In Siberia's Sayano-Shushenskiy Reserve, a 'second spring' was reported as rhododendron blossomed during an unseasonably warm fall season, 10 October 2015. Photo: @calypso_232 / The Siberian Times

By Kate Baklitskaya
10 October 2015 (The Siberian Times) – Is it a freak heat wave or an indisputable sign of global warming? The experts will argue about this but a range of balmy temperatures in October in Siberia certainly begs a few questions: 27C in Altai, 24C in Barnaul, 21C in Novosibirsk, 21C in Tomsk, and 21C in Kemerovo. In the Sayano-Shushenskiy Reserve, a ‘second spring’ was reported as rhododendron blossomed, evidently tricked by the Indian summer into thinking it was May or June again. Pulsatilla was also bursting into flower recently, a certain sign in Siberia that spring is arriving, except that it’s October here in the northern hemisphere. In the Republic of Buryatia, wild apple and bird cherry trees are in bloom, as if nature’s clock thinks it’s mid-May.  Despite this unseasonable warmth, in Norilsk the thermometers hit a familiar minus 14C, yet elsewhere many Siberian cities reported significantly  warmer than average temperatures. ‘What the hell is going on?’ asked one seasoned observer of Siberian climatic rhythms. ‘Mid-October is a time when the snow ‘lies down’, which means that the ground is frozen enough to stop melting,’ she explained. Not any more it seems. […] Elsewhere, the level of Lake Baikal – which contains 20% of the globe’s unfrozen freshwater – is seen as worryingly low. This summer, as in all recent summers, wildfires have raged across huge tracts of Siberia, notably in Buryatia and neighbouring Irkutsk. [more]

Autumn cancelled in southern Siberia as Altai basks in 27C heat