— 
INDEX. 
(Vv 
; Queen Victoria, 446; Rogersiana, adv., 169; majestica 
manrtaores 298: Deansia, 3145 Exoniensis, 360 ; Prince ree 
553; Lowryii, 553; treatment of, 8215 Cripps, 353; Bell, 
to pro) pe a 16; affinis, to flower, 633; discolor, ae 
growth o! eons habit of, 761 ; fine specimen in 
the open air ae ‘Logan, 557; Exoniensis, 
Fumigation, easy mi cea Hs 189; hints respecting, 373, 391; 
atent Blower for, a 
enue ie to sears renorescsht peueaat 691; asa green 
, 116; on tan, to destroy, 357, 6; 
Farn: ae “jukes? patent 39 
Furze, to raise, for a cover, 57 
GARDENERS’ and Farmers’ Almanacks, rev., 84 
Gardeners’ Benevolent Society, remarks on, 99; Association 
—plan for Servis a garden for those out of employment, 
suggested, 
Conon iacolate, remarks on, 19, 21, 41, 54; Societies, 19, 21 
73; remarks on their char acter and interests, 355 ; discussions, 
1395 retard on their education, ; Associations, 822 ; Benevo- 
lent Institution, adv., 240, 329 ; lament, 6 8 
Gardener and Practical Florist, ady., 
boleh ke antiquities of, 71, 119, 157, 372, 389, 412, 500; state 
of, 336, 840 
Garden-engine, cost of, 321; Rollers, sa) 426; pots, Rendle’s 
improved, 519; pots, best form of, 
Saas management of, 249; new ios and shrubs for, 577; 
marks on visiting, 373; walks, formation of, 595; forming a 
public one at Camberwell, 413 ; law of, 528; scenery, remarks 
n, 789 ; produce, query respecting, 117; answered, 139; frame, 
ts construct cheaply, 211, 390; walks, remarks on edgings 
Garrya, its treatment, 2 
Gas, to heat. seraar ra toni eh; 133; lime, a a manure, 57, 88, 218; 
its effect on the eggs of fowls, 159; water, as a manure, 72; 
for destroying insects, 4773 duantiy to apply, tee 321; for 
grass, 191, 209, 301, 461; how produced, 528; not likely to 
destroy insects, 321; lime, its ctfects on grass, 232; tar, 
noxious to insects, 433; as a manure, 528 
Gas tar, its effect on the stems of ahi trees, 909 
eenaee canariensis, nearly Hebe 
ntiana amarella, &c., notice 
Gentianella, its treatment, oun 321, 374 
Geography of plants, 359 
Germany, wild flowers of, 266 
Gesnera lateritia, 38; elegans, flowering of, out doors, 739; 
elongata, its treatment, Ee zebrina, 121 ns Aid 
Gesneras, treatment of, 8 
Ginger, to have a second a of, 557 5 yet regarding its 
citi requested, 590; cultivation of, 608, 6: 
adiolus Coes found in the New Pasa 4 
559; to sow the seed of, 665 72s, eplendenk, 
Glass, Sats of sheet over other kinds, 499 
Glazed frames, substitute for, 55, 557; useless, 139 
Glazing, remarks on, 464, 488, 499, 528 
Gloxinias, to plge om in a 161, 305; digitali 759; 
treatment 0 ‘ 
ect ee cause of its not growing, 193 
Goldham, Mr., his Tulips noticed, 398 
Sect ‘truncata, 
Gooseberry,abest daavoureds 121; weights of, 774; growing on 
Willows, 267; caterpillars, to destroy, 272, 480, 488, 503, 761; 
Cape, to raise oe seed, 400; its treatment, 305; to train, 806 
Gorse, French, remarks on, 192 
Gourd, largest, 1925 good sort, 216 ; remarks on, 909 
rafting Vines, 37, 208, 216, 2303 Camellias, 189 ; as practised by 
the ancients, 84 ; remarks on, 105, 144, 249; clay, recommended 
for, 121, 249; wax, mode of be 286; flute, how per- 
formed, 321; Rhododendrons, 809, 8 
Grain, Bruchus, described, 188 
‘ipen, ; remarks on various kinds, 89; cause col 
120, 230, 265; black Muscat, 232; Chasselas Musqué, 848; 
Malmsey, 3215 dark.juiced kinds, 248; temperatnre which 
and Tequire when ripening, 459; on open walls, 680; Muscat, 
aoe cause of their spotting, 505 ; peniavks on, ih shrivel. 
