Dyed dogs and goats: North Korean traders exploit summer livestock craze
Scammers in North Korea are dyeing the fur of ordinary livestock black and selling the animals as premium dark-furred breeds, exploiting a widespread belief that black animals offer superior health benefits ahead of the hottest period of the summer calendar. In North Korea, the three hottest periods

Scammers in North Korea are dyeing the fur of ordinary livestock black and selling the animals as premium dark-furred breeds, exploiting a widespread belief that black animals offer superior health benefits ahead of the hottest period of the summer calendar.
In North Korea, the three hottest periods of the summer, known as the “sambok” days, are traditionally observed by eating restorative meat dishes to help the body cope with summer heat. The practice, called “bokdalim,” involves boiling meat into soups or stews and has long been a fixture of the summer calendar on the Korean peninsula. In recent years, a growing belief has taken hold that dark-furred animals, including black goats, black pigs, and black dogs, carry greater nutritional value and stamina-restoring properties than their lighter-coated counterparts, driving up prices for those animals in North Korean markets.
A Daily NK source in South Pyongan province said that demand for black goats, black pigs, and black dogs has been climbing across multiple cities in the province as the sambok period approaches. “There are traders who dye ordinary goats, pigs, and dogs black with hair dye and sell them,” the source said. “People are now saying that you have to check whether even livestock are real or fake.”
Dyed fur, drained wallets
The source said dog meat restaurants and other establishments preparing for the sambok season have been purchasing livestock from traders ahead of the peak period. It is during these transactions that fraudulent sellers have been operating, offering black-furred animals at prices slightly below market rate before disappearing once the deception is discovered.



