In a Nutshell: I visited North Korea in late 2014 and over 16 days ventured to all corners of this mysterious nation on one of the longest itineraries ever executed for foreigners. Here are 100 photos (part 1) taken during this visit to North Korea.
About: I’m Elliott. I’m the tour director at North Korea tour operator Uri Tours. I travel a lot myself, sometimes to the unusual, weird and wacky. Earth Nutshell is where I share my experiences. Interested in visiting North Korea for yourself? Shoot me an email at [email protected].
Half way! Click below to head over to part two.
Want to visit North Korea for yourself? I can help. I’m the tour director at Uri Tours, a North Korea tour operator. For inquiries you can contact me directly at [email protected].
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Outstanding! But I wonder if you are now never going to get back in (barring massive regime change) by having smuggled out these photos? Cheers mate, you’re a fool for risking this and I applaud you for it!
The news article about Fergeson was hilarious. Really cool insight on a strange land.
These photos are amazing. I live in Iran, Isfahan city. U should come here and visit Iran too. U will be shocked because Iran is wonderful.Isfahan is awesome. 🙂
Hi Hani, thanks for your comment. It’s funny you say that because Iran is next on the list, I’ll be visiting your country later this year and I’ll certainly make it to Isfahan. To say I’m looking forward to it would be an understatement. I’ve heard only good things!
DPRK is beautiful than another Asian Countries. Not only Asian countries more than half world.
tks
awesome this was interseting
Some of the most fantastic pictures I have ever seen!
Thanks very much!
Great shots! I was there in April 2015 for the marathon. I think we had the same tour guide at the military museum!
Thanks Jason, that wouldn’t surprise me at all, I think each location has a small pool of guides that are allowed to take foreign groups, and this wasn’t necessarily because they spoke English either. It was a shame we couldn’t take photos inside the War Museum, that diorama in the ‘Defeat Room’ with the dead American being picked at by crows was something else. Fascinating museum.
I agree, the museum was fascinating. They showed us a documentary about what “actually” happened during the Korean war and how America is at fault for starting it. They obviously grossly exaggerated the facts but it was fascinating to hear the story told from the other perspective. Seeing the USS Pueblo American ship was the most memorable for me, all the original contents of the boat were intact including copies of National Geographic and Reader Digest from the 1968.
What tour company did you go with?
Yes, we watched that documentary too. An interesting version of events huh? I assume you also saw the one on the U.S.S Pueblo? That ship was a centrepiece, not only to our own trips by the sound of it but to the North Korean propaganda machine. It’s on every tourist itinerary to Pyongyang without fail, local North Koreans are lined in droves to visit it, it’s clear the country is immensely proud in capturing that one American ship, solid ‘evidence’ of American spies, even if it happened all that time ago. Interestingly, it’s actually the only ‘captured’ U.S ship that’s currently (technically) still in service. Heading in one side of the ship, learning it’s North Korean version of history, before coming out the other side just ten minutes later with a differing version of events and tales of North Korean heroism I felt was a poetic example of the ‘educational’ process the citizens experience.
Hey is it not a bad idea that you publicize that your tour guide was given a book to read about the outside world and such? Wouldn’t it compromise him in some way?
Idk I feel like you should omit that picture.
Hi Jose, the book he is reading is the Lonely Planet guide to North Korea, it was legally cleared by customs on arrival in Pyongyang and is one of very few foreign texts given an exception to enter the country as long as you take it out with you. Any unknown texts, or even other tourist guides that haven’t been declared or inspected will land you in jail at worst, or at best be confiscated upon arrival to be given back on departure of the country.
Great Stuff..
Im glad you could sneak these and RETURN, INTACT, Safe & Alive.
Great Stuff
Thank you, me too, I’ve loved sharing my trip with you! If you play by the rules, it’s much safer over there than we give them credit for.