The cold current from Russia invaded the Crimea Peninsula with a lightning speed since October, and the temperature of the Crimea Peninsula dropped sharply in just a few days.
The biting cold wind was like sharp knives, cruelly tormenting every soldier on night duty.
This made the French soldiers, who had barely survived the cholera outbreaks of July and August, undergo the ordeal of influenza again,
Almost every day, several French soldiers had to be carried to the field hospital for treatment, and the morale of the French soldiers on the South Shore of Sevastopol and at Camish Port inevitably declined as the cold front approached.
To alleviate the depression brought by the cold front, Jerome Bonaparte, along with Pellissier, visited various military camps to meet with soldiers and understand their thoughts and conditions.
Though each communication took a lot of their time and energy, Jerome Bonaparte considered it a very meaningful endeavor.
