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In North Korea…

People who…


  • pgraczer
    2 entries
    Worth visiting!

  • Marjolein Katsma
    2 entries
    Worth visiting!

  • SeoulStyle
    1 entry
    Worth visiting!

  • Treefern
    1 entry
    Worth visiting!

  • jtinaustralia
    1 entry
    Worth visiting!

  • gnarr
    1 entry
    Not worth visiting

  • rahjah_6
    1 entry
    Worth visiting!

  • rasputina101
    1 entry
    Worth visiting!

  • kikiki
    1 entry
    Worth visiting!

  • thewonderchicken
    1 entry
    Worth visiting!
  • People going here are also going to these places:

    Entries

    SeoulStyle
    Seoul

    North Korea  — 11 months ago

    Worth visiting!

    The Panmunjom Tour is worth the visit. It is one of three ways into North Korea. The Panmunjom Tour explores the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) of North and South Korea. Other ways into the country include a mountain tour via South Korea or a tour of Pyongyang the Capital City via Beijing. Pyongyang is extremely difficult to get into and requires months of visa preparation.

    Treefern
    30 places

    A review of this place: The Hermit Kingdom  — 1 year ago

    Worth visiting!

    It is hard to describe the feelings of being in North Korea,
    I guess it is perhaps something you have to experience for yourself with your own interpretations and perceptions,
    Often when people write things from their own perceptions and they are read by others, the reader uses their own perception to analyse what was written, thus the true intention of the writer is lost, so perhaps with a place like North Korea, where so many people have their own ideas about it and there is so much controversy concerning the country
    I shall say simply that it is a beautiful country with beautiful kind people and I would travel there again and I intend to again quite soon

    jchapman
    Katy

    Why I want to go to this place  — 1 year ago

    Nature wise, it’s supposed to be beautiful. I’ll go when that crazy guy loses power first.

    jtinaustralia
    Australia

    A tip I have about this place  — 1 year ago

    Worth visiting!

    Make friends with your guide. Be unrelentingly friendly. He or she will determine what you see, where you go, to whom you can speak, and what you can take photos of. If they like you, they will spring amazing surprises on the group – you can see great things.

    gnarr
    United States

    Untitled  — 1 year ago

    Not worth it!

    Six feet inside at the DMZ.

    wdjming
    Mount Changbai

    Why I want to go to this place  — 1 year ago

    North Korea is near to my hometown and they share one boundary. I usually saw North Korea from one side of the river belongs to my country. People in North Korea usually wash their clothes beside river. I want to really go to here and not just see.

    pgraczer
    New Zealand

    One trip i'll never forget  — 1 year ago

    Worth visiting!

    Went to DPRK in Sept 2004. Visited Pyongyang and Kaesong. Hard to describe what it was really like – you have to see for yourselves. Won’t forget the underground Chinese casino at the Yanggakdo Hotel (next to the ‘golden shower’ sauna) – we played blackjack on the first night in Pyongyang and I won $50 US!!

    pgraczer
    New Zealand

    A tip I have about this place  — 1 year ago

    Worth visiting!

    Bring lots of really small denomination Euro notes. These are accepted more readily than dollars, but are hard to change in the DPRK.

    Marjolein Katsma
    Amsterdam

    Eye opener  — 1 year ago

    Worth visiting!

    I’m just back from a 10-day trip in the DPRK, and looking at the tags given here it is painfully obvious how much the ideas about the country are shaped by what we hear in the western press. Go with open eyes and an open mind (knowing that what you’ll be shown is a selection just like what you see and hear in the West is a – different – selection) and you’ll come away with a very different picture of this country.

    I really hope that late president’s Kim Il Sung’s idea of reuniting the “two Koreas” (really one country, one people, one language) as federal country with two states, each with their own system, will one day become reality. Economic development in the North (helped already by joint ventures with South Korea and China) will help making that dream a reality – but so will, in a small way, visits from people from other countries, providing a small “window on the world” through those guides (like ours) that are not only interested in teaching about their country but also in learning from their guests. What won’t help is demonizing the country.

    I’ve come away admiring these proud people and their old culture and hope to return one day to see more, and see how they’ve progressed.

    The picture shows one small aspect I’ve come to love: all main roads across the country (not just entrances and exits to cities as you often see) are lined with flowers. Even when growing food is hard work, a small amount of effort is given to grow a little beauty.

    Marjolein Katsma
    Amsterdam

    Well, I'm *really* going!  — 1 year ago

    Worth visiting!

    How disappointing… I found 5 people who (according to an entry they wrote) have apparently “been” there: 1 who has been in the infiltration tunnels, 3 who have been in the DMZ and ventured a few meters into North Korea, and 1 person who “got lost in the city” so that cannot actually be North Korea. Of the 16 others, who has really been there?

    Well, folks, I’m really going. My Travel Blog already has the itinerary (though the order of things may change). We’ll be in P’yŏngyang only half the time and actually overnight several times outside of the city (most tours don’t do that). Apart from P’yŏngyang, we’ll visit Kaesŏng, Namp’o and Wŏnsan and go hiking in the Myohyang Mountains and the Inner Kumgang.

    So why do I want to go?
    First, I’ve been to China several times now, and have been amazed at the breakneck speed this country is developing. I’ve also been reading a lot about China, and found myself wondering what it would have been like a few decades ago. From what I read, North Korea now is very much like China in the 70s, or just before the cultural revolution.
    Second, Korea has its own unique culture and language that they managed to hold on to despite Japanese efforts to wipe it out (even forbidding the language). And there seem to be beautiful nature and landscapes.

    So I want to go to experience all that. And where else can you still experience real “old-fashioned” communism? (Although not officially communist, Turkmenistan probably comes closest.)

    The tour (apart from my own extension of a week in Beijing) is only 10 days actually in North Korea, but given the lack of freedom, that’s probably the longest I could bear. But I’ve heard from people who have been there several times because they actually like it there – and they’re not communists. Something about this country pulls them back. So we’ll see…

    See all 22 entries

    Questions about this place


    Praha
    Leah Lionheart asks, “What is the procedure for a US Citizen to visit DPRK?”
    — 1 year ago


    3 answers

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