Giase) principal cause 
Gina S field, a destroy slags in, 697; Hie -lime for, 191, 232, 301 
roots 
735 seeds for: pasture, 88, 2165 Couch to destroy, 103; to con. 
0 sow Barley with, 
‘seeds of, an Sutton, 1» 168 
ock in summer, 
Gray’s Flora of N. 
Gieaaarsubeeann amen no noticed, 215 
‘0 sow for, 
Greenhouse, to protect from 
la, glass for, 777; lanes select 7 73 Vines ene 25; 
‘or, adv., Weekes, 224; to fumi- 
Sate, 246; a) adv., Hewetson 
erection of, 400, 4 on, 260; remarks on the 
Greg’s Scotch Farming in England, evi, 160 
Grey Wagtail, anecdote Tospectings 7 
AS om’s Nursery, noticed, aes 
Gian Pea, Satay 8 etoy 
G 
Bod. y e 3 notice of, 
L; experiments with, 845 ; to appl Mi rece its ect on ve; a 
gill, 34; epenrine 2595 Eley; ib. eHuneeie 369; site 
Brass, 3,5; adulteration of, 824; on flowers, 23; on 
Cattle, 806; on Man zel, 357 ;_ on P i 
» 806 ; gel Wurzel, 357; On Peas, 444; on various 
aed %).; Potter’s artificial, its effects, 3; on Celery, 266; 
On 204; Cotton, 312; liquid, for meadows, 177; to prepare, 
3 Barden, on its application, 388 5 experiments with, 5, 7, 
4 
40, 192, 305, 360; to Turnips, 144; to me with 
re 91; to sow with meee 216, ae Pah 
auth on, 51, 86, 264; curious incrustation caused by, 230; 
Tesehemacher’ s experiments with, 141; as appliedin $. 
‘a, 175; sey bones, 8; 19 
Guards, for trees, 6 eae 
Camehias in the open air, there, 39 
e, The ee Bailiff, rev., 648 
coe Castle Gardens, a a find plant of Doryanthes excelsa 
Nn, Jey » his hl + 696 
Bian alight i soe piers let on Arborisulture, rev., 69) 
rie ize essay of the Wetherby Agricultural Association, 
Har 
Hareehberia m macrophylla, its treatment, 137 
Hartwon & Getter om, adv., 112 
Hartwee purpur 
568 
& (Mr), avin fi 
seeds onto? es from, 392; his return apnownced, 5243 
Collected by; udy., 656 s Lanne 
Harvest mouse, eur ous situation of its nest, 711 
Hawk, capture of, 
Hawthorn, Shei the colour of its flowers, 335, 391, 445; 
fungus on, 678; berries, to prepare for sowing, 79! 
Hay, musty, not ‘burtful to ee 183 to render coatatatiles 175, 
team, 3453 after-mat 
Heartsease, see Pa 
Heath-mould, aba of, 839 
Heaths, to kill mildew en ae shifting of, 792; their treatment, 
aes 228; at Berlin, and mildew on, 593; good kinds, 
hardy Y, 248 ; price sper 10, 697; asa manure, 334; seedlings 
iat 361, 461; hybrid, 461 ; MacNab’s treatise oni, 561 
Heating, remarks on, 9n different ey eters of, 643, 72 
ratus, adv., Stephenson, 1; Bailey, Shewen, 1; 
‘Weeks, 17. Palmer, 312; caliGren 312; Bowler, 
516; for frames, 428; upon a new plan, adv., Tho: 
treatise on, adv. , Rendle, 200; remarks on, 19, 40, 57, "66, 68, 449, 
488, 528, 561, 661, 680; earthen pipes described, 737 ; Rendle’s 
tank -system, Ag 609; described, 36, 57,390; pases of using, 
open tanks, by steam, 38; by gas, 133; by m 
Gn Neniaes sete 40; aul i system, 305 5 cost ‘of | apperats, 
144, 161 ; zine pipes unfit for, 144 ; apparatus at Oakley Park, 37 
at Lancaster, 428; Eselsaieysteihs 460, 479 ; Watson’s, ned 
remarks on, 593, 616; open tanks, remarks on, 697; w: ith 
earthen pipes, 693; boilers for, 805 5 killogie, a dustieate for 
fermenting materials in hotbeds, 607,628; boilers, remarks on, 
632; hot-water tanks, 803; hot- wwater gutters: ae 544; as used 
in the Horticultural Society’s garden, 659; paratus for, 
806; a arene 793 ; observations ce on : ace ratus, 
Saul’s, 428, 823 ; with brick-flues, 908 ; observations on, 909 
