GENERAL INDEX. 



loo. 



mosiphon, for circulating hot water, 612 ; 

 Weekes's mode of heating by, explained, 82; 

 strictures on various modes, 83 ; water, heated 

 by the waste heat of a domestic tire, applied 

 to gardening and other purposes, 651 ; I'red- 

 gold's mode of applying hot water, 177. to 185 ; 

 structure of apparatus for heating bv, 238. 



Houstbn^n serpyllif61ia, the true habitat of,2o6 ; 

 H. purpurea, its true habit, 237. 



Hybrid plants, Mr. Sweet's important remarks 

 on, 206 ; the means of procuring, 58; Ama- 

 xyWidcts originated at Highclere gardens, 135 ; 

 Aquilfegia Garner/i(»(7, 47-i, 475 ; azaleas ori- 

 ginated by Mr. Gowen at Highclere, an ac- 

 count of, 62. loj. 471 ; hybrid cyclamens, the 

 origination of, suggested, 562 ; hybrid fox- 

 glove originated between Digitalis ambigua 

 and Gloxin/Vr speci6sa, 582; melons, instances 

 of hybrid, and remarks on, 87. 622; Potentflla 

 KiissellM«rt, 343 ; P. argCita, 201 ; hybrid rho- 

 dodendrons at Knight's, 356; and at High- 

 clere, a particular account of, 135. 472 ; hybrid 

 iJhododendron Karrferiff, 474; hybrid iihodo- 

 dendron liwsieWiunum, 341 ; Rose Clare, a 

 hybrid, described, 596 ; hybrid salpiglossise.s, 

 S. BarclaytJna, noticed, 597; the Kassaba me- 

 lon conjectured to be a hybrid.^ 101 ; hybrid 

 plants with sterile anthers, 582; with fertile 

 anthers, SS2. 



Hybridising, the physiology of, 243 ; applied to 

 apples without obvious ert'ect,50; tocucurbit- 

 aceous plants, valuable remarks on, 718 ; its 

 application to apples suggested, and its effect 

 surmised, 318; the most effectual of human 

 means for modifying fruits, flowers, and vege- 

 tables to human wishes, 582 ; the mode of its 

 application to the amelioration of fruits de- 

 scribed, 581 ; adverse opinions on the limit- 

 ation to which hjbridising is subject, 582 ; the 

 Rev. Jos. Tyso's origination of new varieties 

 of ranunculus by, 565 ; Mr. Sweet's remarks 



' on hybridising, 206. 



Hydrangea hortcnsis with blue flowers, 603. 



Hymenophyllum Wilstrnj Hooker, an Irish 

 and a British plant, 230. 



Hfpxiuxa flav^scens, a new British species, 

 230. 



Jbfiris umbell?lta, 3| ft. high and 6 ft. in cir- 

 cumference, how to render, 102; I. Tenorea«a 

 eulogised, 598. 



Ice-house, plan for the construction of an, 650. 



lUiistrations of La7idscapc Gardening, new 

 series of, in quarto, announced, 720. 



India, address of the Agricultural and Horticul- 

 tural Society of, to the whole world, 661. 



Indian corn, culture of, in America, 705. 



Inns, improvements and defects in, 530. 



Insects: aphides, a mode of destroying, 244; 

 insects and vermin destroyed by the am- 

 moniacal liquor of coal gas, 557; by birdlime, 



' 519 ; by steam, 508 ; by tobacco dust, applied 

 as described, 687. 



Ireland : Horticultural Society of, reported, and 

 defended, 229 ; state of botany and civilisa- 

 tion in, 229 ; rarer plants in, 230 ; remarks on 

 the Horticultural Society of, 107 ; these re- 

 marks replied to, 229 ; Practical Horticul- 

 tural Society, report of, 104 ; remarks on this 

 society, 107; Belfast Horticultural Society 

 reported, 106; remarkable additions to the 

 flora of, 108; large cucumber produced in, 

 108 ; state of arboriculture in, 682 ; gentle, 

 men's seats in, 682 ; large cockscombs grown 

 in, 683 ; temperature at Kilkenny in, 683 ; 

 Irish cottages, and the condition of the Irish, 

 505 ; Irish peasantry, Howden's strictures on 

 the, vi. f>57 ; disputed, vii. 505. 710. 



