Dikij is raw Russian outdoor television, think hunting deep in the taiga, fishing on frozen lakes, and survival skills passed down from Soviet-era manuals. The production values are intentionally rough: shaky handheld shots, minimal editing, no dramatic music. It feels like you're watching a friend's GoPro footage, and that's precisely the appeal. The channel doesn't bother with slick nature documentaries you'd find on National Geographic. Instead, it gives you unpolished reality: men skinning game, building lean-tos, navigating whitewater in homemade rafts. Even the fishing segments avoid glamour shots, just hours of patient casting. It's not for everyone. But if you want an unfiltered window into Russia's wilderness culture without a glossy filter, Dikij delivers. You'll hear plenty of Russian dialogue, heavy on field slang. The channel schedules long blocks of themed content: morning fishing, afternoon hunting, evening survival. And when the sun sets, there's often a campfire chat segment where hosts share tall tales from the woods. For viewers outside Russia, it's a rare peek into a side of the country rarely seen on international TV. To watch Dikij online, expect a no-frills experience. It's Outdoor TV Russia at its most authentic, gritty, slow, and strangely hypnotic.
Live
Live
Live
Live
Live
Live
Live
Live
Live
Live
Live
Live
Live
Live
Live
Live
Live
Live
Live
Live
Live
Live
Live
Live
Live
Live
Live
Live
Live
Live
Live
Live
Live
Live
Live
Live
Live
Live
Live
Live
Live
Live