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The contents of the Seoulmadi squash page were merged into Aehobak on 12 February 2018. For the contribution history and old versions of the redirected page, please see its history; for the discussion at that location, see its talk page.
Hi, I have grown several varieties of Cucurbita moschata but the plant in the picture does not look like a pure C.moschata. It looks like a crossbreed (I don't know the correct English word). I have been crossing C.Pepo with C.Moschata and also C. Moschata with C. Maxima for several years myself. The plant and fruit in the picture looks excactly like one of them. I know my personal experience is not relevant (WP:NOR). However the references included in the wikipedia article indicate that Seoulmadi is an interspecific hybrid. Unfortunatly, only the title of the paper is in English.[1] The paper itself is in Korean. I am very intrigued by these breeds of squash and would like to know more about its origin. Hopefuly someone who can read Korean can help. We could improve this article and I could also translate it into Dutch and create an article on the Dutch Wikipedia. 143.176.56.102 (talk) 10:16, 7 November 2017 (UTC)[reply]
1976 Korean is more of mix with Korean and Hanja (as I glanced over the paper), and 'translating' hanja will take 10x more time than translating plain Korean. I'm busy in other stuff right now so I can't help you, sorry! — regards, Revi01:51, 8 November 2017 (UTC)[reply]
As the article mentions, squashes and pumpkins from Korea are mostly C. moschata. Hybrid cultivars of the Korean cultigens are either intraspecific hybrids of C. moschata or interspecific ones developed using the "native" varieties (C. moschata) and "foreign" ones (e.g. C. pepo or C. maxima varieties). The "native" varieties I think refer to the ones that were introduced to Korea through China before the modern era (e.g. hobak mentioned in Heo, Gyun (1613). Seongsobubugo.). --Munui (talk) 09:56, 12 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]