Heat, brick fiues foe 878 3 water, a non-conductor of,774; peat, 
non-conductor of, 629 
Hedgehog, to keep in a garden, 321, 357 
edychiums, thet treatment, 7 
Hedysarum alkage, 87 
pisliptropiwiss Ke, winter treatment of, 744 
Hemlock Spruce, 192 
Hemp, ateaninvation in the north of Jala, 55 
Henderson’s nursery, noticed, 39, 447, 
Hen-roost, manure from, to use, 272 
Henslow, Prof., his Letters on Fixing yer 135; announce- 
ment of their separate publication, 231, 
Herat, valley of, its production: 
Herbaceous plants, Jackson’s ee 857 
Hewell, near Bromsgrove, gardens noticed, 663 
Hibbertia perfoliata, 9 
Hibiscus Lindleyi, 216 ; cannabinus, character and treatment of, 
74; Wrayz, 488; Surattensis, 809 
Hierro, sacred tree of, 304 
Highclere, notice o! 8 
Highland Journal of Areata rev., 524 
Himalayan mountains, bo' f, adv,, Allen, 2 
Hobart Town, vegetation of, 14 42 
Hollies, to sow the seed of, 649; their treatment when newly 
planted, 105; to clip, 144; to transplant, 249; to prune, 544; 
of, 5: 
Hollyhock, time of sowing, 289 ; gigantic size of, 7: 
Holme gardens, near Inverness, noticed, 695 
Hompesch, Count, remarks on his aw fertilizer, 517 
Honeysuckle, French, as a field plan 
Hooker’s oe ey Flora, 9; Dr. Pacepte his return to England 
announced, 
Hopeton Oats, gigantic, 3 359 
Hops, male and female on the same plant, 7. 
Hop refuse, a substitute for stable dung, uae as a manure, 216, 
417; poles, treatment of plantations intended for, 270; to cul- 
tivate in Wales, 649; improvement in cultivation of, 647 
Hornwort as a green manure 
Horse-radish, to exuirares 9: s plant, 216 
Horsetail, to destroy, 4 
Horse- Chesnuts for ey 6; food for sheep, 7: 
Horticultural Essays of th he Regent’s Park Mutual Nore 
247; enormities, 53; buildings, to heat 
133; Society’s garden noticed, 191, fies alteration in ems 
of closing, 371; in the exhibition 517; statement of the 
weather on the days of exhibition; 556. 
Hotbed, to prepare, 53; substitute for glazed frames for, 55; for 
raising annuals, 289 
Hothouses, advantage in their being. span-roofed, 261 
Jot-water apparatus, Bailey, adv., 857; pipes, i cee 248; hard 
x for, 145 5 ; boilers, ady., Cottam and Hal 537 
Hovea racemulosa, 103; pungens, 341; aplendshe} aay 
Humphrey’s inodorous compound, ady., 552; its effects upon 
nts, 
Humus, remarks on 99; adv., Lance, 
Hyacinths, adv., Youell, 553; list of, ot for forcing, necessity 
of procuring item sanyy 576; remarks on, 697; their treat- 
ment, 36; in W 
Hybrid plants, hints respecting 361, 461; to produce, 444, 460 
Hydrangea, effect of ferruginous peat on colour of, 646 ; its 
ent, 334; turned blue with alum, 543; remarks on, 909 
Hylurgus piniperda, to destroy, 
Hypocalymma robustum, 175 
I 
Icz, Gy of straw in packing, 73; plant, its treatment, 121; to 
preserve, 
Icones lag basen Hooker’s, revy., 632 
Tex Paragnayensis, 118; hints on dae 321 
Implements of spade husbandry, 
India, to prepare cuttings for, he, 539, 544; rapidity of vegeta- 
tion in, 3¢ 
Indian corn, remarkable crop of, 38; its treatment, 400, 823; 
Agri-Horticultural Society, 39, 103, 191, 393; establishment of 
a new one in the N.W. provinces, 392 
Indigofera stachyoides, 212 
Indigo, black, discovered, 87: 
Inorganic substances found in plants, 358 
Insects, to kill, 73; effects of powerful smells on, 22, 264, 477; 
to kill for the anaes &s, 138, 174, 265, pte remarks on kill- 
ing, 101, 138, 174, 433 ; on Firs, to kill, 505, ; on Larch, sib? 
