Dogs in Chernobyl have mysteriously started turning blue over the last week

Nothing to see here.

No nuclear wasps.

No radioactive shrimp from Walmart.

Just some random dogs turning blue pretty close to the site of the world’s biggest nuclear disaster. (So far.)

As you can see, not all the dogs are turning blue, but some of them certainly are:

Wild images show several dogs near the Chernobyl nuclear power plant turning blue, baffling workers taking care of them. The alarming-looking dogs are descendants of pets abandoned after the nuclear disaster there nearly 40 years ago.
They’ve been found wandering around the Chernobyl exclusion zone this month, according to Dogs of Chernobyl, an affiliate of the non-profit Clean Futures Fund that cares for the dogs there.

“We are on the ground now catching dogs for sterilisation, and we came across three dogs that were completely blue,” the organisation said in an Instagram post with more than 330,000 views.

But sometimes, just because there’s been a huge nuclear incident just down the road, and just because the stray dogs are in the exclusion zone around Chernobyl, it doesn’t necessarily mean that they are turning blue because of the high levels of radiation.

Is that a thing anyway?

No. It turns out that they had got into the leakage from a local Portaloo.

“They appear to have been rolling in a substance that had accumulated on their fur. We are suspecting that this substance was from an old portable toilet that was in the same location as the dogs; however, we were unable to positively confirm our suspicions,” states Dr Jennifer Betz, Veterinary Medical Director for the Dogs of Chernobyl program.

Eww. I think I’d have preferred the radiation thing.

Over Ukraine

As I’m currently flying over (or maybe around) Ukraine, so why not hit you up with a Chernobyl post?

For the attention of the residents of Pripyat! The City Council informs you that due to the accident at Chernobyl Power Station in the city of Pripyat the radioactive conditions in the vicinity are deteriorating. The Communist Party, its officials and the armed forces are taking necessary steps to combat this. Comrades, leaving your residences temporarily please make sure you have turned off the lights, electrical equipment and water and shut the windows. Please keep calm and orderly in the process of this short-term evacuation.

Here’s that video taken by CBS in Pripyat, showing the desolation and ruin caused by “the catastrophe that never ended” – their words, not mine.

[vimeo clip_id=”112681885″ width=”678″ height=”289″]

And, while we’re here, a reminder of Michael Jennings’ excellent account of his visit to the same place and another – more recent – essay on the same “dark tourism” subject which I really enjoyed reading.

Tomorrow: Less radiation, more England!

Michael Jennings goes to Chernobyl

Another link via Brian Micklethwait, this time to Michael Jennings’ Samizdata post about his trip to Chernobyl.

We were told that we were about to visit the most radioactive place on the whole trip. Geiger counters were brought out, and we watched the numbers double, triple, and quadruple, to a level far higher than we had seen near the reactor itself. Out the window we could see overgrown grass fields. It was clear nobody stopped here for trivial reasons. We drove through. It was clearly not a place for a roadside picnic.

There’s too much to summarise fully – a bit of history, some personal stuff, some cool photos – but it’s a brilliantly written and fascinating account and really well worth the read.

As Jennings says:

The USSR was dark, strange, mysterious, and seemingly eternal.

Much like their abandoned polar nuclear lighthouses.