Behind the artfully decorated Maianbar bus stop there are half a dozen species of banksia within a short walk. To identify them it is handy to learn their names. The information within the name will jog the memory each time you try to identify a plant. Plants may have a common name and a scientific name, both names can be useful. The common name is least reliable, it will vary from place to place and can be pretty vague. The scientific name will slot the plant into the taxonomic hierarchy which will tell you much about the structure of the plant and how it relates to others. The scientific name can change when academics get busy, but it will lead back to the first scientific description of the plant. The scientific name is a double-barrelled binomial usually composed of latin or greek roots or a nod to a dignitary, explorer or a botanist. All of this is useful information.
In the photo below is Banksia spinulosa, the hairpin banksia. The old fashioned hairpin is now an uncommon object and so the common name is possibly not very useful. The generic name Banksia was conjured up in 1782 by Carl Linnaeus the younger, son of daddy Carl Linnaeus the swedish naturalist who invented the taxonomic system. The first half of the binomial honours Joseph Banks who collected the original type specimen in 1770 on Cooks “voyage of discovery”. The second part of the name refers to spines on the leaf tip.

Am liking the common name now that I see what an old fashioned hairpin from 1850 looks like. It has points on the end that would give you a little jab like little spines, whereas the modern bobby pin is not nearly so fearsome. But all jabbing aside the rounded end of either style of pin resembles the bent anthers of the rows of flowers.

