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Snowfall in the Russian Far East is a record, bringing with it fun, frustration and massive snow drifts

According to weather stations and visuals, the biggest snowfall in 60 years occurred on 'Russia's Far Eastern Kamchatka Peninsula. This resulted in a metre-high sand drift that buried cars and blocked building entrances.

According to weather monitoring stations, in some areas over 2 m of snow (6.5 feet) has fallen during the first half January. This is after December's?3.7 m.

Pictures showed four-wheel drive vehicles struggling to 'traction or being blocked by huge drifts of snow. Locals had to dig paths up to apartment building entrances.

"I plan to go on a walk around ?the city tomorrow, though unfortunately the car has been parked in a ?snowdrift for a month," said Lydmila Moskvicheva, a ?photographer in Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky, a port city 6,800 km (4,200 miles) east of Moscow.

A video posted on Russian media showed locals walking along snow drifts and traffic lights, with?great snow piles several meters high lining the roads.

Some people jumped down the slopes just for fun. (Reporting and writing by Guy Faulconbridge, editing by Jan Harvey).

(source: Reuters)