Italy, notices on the gardening, farming, and 

 olive culture of, 6(i5 ; the cultivation of orange 

 trees in, 3<j8 ; the pine forests of, and use of 

 pine strobiles and seeds in, 311. 



Ivy, the uses of its wood, and the injury plants 

 of it do the trunks of the trees they surround, 

 233.725. 



J«Bgersborg, Denmark, scenery in the park 

 of, 631. 

 Vol. vii. — No. 35. 



Jamaica, an account of Bath Gardens in, 93. 

 Jan)))ha Mdnihot, and its uses described, 



470. 

 Jasmlnum pubigcrum, orWallichj^SniiOT, 471. 

 Jones. Mr. Richard, an obituary of, 639. 



Kennedfrt rubicunda, a mode of training, 

 483. 



Kew Botanic Garden, Oct. 29th, 687 ; kitrfien 

 garden, 688. 



Kewley's mode of heating by hot water prefer. 



red, 685. 

 Kidneybeans : the royal dwarf, 655 ; the scarlet 

 runner, a perennial, 485. 



Kidneybeans.'on preserving them green through 

 the winter, 249. 



Kilkenny, the temperature at, and its action on 

 plants, 683. 



Kilmanahan Castle, in Waterford county, 

 noticed, 683. 



Knowlsley Park, the gardens at, noticed, 550. 



Kuskovo, near Moscow, described, 660. 



Labouring classes, their condition in 1831, 419; 

 their relative condition in some different 

 counties, 527 ; allotments of land let to, 424 ; 

 state and style of their cottages, in several 

 counties, 527. 607. 709 ; employment reserved 

 for labourers by the French government, 659 ; 

 a Labourer's Friend Society, 224. See Cot- 

 tages. 



Ladder for the purposes of gathering fruit, 

 pruning, or training trees, &c., 26. 



Lakes of Cumberland and Westmoreland, sug- 

 gestions for the improved application of, 516 ; 

 geology of, 514. 



Lancaster, the condition of the taste for garden- 

 ing in and near, 538. 



Landscape-gardening, an instance of the efffect 

 of skill in, 431 ; its backward state remarked, 

 605, 606 ; works which treat on, 227. 



Lap, Stewart's patent copper one for glazing 

 sashes, 225 ; substituting oil for putty in 

 laps, 84. 



Larch, fittest soil and site for, and the cause 

 of the rotting of the, 374. 725; the dimen- 

 sions of a very large tree of, 675. 



Largo House, an account of the garden at, 

 22. 



I-arks, traps for catching, 98. 



Lathallan, an account of, 21. 



Lathvrus suavtolens ? culture and agricultural 

 merits of, 88. 



Laund .\bbey and gardens, Leicestershire, 422. 



Laurel, common, grafted on cherry stocks 

 12. 



Laying out and planting grounds, 559 ; errors in, 

 remarks on, and hints fur, 4i;0 ; the geometric 

 and natural styles of, contrasted, 3 ; laying 

 out a classical garden, 4.32; a classical resi- 

 dence, 723 ; a geographical garden, 668. 



Laving, the physiology of increasing by, 585. 



Leafing and shedUing'leaves, irregularity of, as 

 to time in trees of the same species, 3.57. 



Leicester Abbey, and gardens in its grounds, 

 425 ; other gardens at Leicester, 425. 



Leicestershire, gardens and country residences 

 in, 421. 



Lent, forced vegetables provided for the fasts of, 

 in France, 10. 



Leonard's, St., Scotland, gardens at, reported, 

 680. 



Leven's Hall and gardens noticed, 550. 



Libraries, itinerating, 674. 



Lilac, a very beautiful and perhaps rare variety 

 of, 379 ; retarding the flowering of, 247. 



Lily, Jacobsean, its seeding queried, 728. 



Lime as a manure, 534 ; chloride of, 378. 



Lime trees, weeping ones at Chatsworth, 375; 

 wood of common, fittest for butter casks, 375. 



Limewater, its effect in destroying worms, 

 682. 



Lin^ria alplna, a hint on the culture of, 476. 



Lindfield, in Sussex, infant schools, &c., at, 

 223. 



Linnsus, and the genus Valant/Vi, 118 ; the ele- 

 gance and richness of the mind of Linnxus 

 instanced, 598. 



3 f 