on Cherries, to ‘drive ny, 249 ; in malt, to Aye 433 ; 
apes 465; from walls, 249 ; from furniture, 249, 361; Inuesee 
ar, &c. ., in destroying, 285; on Roses, to kill, 361, 488 ; 
cup sourtas to extirpate, 577 
tenis Islands, treatment of the Vine there, 70 ; manner of water- 
ing plants there, 543 
Ipomeea, to plant, 105; in the open air, 232; rubro-czerulea, its 
nent, 71, 192; Learii, 161,616; cymosa, vie tynanthina, 
321; crerulea, &e., remarks on flowering of, 
Ipomopsis elegans, 848; splendens, to protect ro frost, 697 
Ipswich Cucumber show, remarks on, 157, 174; prize Cucumbers 
it, 480 
Ireland, remarks on planting in, 267 
Iris, Chinese, i treatment, 177; select, 825 
Tron labels, 1 
Ttaliaa fire- gee alscovereds in a greenhouse in Norfolk, 718, 860; 
to naturalise, 
Ivy, asa eoreclae ue houses, 80; stem, roots of, remarks on, 721 
to cover a new wall with, 910 
Ixias, ady., Young, 537; treatment of, 721 
J 
JacKson’s Deo noticed, 288, 807 
Japan, Flora of, 2: 
Tasmines, ady., oboe, 85 Arabian, require artificial heat, 321 ; 
ape, treatment of, 4. 
Jealous wild flowers, 
Jesse's leanings in’ Natural History, reviewed, 192 
i ono 8 ra Calendar for Young Farmers, reviewed, 376; Lectures 
on Agricultural Chemistry, adv., 442; Every Lady her own 
BY Gardener, adv., 50; Guano as a Fertilizer, reviewed, 
‘Agricultural Chemistry for Young Farmers, reviewed, 215 
Joining earthen 1 pipes, 842, 862 
Journal, to form, 73; of the Royal Agricultural Society, adv., 
368; RE Agriculture, and Transactions of the Highland Society, 
reviewed, 5: 2 
Jukes’ patent it anees 39 
K 
Kewnep1s, their treatment, 105 ; splendens, 
Hepsington sae noticed, 695; ee mRIAE in, 214; pillag- 
ing of plants in, 771 
Kew Botanic Gardens page on, 247 
Khat plant, account 0! 
Kidney Beans, a proseale eis for the poor, 387; remarks 
on, 721; good kinds, 
Kieri, ‘valley of, 319 
Kilravock Gardens, noticed, 791 
Kilosie, 628; a substitute "for fermenting materials in hotbeds, 
Ki ng of Hanover, false reports concerning, 675 
King wood, whence procured, 
Kitche en gardening, & a65 
Kitchen garden, ‘0 prepare soil in, 649; economics, 246, 336 
Knapp’s fiiustrations or the British Grasses, adv., 368 
peo for budding, Amproyets 519; adv., 53! 
t’s Nursery, ni , 375 
eu 's, (Prof.,) Hence Fianteram, reviewed, 807 
yale, derivation of the wor 
L 
Laxezs, iron, 105; zinc, to write on with common pencils, 911 
Labichea bipunctata, 663 
Labourers, employment of, 187, 206, 227, 299, 315, 373 ; means O 
improving their condition, 333, 387; to educate their children, 
355; Mr. Lawrence’s letters to, 242, 
Labour, agricultural, ancient price of, 445 
Lachenalias, their treatment, 159 
Lackey Moth, described, 244 
Lelia acuminata, 341 
Lambertian herbarium, Don’s account of, ady., 128 
ament, Gardener’s, 608 
Lane’s Nursery, noticed, 463 
Lance’s manures, Treatise on, rev., 
Land, to support a family, 821 ; it a fe subsoil, its treat- 
ment, 9; marshy, to recli aim, 9; beneficial results of pulve- 
rizing, 87 ; clover sick, 99; remarks on paring and burning, 
528; grass, to crop and manure, 105; to crop after eed 
105; advantage of inclosing from the sea, 175, 209; heavy, 
reclaim, 121, 539; profits derived from its improvement, 245; 
light, rotation of crops for, 376, arable, to crop, 477; waste, 
to improve, 517, 539, 555; sandy, to improve, 539; grass seeds 
