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Jimmy Barnes lists ENORMOUS warehouse home

<p><span style="font-weight: 400;">Rockstar Jimmy Barnes and Jane Barnes are selling their Botany warehouse residence at auction on August 28.</span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">The decision comes as the family has been spending almost all of their time at their longtime home in the Southern Highlands.</span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">The four-bedroom, four-bathroom property has been listed through Firmstone Pappas Properties and MyPlace, and is expected to sell for over $4 million.</span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">The family bought the property for a hefty $1.6 million in 2004, which had received a $400,000 makeover from the previous owner, including the installation of a full recording studio.</span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">Since first purchasing the warehouse, the former Cold Chisel frontman has had renovation works undertaken, including the addition of a second soundproof studio.</span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">The home also features an overscale kitchen, a cinema lounge, a private front courtyard with undercover spaces for three vehicles, and a separate first-floor residence with its own kitchen, dining area, and lounge room.</span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">The home is walking distance from Botany shops, public transport, cafes and schools, as well as a park and aquatic centre.</span></p> <p><em><span style="font-weight: 400;">Images: Jimmy Barnes / Instagram, Firmstone Pappas Properties</span></em></p>

Real Estate

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The search for ‘La Botaniste’

<p><span style="font-weight: 400;">Sorting through your attic or garage can lead to interesting discoveries and mementos from the past, and staff at the Royal Horticultural Society (RHS) have made a surprising discovery doing just that.</span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">While going through old plant books, they found poems, doodles, plant specimens, and a cartoon tucked away inside a copy of </span><em><span style="font-weight: 400;">The English Flora</span></em><span style="font-weight: 400;"> from 1830.</span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">The owner, Isabella A Allen, appeared to be a keen plant woman. But, her name has since been lost to history.</span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">She may be the 19th century botanical illustrator who we know little about, or she could be one of the many uncelebrated women with a passion for plants during the 19th century.</span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">Either way, the RHS is hoping to identify who she is and find out more about her life.</span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">“All we’ve got is a reasonably common name and lots of contextual stuff that she’s interested in biology,” said Fiona Davison, the head of libraries and exhibitions.</span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">“What I’m hoping is that somebody is aware in their family tree of an Isabella A Allen, that they’ve got any information about being a botanical artist or involved in botany.”</span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">Staff also found a collection of pressed flowers in the book, written by Sir James Edward Smith, which gives them a further insight into her knowledge of plants.</span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">“I think she clearly is a keen botanist because pressed in a number of pages are wild flowers,” Fiona said.</span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">Kidney vetch, cranesbill, lousewort, and sow thistle among others were found.</span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">“They’re wildflowers when you’re out on a botanising trip you would have picked up, identified with the help of the book and pressed.”</span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">Though the book itself isn’t rare, the annotations, bookmarks, and cartoon make it unique from the many other copies the RHS owns. </span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">Staff came across the find while going through boxes of books ahead of the combining or their two collections in new laboratories.</span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">“I don’t think that this volume had been opened in decades. It’s just been sat in an attic in Wisley,” Fiona said. “We opened this little one and we were really amazed to find all of this additional material left by its original owner.”</span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">As well as an annotation reading “this is the book of Isabella A Allen”, a print known as a personification was also found inside.</span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">Personifications, printed and sold as sheets, depicted people made up of artefacts that embody their character or tools of their trade.</span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">The one found inside Isabella’s book depicted a person made of flowers and vegetables, which was produced by a male midwife and surgeon called George Spratt.</span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">The book also contains a handwritten poem that appears to be an adaptation of a common poem, including a reference to botanists filling a garden with plants with Greek and Latin names.</span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">Though the RHS has unsuccessfully attempted to track her down, it’s hoped someone can help them solve the mystery.</span></p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;">“We hope that we’ll be able to share it with people and show it in the new library as part of the wider effort we’re making to encourage people to take an interest in the plants that are growing around them in the same way that Ms Allen did,” Fiona said.</span></p> <p><em><span style="font-weight: 400;">Image: The Royal Horticultural Society</span></em></p>

Books

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Botany and the colonisation of Australia in 1770

