Subscribe | UPI Odd Newsletter Subscribe June 2 (UPI) -- A cafe in South Korea is attracting customers with a set of unusual residents -- two raccoons, a capybara and a corgi with identity issues. Han Song Hee, owner of the Blind Alley cafe in Seoul, told Insider the business was a normal cafe until she purchased it about two years ago and started bringing in her baby raccoons, Cong and Milk. Advertisement Song Hee told Refinery29 she bought Cong from a breeder and rescued Milk from a fur trader. She said she added the capybara -- one of the world's largest rodents -- to the family when she rescued it from a zoo that went out of business. Song Hee said the cafe has also since acquired a third raccoon, Shot, and a corgi, Cookie, that has spent so much time being brought up among raccoons that it thinks its one of them, rather than a dog. The animals are kept in a special room at the cafe to keep them away from customers' food. Read More San Francisco Rat Cafe offers dining with domesticated vermin Nutella Cafe to spread chocolaty cheer in Chicago Pop-Tarts pop-up in Times Square features sugar-packed pizza, tacos