It was a longstanding problem to decide equivalence of indefinite forms. The showpiece of the spinor genus is that, for indefinite forms in at least three variables over the rational integers, the spinor genus and the equivalence class coincide.
The phenomena that are most directly explained occur in three variables and positive forms, first identified in Jones and Pall (1939). The first example is that $$ g(x,y,z) = 2 x^2 + 2 y^2 + 5 z^2 + 2 y z + 2 z x \neq m^2,$$ where all prime factors of $m$ are congruent to $1 \pmod 4.$ In comparison, and in the same genus, $$ f(x,y,z) = x^2 + y^2 + 16 z^2$$ does represent all squares, and primitively represents all $m^2.$ Other than the difference noted, the two forms represent the same numbers. $g$ and $f$ are in different spinor genera. $f$ is called regular, as it represents all numbers locally eligible, while $g$ is called spinor regular, as it represents everything eligible for its spinor genus.
Kaplansky, A. Schiemann, and I found all possible regular positive ternary forms in 1997. Later, in contact with Andrew Earnest, i found a total of 29 spinor regular forms that are not regular. This is probably the complete list. Earnest contacted me recently about completing the project by proving the 29 are all. I sent him some background on what is necessary to complete such a proof.
My own little toy, to appear next year, is infinite families of genera where membership in a spinor genus can be decide by a single number. If $N$ is squarefree and $N = u^2 + v^2$ in integers, then consider the genus of
$$ h(x,y,z) = x^2 + y^2 + 16 N z^2. $$
It turns out that the genus of $h$ has exactly two spinor genera, there are spinor exceptional integers, which are all the $Nm^2.$ The theorem, quite unusual, is that a form $k(x,y,z)$ in the same genus as $h$ is in the same spinor genus as $h$ if and only if $k$ integrally represents $N.$ This is pretty rare. There is usually no assurance about the small numbers a form represents. All we really know is that a form resents all sufficiently large numbers that are primitively represented by some form in the same spinor genus; this is Duke and Schulze-Pillot (1990). I have about a dozen such infinite families and some related conjectures.
Probably enough for now.