 19:27:12 UTC 4 years ago
Thank you
I love your photos of the Zone - very haunting, sad, fascinating.October 19 2007, 19:35:36 UTC 4 years ago
Re: Thank you
thank you :)Anonymous
November 10 2007, 04:03:22 UTC 4 years ago
Hey!
I just want to know, are you as a visitor allowed to go into the hotel and rooms? Or any other type of buildings?Thank You .. And Wait for your answer.
November 10 2007, 12:37:30 UTC 4 years ago
Re: Hey!
Hi. At that time, it required a special permission, but yes, that was possible, lots of people took pictures insude.Anonymous
4 years ago
4 years ago
Anonymous
March 9 2008, 14:30:18 UTC 4 years ago
Thanks for the photos!!!
Thank you, great photos. When all buildings crumble and everything will be covered with grass,these photos will provide info on how the zone looked like.A half-sunk ship... I'm kinda obsessed with that partly-sunk, abandoned ship stuff... It just lies there, rusting... Spooky...
Anonymous
November 2 2008, 15:40:58 UTC 3 years ago
roof broken
When I look to this photo, I see cracks in the roof (about in the middle), isn't that dangerous ? :(March 12 2009, 21:03:10 UTC 3 years ago
Re: roof broken
Kind of. There is a powerful inhale ventilation inside the Shelter, so no dust comes out. Usually. :)Anonymous
November 2 2008, 15:48:02 UTC 3 years ago
people on reactor 4
yes, I can see the people !!, first I could not believe it were people when I saw then, but when I read your comment, I realize it really were people, the building of the reactor must be impressive large when you see it in real, thanks for sharing all the impressive photosAnonymous
November 2 2008, 16:03:06 UTC 3 years ago
Antennes
Thanks for the information, I've seen photos of these antennes at several sites, but I was allways asking myself why they were so large and why they were build. Now I know. Very interisting photos and comments ! Thanks !!Anonymous
December 10 2008, 02:56:28 UTC 3 years ago
As an Amateur Radio operator W6PU, in the 70' and 80s, the radio transmissions from the Duga system would badly interfere with all high frequency communications.
The photos and story of Chernobyl are chilling. If you Google "Chernobyl disaster videos" the complete story of the nuclear meltdown,and its radio active hellish aftermath can be seen.
Over fifty tons of highly radio active fallout rained down, and those particles remain deadly in the soil and dust, for thousands of years!
Bob/W6PU
Anonymous
March 6 2010, 03:52:41 UTC 2 years ago
Anonymous
September 9 2010, 22:29:14 UTC 1 year ago
Impressive
It is a shame not to be there and enjoy it all. I'm passionate about abandoned sites.