I've had several lawnmowers and I've come to the conclusion Briggs & Stratton don't make spark plugs. It there was a lot of sodium in the air everything would burn with a Na-yellow flame. Characteristic D-line of sodium is yellow, which is why sodium street lamps are yellow, throw some NaCl salt into the fire etc. Ionisation colour is like heating metal, goes up from dull-red to blue-white, same reason - excited electrons emitting photons with more energy (colour) as they fall back to base state, increase the energy beyond visible and we get x-rays (we're photons too).
The electrode may colour the spark, they use various alloys, copper, yttrium, platinum, itrrridium, phos-bronze and steel &c.. Iron gives us red, copper green. Also crap on the plug. I'm not saying you can't have sodium present but it's not what to look for and if you don't live at the seaside it shouldn't produce a false test reading.
It's just an visual indicator - if you have a big fat spark you have more whumph than a thin weedy one. It really doesn't need the HT probe on the oscilloscope
