i live less than two miles from the 45th parallel, which means I am equal distance from the North Pole and Equator. The 45th passes through Crimea. Krasnoyarsk is between the 67th and 68th. Therefore, the distance from my home to the North Pole is twice as far as from Krasnyarsk to the North Pole. Krasnoyarsk has a very short but hot Summer. There is only a few hours of darkness there in Summer. Conversely, they have a very long Winter. In the middle of Winter, there is only a few hours of daylight. There is not much Spring or Fall weather. It can get down to -40 degrees F in Krasnoyarsk or colder.
I live on a peninsular extending into the Great Lakes. My county has 93 miles of shoreline, plus several large inland lakes. This makes the Summer cooler and the Winter warmer. It has been about 7 or 8 years since the water in front of my house has frozen over. The largest crops are cherries and grapes. Peaches, plums, apricots, English Walnuts, Pecans and manny other crops are grown here. Maple and Beech trees are most common.
Almost none of the plants that grow here would stand the Siberian Winter. What I seen there was some form of Birch tree and Siberian Larch. The Larch are very slow growing and lose their needles in the Fall. The wood is very dense and resistant to decay. It makes better lumber for decks than any Cedar or Redwood.
What I am getting at is, Oksana will notice many differences in nature and weather. My county gets about 150 inches of snow per season, but some counties near here get much more! When it is extremely cold in Siberia, not much snow would fall, and it would be very dry and fine, like dust. Around New Year, they make many very large ice sculptures in Krasnoyarsk, and they last well into the Winter before melting.
That would not work at all here.