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Dionaea 'Korean Melody Shark'

Posted: Sun Feb 27, 2011 2:40 am
by Matt
For those of you who haven't seen photos of this newly registered cultivar, below are a few I took recently. This is a very odd looking flytrap and not like any other clone I've ever seen. The petioles are long and thin like spaghetti noodles and the traps are poorly formed, almost like Wacky Traps. It's a really unique and interesting Venus fly trap clone and I'm really liking it so far.
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Re: Dionaea 'Korean Melody Shark'

Posted: Sun Feb 27, 2011 2:42 am
by Dionae
Thats incredible looking. Is that 5 triggers I see on one of the traps?

Re: Dionaea 'Korean Melody Shark'

Posted: Sun Feb 27, 2011 2:48 am
by manzano167
Look really weird! Thanks for sharing

Re: Dionaea 'Korean Melody Shark'

Posted: Sun Feb 27, 2011 2:51 am
by Matt
Dionae wrote:Is that 5 triggers I see on one of the traps?
Yeah, many of the traps have more than 3 trigger hairs.
Dionae wrote:Thats incredible looking.
manzano167 wrote:Look really weird! Thanks for sharing
Thanks both of you :)

Re: Dionaea 'Korean Melody Shark'

Posted: Sun Feb 27, 2011 2:55 am
by dantt99
Wow! That's awesome! Where do you get all of these awesome cultivars?

Re: Dionaea 'Korean Melody Shark'

Posted: Sun Feb 27, 2011 2:56 am
by manzano167
how many months has it been with you? Is it hard to TC or do any pullings? looks hard to do pullings!

Re: Dionaea 'Korean Melody Shark'

Posted: Sun Feb 27, 2011 3:23 am
by jht-union
It looks amazing, and is really pretty and weird!, i bet in over 10 years, there will be more than 1000 VFT's register cultivars! :)

Re: Dionaea 'Korean Melody Shark'

Posted: Sun Feb 27, 2011 5:20 am
by Matt
dantt99 wrote:Wow! That's awesome! Where do you get all of these awesome cultivars?
Most of them come in trades. For Korean Melody Shark, I was able to work out a trade directly with the person that registered it as an official cultivar.
manzano167 wrote:how many months has it been with you?
I've had my plants since October.
manzano167 wrote:Is it hard to TC or do any pullings? looks hard to do pullings!
I have it in TC right now. In fact, I already have a few of them potted out and nearly ready for sale. Steve and I will be selling our first one on eBay starting on Monday.

And yeah, it does look like it would be hard to take pullings from. The rhizome on them is pretty small because the petioles are so thin.
jht-union wrote:It looks amazing, and is really pretty and weird!, i bet in over 10 years, there will be more than 1000 VFT's register cultivars! :)
I've been wondering lately how many clones will be registered eventually. It seems like there have been quite a few registered recently after not having too many for quite a few years.

Re: Dionaea 'Korean Melody Shark'

Posted: Sun Feb 27, 2011 10:33 am
by Darkrai283
Wow! :o HOw do you get all of these plants? (I know: by trading) But like how do get in contact with the people that registered it as the cultivars?

Re: Dionaea 'Korean Melody Shark'

Posted: Sun Feb 27, 2011 11:04 am
by Grey
How strange! It looks beautiful in its own noodly way and I'd certainly be proud to own one! Best of luck continuing its wonderful growth and I'll certainly be jealous of the lucky ones who score one of these on eBay.

Re: Dionaea 'Korean Melody Shark'

Posted: Sun Feb 27, 2011 11:11 am
by Daniel_G
Wow! That's another plant that i want :lol:

Re: Dionaea 'Korean Melody Shark'

Posted: Sun Feb 27, 2011 5:40 pm
by Matt
Darkrai283 wrote:But like how do get in contact with the people that registered it as the cultivars?
Often times, they'll contact me. But if there is something in particular that I'm looking for, I'll find out who is growing it and send them an email or message.

Re: Dionaea 'Korean Melody Shark'

Posted: Sun Feb 27, 2011 6:00 pm
by stitz25b
do you reckon it drops loads of bombs to protect itself
cool cultivar

Re: Dionaea 'Korean Melody Shark'

Posted: Sun Mar 06, 2011 10:22 pm
by victor
That VFT is very cool and interesting.

Although, I wonder where it gets it's name???

Re: Dionaea 'Korean Melody Shark'

Posted: Sun Mar 06, 2011 10:45 pm
by Matt
victor wrote:Although, I wonder where it gets it's name???
You can find out everything about it here:
http://www.flytrapcare.com/venus-fly-tr ... -trap.html

Quote from that page:
Etymology: This cultivar was named "Korean" because it came from Korea, where this new carnivorous plant cultivar was named, "Melody" because the traps look like musical notes, and "Shark" as an allusion to the informal name of the parent plants.