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5== ==200 The material below was originally in the article. It appears to have been cut & pasted from http://www.aussie-info.com/identity/flora/waratah.php Abstraktn 09:19, 20 Jan 2005 (UTC)


In 1793 the English botanist, Sir James Smith. Aborigines used the seeds of several species as a source of food. Some species are toxic. The original Waratah is native to a small area of the central coast of New South Wales, and it grows wildly in hilly areas near Sydney, Newcastle and Wollongong, and on the slopes of the Great Dividing Range, whilst other species grow in Victoria and Tasmania. Proclaimed the official floral emblem of New South Wales on 24 October 1962. It is a slender, erect shrub, to 3 metres tall and about 1.5 metres across. It has stiff, wedge-shaped and usually coarsely toothed, dark green, leathery leaves to 15 cm long. In cultivation they can grow to about twice the size. The NSW species normally flowers red, but many produce pink or even white flowers. A rare white-flowering form, ‘Wirrimbirra White’, is occasionally available from specialist growers. The large, bright crimson flowerheads consist of many small flowers densely packed into conical or peaked dome-shaped heads to 15 cm across, and surrounded by a collar of large red, smooth bracts. The ‘flower’ is in fact a conflorescence that comprises, depending on the species, as many as 240 individual flowers. It flowers during spring, October to November. It is a bird-attracting plant, providing large quantities of nectar for a variety of honeyeaters.

Schweppes

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The article states that the Waratah is used in the Schweppes logo. But the Schweppes logo is a picture of a fountain. I ran an ATMOSS search on Schweppes, and didn't find any logos that made use of a waratah. I then ran an image constituent search on waratahs, and found a whole bucketload of logos that incorporate the waratah, including a Shelleys logo registered by Coca-Cola Amatil. So I reckon whoever inserted the Schweppes information has misremembered. Hesperian 13:04, 22 June 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Aaah, my bad. Shelleys' it must have been then. Did they have Shelleys in WA? cheers, Casliber (talk · contribs) 13:29, 22 June 2007 (UTC)[reply]
You! I should have known ;-) Nah, never heard of it before now. Hesperian 04:19, 23 June 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Lede

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Removed what appears to me to be an obvious 'cut-and-paste' error, and restored a previous section's technical description of the flowers. The grammar that I found was nonsensical to me, and the English language is one of my areas of expertise. The waratah is not in my areas of expertise, so I'd hope someone who normally edits botanical pages would check the revision. I cut an pasted from an earlier historical version. MGBuell Mbuell72 14:43, 8 November 2021 (UTC)[reply]