Backpacking in Ukraine: Chernobyl Exclusion Zone Tour Part 5 – Backpacking in Kopachi

“I can feel the warning signs running around my mind” – Noel Gallagher.

Backpacking in Ukraine: Chernobyl Exclusion Zone Tour Part 5 – Backpacking in Kopachi

Backpacking in Ukraine: Chernobyl Exclusion Zone Tour Part 5 – Backpacking in Kopachi

So far the day tour of Chernobyl has the mind constantly churning with thoughts. Against a dirty, smoggy, swollen sky it hardly seems appropriate to smile at any point. It’s easy to know that something bad happened here. You just sense it in the air. The air didn’t even feel clean, but then again, having backpacked through 13 Provinces of China so far, the air isn’t always clean anyway. But something else sticks – some kind of smell. Like an intermittent headache that lingers 29 years later, on and off. White and black. Hot and cold. Without a guide book, map or list of top sights to tick off, we go backpacking through the streets of Kopachi.

Backpacking in Ukraine: Chernobyl Exclusion Zone Tour Part 5 – Backpacking in Kopachi

Backpacking in Ukraine: Chernobyl Exclusion Zone Tour Part 5 – Backpacking in Kopachi

We have left the site of the secret radar system and visit our second settlement of the day, after our earlier visit to Chernobyl town. What? People live here? Yes, people live within the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone. Not many of them, but some live here. We are off backpacking in downtown Kopachi.

Downtown Kopachi, Chernobyl Exclusion Zone, Ukraine

Downtown Kopachi, Chernobyl Exclusion Zone, Ukraine

Except there is one problem – the town no longer really exists. Kopachi suffered badly during the Chernobyl disaster and to this day, you can still drive right through the town, looking at where houses once were, people once lived and now, 29 years on, times have changed. Trees are now growing through the old town centre.

Trees and a lampost in Kopachi

Trees and a lampost in Kopachi

All the wooden buildings in Kopachi were destroyed and taken apart to be de-radiation ised. A town once housing 1,114 people now lies in ruins. It has a difference to Agdam in Nagorno Karabakh however – there are trees everywhere. Karabakh was rather barren.

Kopachi, Chernobyl Exclusion Zone, Soviet Union.

Kopachi, Chernobyl Exclusion Zone, Soviet Union.

For a backpacker here, the four main sad sights, seem to be as follows (and you can tick them off quite easily with your guide in tow):

1.Radiation Warning Signs
Arrival in Kopachi comes with a massive reminder of where we are. In this area there are lots of signs showing the radiation logo and displaying the risk. The air feels decidedly choke-ier and I do try to drink more water and noticeably, I cough more on my exit from this sad little town.

Radiation warning signs in Kopachi

Radiation warning signs in Kopachi

Radiation warning signs in downtown Kopachi

Radiation warning signs in downtown Kopachi

2.The Radioactive Tree
Misha grabs the Geiger counter, “come here lads, check this out” and as he holds the Geiger Counter to the roots of a huge tree, the dial goes skew-wif. It’s a high reading. It’s radioactive here. It’s like 5.9 usv/h on the Geiger Counter. Most places on the tour remain below 1 usv/h.

The Radioactive tree - Geiger counter goes wild

The Radioactive tree – Geiger counter goes wild

Radiation tree in Kopachi

Radiation tree in Kopachi

3.The Soviet Statues
Downtown Kopachi won’t make the Lonely Planet’s Top things to do in Ukraine nor should you go here on a honeymoon. But there are some reminders of pre-1986 Kopachi. The Soviet statues still stand near where the town centre once was, and in front of a building. A building which is now the largest standing structure in Kopachi, the Kindergarten.

Soviet Union era statues. 29 years after the disaster.

Soviet Union era statues. 29 years after the disaster.

4.Kopachi Kindergarten
The sadness is clear for all to see here. The Kindergarten in Kopachi has been left entirely the way it was. Books on the floors, dolls in the dorm rooms, music books, tables, beds. The place is like something out of a horror movie. And so it should be. The disaster was horrific. There hasn’t been a need to clear this kindergarten out.

The floor of the Kindergarten

The floor of the Kindergarten

Seriously, 29 years later (now almost 30) and the Kindergarten in Kopachi remains as it was on the fateful day it was evacuated.

A former classroom

A former classroom

A former dorm room

A former dorm room

There is a real sadness when you walk around it. I went into most of the rooms. But I didn’t need to go into all of them. Misha waits for us – we can spend as long as we want inside the Kindergarten but once you’ve seen the horrors of it, you get the idea.

Backpacking in an abandoned kindergarten in Kopachi, CEZ

Backpacking in an abandoned kindergarten in Kopachi, CEZ

The entrance to the kindergarten

The entrance to the kindergarten

We spent less than 40 minutes in Kopachi and that’s all you need here. The rest of the town was destroyed to cover the radiation risks. A lot of it was buried underground. Kopachi was evacuated and nobody ever returned. After the kindergarten tour we are heading to the scene of the crime. Reactor Number 4. The day is coming together well.

Books in Kopachi

Books in Kopachi

The Kindergarten

The Kindergarten

Driving through Kopachi - once the main road through the town.

Driving through Kopachi – once the main road through the town.

Here are my videos from backpacking in the ruins of Kopachi. Some scenes may be disturbing:

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