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Ghost Hunting in Polotsk: Cold Enough to Freeze a Spirit's Scream

@Sophia Berg3/9/2026blog
Ghost Hunting in Polotsk: Cold Enough to Freeze a Spirit's Scream

polotsk hit me like a wall of cold, damp air the second i stumbled off the minibus from minsk. my phone died in my pocket from the chill, the weather app last showed -1.64°c but the wind chill made it feel like -3.84, and the humidity was a suffocating 98%-like breathing in a wet blanket. i just checked and it's...still freezing, hope you like that kind of thing.


so yeah, i’m here to hunt ghosts. specifically, the rumored *soviet factory poltergeist that haunts the old tractor plant on the outskirts. a fellow urban explorer on a sketchy forum swore blind that the foreman, boris ivanovich, still roams the assembly line checking quotas. i’m not convinced but the challenge sounded cool and flights to minsk were cheap. plus, i needed a break from my apartment where the walls keep whispering my ex’s name (that’s a story for another day).

anyway, polotsk is basically a city of silent churches and river mist. the
dnieper river cuts through like a silver scar, and at night the fog rolls in thick. locals say it’s the ghosts of ancient slavic warriors still patrolling the banks. i heard that from a guy named vlad at the hostel who’d had a few too many local honey mead. his exact words: “stay away from the water after midnight, you’ll hear the clang of swords and the splash of oars-they don’t take kindly to outsiders.” definitely drunk advice, but i’ll admit it made my skin prickle.

i set up my gear in the abandoned part of the factory: a
digital voice recorder, a trusty emf meter (that’s electromagnetic field, for you newbies), and a night-vision cam my cousin lent me. the air smelled of rust and old coolant. humidity was 98%, my breath fogged instantly, and that pressure reading-1032 hpa-felt like the atmosphere itself was leaning in. some paranormal researchers claim high pressure can amplify psychic phenomena. i rolled my eyes but later, when my emf spiked without explanation, i nearly spilled my thermos of tea. note: never spill tea on your recorder. i learned that the hard way.

a crane is attached to a wooden pole


that crane in the photo? it’s actually still operating at the plant, or it was before they shut down line 3. the workers called it “old ivan” and claimed it would swing on its own when no one was around. i didn’t see that, but the motor made a weird humming that sounded almost like a moan. could be the wind, could be something else.
listen to the machinery-sometimes the ghosts use them as a medium.

i also visited
st. sophia cathedral, a baroque beauty that’s supposedly haunted by a nun who never left her post during the 1812 napoleonic invasion. inside, the air was cold despite the -2 outside, and my thermal camera picked up a spot that was 5 degrees colder near the altar. e , that’s a classic cold spot. i recorded an evp asking ‘is anyone here?’ and got a faint whisper that sounded like ‘go away.’ i think it was the wind through a crack, but my spine still tingled.

close up of flowers


those flowers? yeah, they’re from a little courtyard i stumbled into behind a dilapidated apartment block. they were the only splash of color in the grey decay. weirdly, they felt warm to the touch, like they were absorbing sunlight from a day that never came. maybe nothing, but in this line of work, you start noticing the uncanny everywhere.

if you’re thinking of coming here, take note:
public transport is a mess. the minibus from minsk is cheap but crowded, and the drivers don’t speak english. have your hotel address printed in russian. also, the hostel i stayed at-hostel drevny-has lockers that actually lock, which is rare. they also serve a mean borscht that’ll stick to your ribs. i’ll drop a yelp link below because i’m not lying, it’s good.

if the ghosts are shy-which they often are-you can always bail to
vitebsk, about an hour’s drive east. there’s a haunted psychiatric hospital there that’s been featured on some russian ghost shows. i heard from a local that the ghost of a patient who was lobotomized still wanders the halls humming a folk song. i haven’t been, but it’s on my list for next winter.

a close up of a plant with drops of water on it


this plant with water drops-i found it in the factory’s broken greenhouse. in the middle of winter, it shouldn’t have been alive, but there it was, glistening. spooky? maybe. or maybe someone was tending it. i didn’t stick around to find out.

i read a ton of reviews before heading out. one on tripadvisor said: “polotsk is boring, nothing to do after dark.” that’s exactly what a ghost wants you to think. another on a local board warned: “the spirits get angry if you use flash photography in the cathedral.” i tried it anyway (quietly) and my camera battery died instantly. take that as you will.

here are some links that helped me plan:
- Polotsk Ghost Tour on TripAdvisor
- Paranormal Research Society: Cold Weather Investigations
- Hostel Drevny on Yelp
- Local Board: Polotsk Hauntings

the weather here is no joke. i've been in colder places, but the combo of high humidity and that wind chill-
feels like a freezer with a broken door-makes it penetrate every layer. i slept in my sleeping bag with all my clothes on and still shivered. if you go, invest in wool socks and a balaclava. also, the high pressure (1032 hpa) supposedly reduces ghost activity? i heard conflicting theories. i say bring gear anyway; you might get lucky.

i’m sitting in a tiny cafe now, nursing a
hot chocolate that tastes like melted chocolate bar, typing this on my phone with numb fingers. the cafe owner just told me i should visit the old bridge at dawn because “the ghosts of executed rebels gather there to weep.” i’m inclined to go, but i might just catch up on sleep instead. maybe the ghosts will leave me alone if i do.

anyway, that's polotsk for you: a place where the cold seeps into your bones and the past refuses to rest. if you're into quiet, eerie vibes and don’t mind frostbite, give it a shot. just remember:
the best ghost stories happen when you least expect them, often in the most mundane spots*. and maybe bring an extra battery for your recorder. the cold eats them alive.


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About the author: Sophia Berg

Exploring the intersection of technology and humanity.

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