for, 504 
Larch, disease in, 661; adv., Dickson, 49; Urquhart, 65; re- 
on, 2) dist seased, 488; a light moist soil good for 
grr of, Dats “cause of, 542; cause of decay in, 572; insects 
n, $62; rot in, $42 
Tete in the heads of deer, 1 
Launceston (Van Dieman’s Land), Botanical Garden, 7 
Laurel, leaves to destroy insects, 73; eaten by eek: 272; Por- 
tugal, to prune, 57 
Law of Gardens, 528; 881 
Lawns, to kill moss on, manures eae 761; soot, a good manure 
for, 73; grass-seeds for, 177, 88, 400, 405; their treat- 
ment, 305; manure-water es ‘to improve, 121, 233; 
grass-seeds for, 681; sete: for pits, 25 ; fork for, 38 ; when to 
apply gas-water to, 720; apply soot to, 
Lawson’s Treatise on the s aneivated Grasses, rev., 143 
Lea-land, to crop and manure, 105 
Leaf (Mr.), his garden noticed, 415 
se tng xe. prepare, 232, 504; to grow Melons in, 528 
Leaf-cutt 
Leaves, ‘Genta eTieey of removing them from Vines, &c., 4435 
respiration of, 463; bad effects of mowing them from Straw- 
berry- ecae 55 
Leeks, to boil, 23 
Lee’s Botany of the Mal a Hills, adv., 456; rev., 503 
Leianthus nigrescens, 
Lelienr (Comte), his iene on Strawberries, 542 
Leonotis leonurus, its treatment, 41 
Letter to the Farmers of England, ady., 
Lettuce, Artichoke-leaved, 89; got pea kia, 105; white Versailles, 
He ee 545; kinds to stand the winter and time of sow- 
59: 
Lichens, fragrant, 22; on fruit-trees to eradicate, 158; onlawns, 
Liebig’ 's Agricultural sae ay new edition, by Blas Fay adv.s 
690; his letters on, rev., 77! ied nl Chemistry, rev., 
Light land, rotation of crops 
Light, its effects on plants, af oe yaar of branches to seek, 
359; its effect on wae 
Lilies, treatment o: 
Liam ae Pie 33; testaceum, 175; isabellinum, 807 
Lily, Valley, to transplant, 9, 25, 232; to flower in autumn, 
Dy toh sseuiptaces 429, 465 
Lime-tree, leaves of, as a manure, 33: 
Lime, its effect on Wheat, 232 ; to iat worms, 809 
Lime-water, to prepare, 54, 57; not effectual in killing worms, 
15; 
Lindley’s (Prof.), Theory of Horticulture, rev-, 847 
Linnea borealis, 711 
Linneeus, remarks of, 87 
Lion, habits of, 31 is 
Lisianthus Russellianus, Cuthill’s adv., 857; to raise from seed, 
161; treatment o} 
Lissochilus roseus, 39 
Loasa lucida, adv., 5! 
Lobelia eet ie bropagate, 773; to sow seed of, 248; fulgens, 
treatment of, 633; erin oe 396 
Locomotion oe plants, 5. 
Loddiges’ Norssry, auaeal 343, 8: 
London, a nt of a Vinery on ihe ‘eds of @ house in, 462 
London end o ndinburgh Journal, adv., 
London Enysiological Journal, rev., jaa. 
Loudonia aurea, 
London’s (Mr. Bheyelopedia of Plants, of Cottage and Villa 
Architecture, Trees and Shrubs, ady., 200; Suburban 
Horticulturist el *Sutitsban Gardener, adv., 204; Encyclo- 
pedia of Gardening, ady., 328; Loudon (Mr.), statements con- 
cernin 604 ; Loudon (Mrs.} .), Ladies’ é 
Flower-garden, iN 204; Hower-garden of Ornamental Peren~ 
ed, & 
Low (Poh) his Fibtants of Practical Agriculture, adv., 3705 
Lucerne, a green manure, 36 
Luculia gratissim: 22 
Luminosity of ipa 691, 711, 758 
Lupines, Mr. H. Pepys’ experiments with, 543 
Lycaste plana, ne 631; lanipes, 212 
pence 'S patent Spades, adv., 370; remarks on, 103, 36 
pee Remarks on the Management of Orchidaceous Plants, 
eV., 343 
Lytham Agricultural Associati 
made at, 737 
Manzrra, its vegetation, 70, 463, 
Madia sativa remarks on, 157 
