banksia integrifolia coast

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Banksia integrifolia Coast Banksia 8 Royalty Free Stock Photo
Banksia integrifolia Coast Banksia 7 Royalty Free Stock Photo
Banksia integrifolia Coast Banksia 2 Royalty Free Stock Photo
Banksia integrifolia Coast Banksia 1 Royalty Free Stock Photo
Banksia integrifolia Coast Banksia 3 Royalty Free Stock Photo
Coast banksia or Banksia Integrifolia plant in Zurich in Switzerland 16.6.25 Royalty Free Stock Photo
Coast banksia or Banksia Integrifolia plant in Zurich in Switzerland 16.6.25 Royalty Free Stock Photo
Banksia integrifolia Coast Banksia 1
Banksia integrifolia Coast Banksia 4 Royalty Free Stock Photo
Banksia integrifolia Coast Banksia 6 Royalty Free Stock Photo
Coast banksia or Banksia Integrifolia plant in Zurich in Switzerland 16.6.25 Royalty Free Stock Photo
Coast banksia or Banksia Integrifolia plant in Zurich in Switzerland 16.6.25 Royalty Free Stock Photo
Coast banksia or Banksia Integrifolia plant in Zurich in Switzerland 16.6.25 Royalty Free Stock Photo
Coast banksia or Banksia Integrifolia plant in Zurich in Switzerland 16.6.25 Royalty Free Stock Photo
Banksia integrifolia Coast Banksia 5 Royalty Free Stock Photo
Banksia integrifolia is a native plant to coastal regions of Australia but is such a hardy plant, it is now found widely growing outside its native region, earning it the reputation of being a weed. Commonly known as Coast Banksia, the many different Indigenous groups have many different names for it. It was on the first trip of James Cook, then still just a Lieutenant, in the 1770's, to the Pacific Ocean, with Naturalists Daniel Solander and Joseph Banks, who brought some back to England with them that it was first seen in Europe. Not a very good food plant, the Indigenous people have long used the flower as a hair brush, while the European settlers learned how to turn the nectar into a cough and cold syrup. As enjoyed seeing in the San Francisco Botanical Garden of Golden Gate Park 17 January 2025.


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