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].
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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Thanks for sharing this pictures! They are amazing!
Thanks Jessica, great feedback makes it all worthwhile!
Your birthday cake looked scrumptious! Thank you for sharing such amazing photos. You are very lucky to have had such an experience!
It was as tasty as it looks – served directly after a great Korean BBQ. The lavish cake took me off guard – I mean, having my birthday recognised…in North Korea? Wow. Not an experience I’m likely to forget.
I once joined a one-week tour in China that straddled my birthday. During dinner at a restaurant, I was presented with a cake that was big enough to feed everyone in the tour group (about 30 people) and a souvenir. That was certainly unexpected, but I appreciated it.
Woah, it’s crazy. I don’t think I’d have the heart to go there. You’re awesome Elliot.
I appreciate your kind words! I feel as if personal safety to North Korea is the least of the worries as a tourist. The moral repercussions of a visit really do present a grey area worth considering. It’s a complex issue.
Awesome collection of photos! Very cool to see the lighter side of soldiers, albeit fabricated. I’m looking forward to your next round of photos!
Hi Jeremy, thanks for your comment. I’m pleased you noticed! It was a conscious effort to select not only nice photos, but those that tell a deeper story as you mentioned. Without the captions, many photos lose context and are not nearly as impressive.
Loved the photos, along with the informative captions! Thank you for sharing this with us you brave, young, sexy lad.
Thanks sir! It’s my pleasure, Your name reminds me of a certain track from the Marshall Mathers LP that puts an entirely different tone to your comment…
Great photos! Very impressive work.
Thanks Greg!
I enjoyed this! Come visit the Philippines next time. I am interested how you see it. 🙂
Thanks Maurice! Phillipines is certainly on the list!
These are awesome. Still would have liked to see more of those female tour guides, ding dong!
Beautiful right? Try your best not to get caught up in the forbidden lust!
Thanks for posting these photos. I really enjoyed them.
Thanks Chris! I enjoyed putting it together.
I bet you did not get within 500 miles of their “So called, none existent prison camps”?
Hi Elliot, you might be one of the bravest young people I know! What amazing photographs and loved the insights! North Korea seems to have a sterile concrete heart surrounded by some beautiful countryside.
I look forward to your next trip and ensuing photos and commentary ..thank you so much for sharing!
Thanks for your comment Sylvie, I am pleased you enjoyed the post! It was quite the experience, and although it seems dangerous at face value; North Korea as a tourist is quite safe as long as you play by the rules. Nodding your head in agreement and following local customs has never been so important! Simply bite your lip, and a silently take on the role in sorting reality from façade. Absolutely fascinating. Sterile is a great way to put Pyongyang, the lack of advertising in this city really throws you off, while the untouched countryside and seemingly forgotten villages expose a dark; contrasting reality to North Korea. Thanks again for reading!
“Lack of advertising…” Just have to say I saw tons of advertising and “billboards” in your pictures of the Dear Leader Kim Jong Il or Un. They might as well put his face on everything they produce in the country
You certainly aren’t wrong, and they almost do! Kim Il-Sung and Kim Jong-Il are everywhere; including the currency, and scarily – after a while in North Korea you don’t even consciously notice the billboards and the murals anymore. They’re faces are so common that it becomes normality.
Great photos but you are very brave. If they had caught you, you may have ended up in a labor camp for spying. Great pics though.
Absolutely stunning. As I want to go everywhere, eat everyone’s food and meet everyone – I think I might find NK amazing.
What a collection of astounding photographs. I just hope the folks in the photographs are safe from harassment and wrath from Kim Jong Un.
Loved the pictures!! I was in Suwon and did the DMZ tour the day the North Korean soldier killed his fellow soldiers and ran to the south. I miss it!!
Fantastic pictures, and the deepest insight I’ve read and seen about the country. It is so bizarre! Really feel for the people living there though…
Thank you, bizarre is certainly one way to sum up North Korea. It’s an absurdity that for us from beyond the fishbowl is hard to believe exists outside of mere historical texts. As you say, it’s actually a living, breathing country of approximately 24 million people who exist parallel to our realities of absolute, relative freedom. Unbelieveable.
succinctly put, Elliott. I am still completely blown over by these pictures. It does remind me of Zombie apocalypse movies.
Thanks for taking the photos because N.K. is fascinating back in time yet present in your photos.
No problem, thanks I’m glad you enjoyed it! I’ll ensure these photos remain available, it may be an interesting comparison as things change in the future (if ever).
Really amazing pictures. But i think the scenery is set up. why so many people in the grass with the uniforms? thely look like they are ready for u to take a picture. nobody does anything
Hi Sakis, thanks for your comment.
I’m unsure as to the photo you’re referring to, probably the one with the ladies maintaining the grass at the Kumsusan Palace of the Sun? http://www.earthnutshell.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/07/101-pyongyang-gardening.jpg
If so, I can assure you this was not setup, I was told off for taking that particular photo after being spotted by the guides. I had the camera sideways. North Korea believe these scenes to reflect badly on the country, they provide a glimpse into realities hidden from tourists under the surface-level parade of central Pyongyang. We were whisked past anything similarly ‘controversial’ very quickly. Some I could get photos of, some I could not, for various reasons.
you got some huge balls to take those pics but i have to say they were some amazing pics none the less and i would like to thank you for the incite of a country ran by a bunch of nut cases and i look forward to seeing more of your photos again
Amazing photography, well done! Im curious about traveling to North Korea to feel the country atmosphere..As I see in your photos, its a travel back to Stalinism or URSS, as you prefer. The north korean people had been receptive with you or in a certain way you felt a propaganda affection with tourists?
Hugs from Brazil and again, congratulations by realizing this traveling! 🙂
Hi Kevin, it may well be the Cold War’s final frontier, it certainly felt that way.
The North Korean people were very receptive. Tourists are shown utmost respect as visitors at all times. I felt safe at all times. Our expectation was respect in return, this meant bowing when required, no political debates, preaching, or discounting questionable ‘facts’ that were presented. It was par for the course. You don’t visit North Korea without knowing this. We were not expected to ‘believe’ their way, merely listen, appreciate and be respectful of the culture as it is, just as anywhere else in the world. Of course, if you left North Korea believing Kim Il-Sung and unification under socialism was the best thing since sliced bread, then they’d be happy with that too. Trips to North Korea are very much political.
The language barrier made interacting with true locals (outside of your guides) difficult, if not impossible on a conversational level which I’m sure is a convenient reality to the government. However, I felt no dissent from those I conversed with, including those I had translated conversations with on behalf of my minders. Contrary to popular myth, it is legal to interact with locals in North Korea as a foreigner, the circumstances of your visit (no independent freedom and strict time constraints) is the limiting factor. The people were most interested in Americans, after growing up to believe them as the enemy — seeing them smiling, waving, interested in touring their home country was quite the contradiction. Children all over the country were excitable after seeing foreigners, laughing and waving as we passed just as anywhere in the world.
Thanks for your kind words!
You’re a brave soul. looks like a bleak place to me.
Very, Very Impressive photos.. One thing people need to realize is that growing up under such an oppressive gov’t, is, that is all you know, You are told and taught at a young age that Jong-ll leading the country is basically a god, and you have no reason to believe otherwise….
Reminds me of South Carolina. Visit any mining town or the South and it’s no different. Most people in the lesser American states such as the mid-west or the South have never been outside their county, work in slum towns, likely have never played any sport and are just as indoctrinated and only the capitol city contains any sign of luxury, so I don’t see much difference here, but thank you for a view into NK. For some reason, I feel as the wife has some influence in changing the nation.