Posted on May 28, 2014 |
Only recently have tourists been allowed to take photos out of the bus window. These are photos on the Reunification Highway between Pyongyang and on the Chongsan-ri Co-operative farm just outside of Pyongyang.

by Viola Zhou
Children play at a school on the Chongsan-ri Cooperative Farm.

by Crystal Tse
Greenhouses on the Chongsan-ri Cooperative Farm are open to tourist visits.

by Alice Wan
A North Korean walks with goats outside of Pyongyang. Last year, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un said the country would move from grain-fed livestock to grass-fed livstock to lessen the strain on the short food supply.

by Kyle Sun
A farmer works in a greenhouse on the Chongsan-ri Cooperative Farm, which is open to tourists.

by Yupina Ng
Farmers plant while listening to North Korean songs from a loudspeaker on the Chongsan-ri Cooperative Farm near Pyongyang, which is open to tourists.

by Thomas Chan
North Korean rest in the countryside outside of Pyongyang.

by Viola Zhou
Children play at a school on the Chongsan-ri Cooperative Farm.

by Robin Ewing
In the countryside, most people use bicycles to get around.

by Robin Ewing
Traffic is light on the Reunification Highway to the DMZ.

By Robin Ewing
Most of North Korea's land is mountanious, with only 18 percent arable enough for farming.