This picture was taken secretly from a passing bus and shows a man trying to plow his field with a steer and without modern farming tools.
Unfortunately, when you look at the ground, it seems like there are more rocks than soil. This is not ideal for planting crops. Hopefully, the poor man will be able to plant some seeds that will help feed his family. Otherwise the leaders in Pyongyong may need to start working on a cookbook for rocks.
Just stay home
Traveling is not part of life in North Korea. Most people in the country do not leave the village they were born in their entire lives. There are military check points at the entrances to many towns and villages and it is very rare to get permission to leave. There is always the risk that even with special permission you will get arrested and charged with trumped up espionage charges. That is why this picture of a bus traveling the countryside is so rare. The bus looks at least 50 years old and probably doesn’t even have air conditioning.
The bus looks at least 50 years old and probably doesn’t even have air conditioning. Talk about traveling in style. This 1960’s era bus traveling the countryside is a rare sight.
0 unemployment
What a marvelous country North Korea must be to have a 0% unemployment rate and a job for every worker. This is surely a sign of a strong economy. An economy so strong, that even the schoolgirls want to pitch in and clean the street from dust.
Unfortunately, this doesn’t seem to be the whole truth, but with no access to unofficial numbers, we must trust in the government’s unemployment figures. Well, maybe with just the tiniest hint of skepticism.
Fishing for food
Many men come to the Taedong River to try their luck at fishing for their supper. It may seem like this is a shot of rural life in an impoverished village, but it is actually from the North Korean Capital Pyongyang.
The whole of North Korea is suffering from malnutrition and fresh fish and meat are almost impossible to find in supermarkets. Therefore, these men need to fish in the city’s river in order to secure the protein necessary for them and their families.
Public bathing
Due to the fact that running water is hard to come by across most of North Korea (even having a faucet is no guarantee because there is rarely water in the pipes), most people bathe outside in river. They go outside with some soap and let the current wash their dirt away.
The North Korean government forbids taking pictures of people bathing in rivers because the censors believe it portrays the country in a negative light as an impoverished backwater.