St Petersburg ice walls thrill Russians

Ice wall in ZelenogorskImage copyright
Terijoki.spb.ru

Russians are marvelling at rare ice walls – in places 5m (16ft) high – towering on the shores of the Gulf of Finland near St Petersburg.

They were created by storms lashing the region in recent days.

Such phenomena are more characteristic of Russia’s Arctic far east.

The walls are formed when a storm exerts sideways pressure on thick ice covering a sea, river or lake. The ice is bad news for seals, though, as it can cut them off from the sea.

A conservation group – the Baltic Seal Foundation – is urging Russians to alert it to any stranded seals found in the region. Some have been spotted from helicopters.

Baby grey sealImage copyright
Balticseal.org

Image caption

This baby weighs just 13.5kg (30 pounds) but needs to reach 40kg to survive independently

One baby grey seal, just a few days old, was rescued last week and is doing well now, the group reports, with a video on vKontakte, the Russian version of Facebook.

The seal, swaddled in blankets, is fed five times a day with a pipette. It got stranded in Gakkovo, a coastal village near Estonia.

Baby grey sealImage copyright
balticseal.org

Image caption

A gloved hand shows how vulnerable the baby still is

The most dramatic ice wall pictures so far have come from Zelenogorsk, on the northern shore of the Gulf of Finland, just outside St Petersburg.

Alexander Bravo posted images of the wall on the local website Terijoki.spb.ru. He calls it “the Zelenogorsk Alps”.

Ice wall in ZelenogorskImage copyright
Terijoki.spb.ru

Ice wall in ZelenogorskImage copyright
Terijoki.spb.ru

Ice wall in ZelenogorskImage copyright
Terijoki.spb.ru

Gulf of Finland map

Ice wall in ZelenogorskImage copyright
Terijoki.spb.ru

Ice wall in ZelenogorskImage copyright
Terijoki.spb.ru

Surfer, 17 Feb 19Image copyright
AFP

Image caption

The ice did not deter this surfer last month at Lipovo, near St Petersburg

All images subject to copyright.

St Petersburg ice walls thrill Russians