<p>James Cook and his companions aboard the Endeavour landed at a harbour on Australia’s southeast coast in April of 1770. Cook named the place Botany Bay for “the great quantity of plants Mr. Banks and Dr. Solander found in this place”.</p> <p>Joseph Banks and Daniel Solander were aboard the Endeavour as gentleman botanists, collecting specimens and applying names in Latin to plants Europeans had not previously seen. The place name hints at the importance of plants to Britain’s Empire, and to botany’s pivotal place in Europe’s Enlightenment and Australia’s early colonisation.</p> <p>Cook has always loomed large in Australia’s colonial history. White Australians have long commemorated and celebrated him as the symbolic link to the “civilisation” of Enlightenment and Empire. The two botanists have been less well remembered, yet Banks in particular was an influential figure in Australia’s early colonisation.</p> <p>When Banks and his friend Solander went ashore on April 29, 1770 to collect plants for naming and classification, the Englishman recollected they saw “nothing like people”. Banks knew that the land on which he and Solander sought plants was inhabited (and in fact, as we now know, had been so for at least 65,000 years). Yet the two botanists were engaged in an activity that implied the land was blank and unknown.</p> <p>They were both botanical adventurers. Solander was among the first and most favoured of the students of Carl Linnaeus, the Swedish botanist and colonial traveller who devised the method still used today for naming species. Both Solander and Banks were advocates for the Linnaean method of taxonomy: a systematic classification of newly named plants and animals.</p> <p>When they stepped ashore at “Botany Bay” in 1770, the pair saw themselves as pioneers in a double sense: as Linnaean botanists in a new land, its places and plants unnamed by any other; as if they were in a veritable <em>terra nullius</em>.</p> <p><strong>Botany in ‘nobody’s land’</strong></p> <p><em>Terra nullius</em>, meaning “nobody’s land”, refers to a legal doctrine derived from European traditions stretching back to the ancient Romans. The idea was that land could be declared “empty” and “unowned” if there were no signs of occupation such as cultivation of the soil, towns, cities, or sacred temples.</p> <p>As a legal doctrine it was not applied in Australia until the late 1880s, and there is dispute about its effects in law until its final elimination by the High Court in <em>Mabo v Queensland (No. II)</em> in 1992.</p> <p>Cook never used this formulation, nor did Banks or Solander. Yet each in their way acted as if it were true. That the land, its plants, and animals, and even its peoples, were theirs to name and classify according to their own standards of “scientific” knowledge.</p> <p>In the late eighteenth century, no form of scientific knowledge was more useful to empire than botany. It was the science <em>par excellence</em> of colonisation and empire. Botany promised a way to transform the “waste” of nature into economic productivity on a global scale.</p> <p><strong>Plant power</strong></p> <p>Wealth and power in Britain’s eighteenth century empire came from harnessing economically useful crops: tobacco, sugar, tea, coffee, rice, potatoes, flax. Hence Banks and Solander’s avid botanical activity was not merely a manifestation of Enlightenment “science”. It was an integral feature of Britain’s colonial and imperial ambitions.</p> <p><em>Banksia ericifolia</em> was one of the many species given a new name by Banks. Natural History Museum</p> <p>Throughout the Endeavour’s voyage, Banks, Solander, and their assistants collected more than 30,000 plant specimens, naming more than 1,400 species.</p> <p>By doing so, they were claiming new ground for European knowledge, just as Cook meticulously charted the coastlines of territories he claimed for His Majesty, King George III. Together they extended a new dispensation, inscribed in new names for places and for plants written over the ones that were already there.</p> <p>Long after the Endeavour returned to Britain, Banks testified before two House of Commons committees in 1779 and 1785 that “Botany Bay” would be an “advantageous” site for a new penal colony. Among his reasons for this conclusion were not only its botanical qualities – fertile soils, abundant trees and grasses – but its virtual emptiness.</p> <p><strong>Turning emptiness to empire</strong></p> <p>When Banks described in his own Endeavour journal the land Cook had named “New South Wales”, he recalled: “This immense tract of Land … is thinly inhabited even to admiration …”. It was the science of botany that connected emptiness and empire to the Enlightened pursuit of knowledge.</p> <p>One of Banks’s correspondents was the Scottish botanist and professor of natural history, John Walker. Botany, Walker wrote, was one of the “few Sciences” that “can promise any discovery or improvement”. Botany was the scientific means to master the global emporium of commodities on which empire grew.</p> <p>Botany was also the reason why it had not been necessary for Banks or Solander to affirm the land on which they trod was empty. For in a very real sense, their science presupposed it. The land, its plants and its people were theirs to name and thereby claim by “discovery”.</p> <p>When Walker reflected on his own botanical expeditions in the Scottish Highlands, he described them as akin to voyages of discovery to lands as “inanimate &amp; unfrequented as any in the Terra australis”.</p> <p>As we reflect on the 250-year commemoration of Cook’s landing in Australia, we ought also to consider his companions Banks and Solander, and their science of turning supposed emptiness to empire.</p> <p><em>Message from The Conversation: Captain James Cook arrived in the Pacific 250 years ago, triggering British colonisation of the region. We’re asking researchers to reflect on what happened and how it shapes us today. You can see other stories in the series <a href="https://theconversation.com/au/topics/cook250-78244">here</a> and an interactive <a href="https://cook250.netlify.app/">here</a>.</em></p> <p><em>Written by Bruce Buchan. Republished with permission of <a href="https://theconversation.com/botany-and-the-colonisation-of-australia-in-1770-128469">The Conversation.</a></em></p> <p><em> </em></p> <p><em> </em></p> <p><em> </em></p>

Cruising

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Travelling to Botany in Darwin

<p> </p> <p>Darwin is best known for its delightful CBD waterfront, but many are surprised to see the amount of interesting plants and trees all around Darwin. Don’t be afraid to put on your favourite botanist hat and get used to the tropical green!</p> <p>The best place to view the widest variety of flora is at the Charles Brown Darwin City Botanic Gardens. Located walking-distance outside of the CBD, and just behind Mindil Beach, the Botanic Gardens are home to many including Australian-, African-, Cuban-origin plants and trees. Why not head over for ½ the day and enjoy having the ability to walk between biospheres; first through the woodlands then to the monsoon and rain forests.</p> <p>Whether you choose to self-guide or take a segway tour, there is a lot to see and lots of grassy shaded area to have a break! Not to mention, the Botanic Gardens has a cafe conveniently situated close to the car park at the Mindil Beach side entrance. Eva’s cafe is highly rated and has the air of a quaint old-fashioned tea house- so why not stop for a cuppa?</p> <p>Even after you have exhausted yourself at the Botanic Gardens, you still won’t be able to get away from the exotic plant life in Darwin! Along the Esplanade walk, in or just outside of town you will often be pleasantly surprised by the plants around you.</p> <p>And don’t worry, if you are traveling with a plant-enthusiast but aren’t so keen yourself, you can simply enjoy the shade provided by the tropical trees or relax on the benches often located at the bases of some Darwin trees- like the Tree Of Knowledge pictured below. The Tree Of Knowledge is located just out front of the Darwin City Library and Civic Centre and was named as such due to the conversations that occurred beneath it in past years.</p> <p><em>Written by Luray Joy. Republished with permission of <a href="https://www.mydiscoveries.com.au/stories/botany-darwin/">MyDiscoveries.</a> </em></p>

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