But does he know how to train them? (see below a few posts)
cd
Kim Jong Il seeks monster bunnies | The World | The Australian
NORTH Korea has given a German pensioner a contract to supply the communist state with giant rabbits to help boost meat production and ease the country’s severe food shortages.
The only problem for Karl Szmolinsky, who won a prize and worldwide fame for breeding German’s largest rabbit – Robert, a 10.5kg bruiser the size of a dog – is that such huge rabbits consume vast quantities of food themselves as they grow.
Mr Szmolinsky, from Eberswalde, in the east of Germany, was contacted by the North Korean Embassy in Berlin in October after he attracted press coverage.
“They want to boost meat production. They’ve arranged for me to go to Pyongyang in April to advise them on setting up a breeding farm,” Mr Szmolinsky, who is 68 next month, told The Times.
He breeds German gray giants, which are among the world’s biggest rabbits, and sells his annual crop of 60 to 80 to other breeders in Germany for between € 200 ($330) and € 250.
He said that an attaché at the embassy came to his home and asked to see his rabbits. The diplomat was so impressed that he placed an order for eight females and four males, which were shipped to North Korea a few weeks later at a price of € 80 each.
Robert was among the first consignment. “I don’t know how many more they want and whether I’ll be getting any more orders,” Mr Szmolinsky said.
He has also received a request for rabbits from a Chinese buyer. He said he believed that the monster bunny program -one rabbit yields 7kg of meat – was aimed at feeding the North Korean people rather than the “Dear Leader”, Kim Jong Il, who is said to favour lobster.
The embassy in Berlin could not be reached for comment, but the state-run news agency reported in September that people were being encouraged to breed rabbits for food.
Mr Szmolinsky’s 12 rabbits, which are awaiting his arrival at a petting zoo in Pyongyang, could produce 60 babies in a year. They are unlikely to alleviate the chronic malnutrition endemic in the country of 23 million that drew condemnation when it announced a nuclear test last year.
The rabbits are also voracious eaters, which is why Mr Szmolinsky said that he would not be boosting his own annual production because feeding them would be too expensive.
The following is a recipe for Korean spicy rabbit and potato
Ingredients
2.25kg chopped rabbit
2 chopped potatoes
2 chopped carrots
1 chopped onion
4 cloves garlic, crushed
120ml water
120ml soy sauce
2 tablespns white sugar
3 tablespns hot pepper paste
Method
Mix the rabbit, potatoes, carrots, onion, sugar, and garlic over medium heat.
Pour in water and soy sauce, and stir in sugar and hot pepper paste.
Bring to a boil, reduce heat to low, simmer for 45 minutes