INDEX 



A. C. query of, 359 ; answer, 378. 

 A Constant Reader, on diseased elm trees, 378. 

 query of, 96 ; answer, 229. 

 A Friend to Discussion, 393. 



Facts, remarks by, 391. 

 A. S., query respecting gold Sc silver fish, 229. 

 A Subscriber, query of, and answer, 229. 

 A Young Gardener, query of, and answer, 229. 

 Acclimating plants, remarks on, 214. 

 Acorn, used to fatten sheep in Germany, 200. 

 African sheep in the United States, 86. 

 Agave Americana, uses of in Mexico, 206. 

 Agricultural and Botan. Soc. of Ghent, 201. 

 Company of Australasia, 86. 

 establishment in France, 445. 

 implements (advertised), 230. 

 schools of Switzerland, 82. 

 Society of Calcutta, 207. 

 Moscow, 443. 

 Stockholm, 83. 

 Wurtemburg, 441. 

 Agriculture connected with garden culture, 7. 

 in the neighbourhood of Warsaw, 4. 

 of the State of New York, me- 

 moirs of, remarks on, 443. 

 of the island of Corsica, 79. 

 Allen, Mr. T., F.H.S., on cucumbers, 416. 

 Amager, an island of gardens near Copen- 

 hagen, 272. 

 Amaryllis, on a hybrid produced between A. 

 vittata and A. regina vittata, by J R. 

 Gowen, Esq. F.H.S. 70. 

 Amateur, on the Granadilla r 15. 



, query of, 229 ; answer, 356. 

 American aloe in flower at Chiswick, 89. 



fine specimen of, at Kitley, 335. 

 blight, (Aphis lanigera,). some ac- 

 count of an attempt to arrest the ravages of, 

 on fruit trees, by T. C. Huddlestone, Esq. 

 F.H.S., 388. 

 American botanic gardens, 52. 

 botanists, 53. 



cranberry and oak leaves, in Ger- 

 many, 80. 

 Anderson, Mr. John, F.H.S., gardener to the 

 Earl of Essex, celery grown in trenches by 

 him, 170 ; recipe for tomata sauce, 353. 

 Anderson, Mr. William, F.L.S. H.S., curator 

 of the botanic garden, Chelsea, on packing 

 and preserving seeds, 210; remarks, in- 

 , eluding the results of some experiments on 

 budding the peach, &c. on almond stocks, 384. 

 Angler's book (advertised), 233. 

 Annales Agricoles de Roville, par Mathieu 



de Dombasle, account of, 196. 

 Annfield, the villa of Dr. Percival, 261. 

 Anona squamosa, ripened by Earl Pow.is, 73. 

 Ants, how destroyed in France, 80. 

 Aphis lanigera, or American blight, an attempt 

 to arrest the ravages of, on fruit trees, by X. 

 C. Huddlestone, Esq. F.H.S., 388. 

 Apple, Bere court-pippin, 73. 



Calville rouge de Micoud, 429. 

 Claygate pearmain, 73. 

 Cray pippin, ib. 

 Jubilee pippin, 72. 

 Esopus Spitzenberg, 73. 

 stony royd pippin, 73. 

 mammoth, 351. 

 Pomme de deux ans, 94. 

 golden knob, old maid, or old lady, 269. 

 Apples, how marked with the impression of a 

 leaf in Persia, 332. 

 how to retain good varieties of in the 



country, 223. 

 on a mode of keeping through the 

 winter, bv Mr. Robert Donald, 268. 



Vol. I. No. 4. 



Apples, remarkable variety at St. Valery in 

 Normandy, some account of, Us. 



Arachis hypogsea, on its culture, by Mr. John 

 Newman, 66. 



Archibald, Mr. J., C.M.H.S. On Dalhousie 

 castle and gardens, and the botany of the 

 neighbourhood, 251. 



Architectural improvement, 353. 



Architecture, half a dozen hints on (adver- 

 tised), 97. 361. 



Arniston, botany of, 256. 



Arracacha, description and account of, 332. 



Asparagus, on the cultivation of, during the 

 winter, by Mr. P. Lindegaard, C.M.H.S. 173. 



Astragalus Bceticus as a substitute for coflee, 

 82 ; remarks on, 440. 



Atkinson's agriculture of New South Wales, 

 remarks on, 432. 



Atkinson, W., Esq. F.H.S. , his directions for 

 the management of hot-house fire-places, &c. 

 167 ; his Grove End scarlet strawberry, 72. 



Atti del Real Instituto d'lncorrugiameiito, &c, 

 account of, 196. 



Aubergine, the br'mjall, a variety of the egg- 

 plant, Solanum melongena, 307. 



Australian Agricultural Company, 86. 



Averruncator, echenillier, Fr., its use in the 

 Netherlands, 325. 



Baical lake, great botanical interest of, 52. 



Bailey, Mr. W., F.H.S. civil engineer, Lon- 

 don, Traits de l'Emploi de la Vapeur pour 

 les Serres Chaudes, &c. account of, 197. 



Bailly, M. C, abridgment of his pamphlet on 

 raising fruit trees, 80. 



Baines, E. M., Esq. on an anomalous appear- 

 ance in Lilium, 273. 



Balfour, Mr. W., on reverse grafting, 71. 274. 



Banks, Sir Joseph, P.R.S. &c. &c, 53,54. 



Banyan tree, on the treatment of, by Captain 

 Peter Rainier, F.H.S., 67. 



Barnet, Mr. James, his description of the diffe- 

 rent varieties of strawberries cultivated in 

 the garden of the Horticultural Society of 

 London, 420. » 



Bates, Mr. William, a remarkably large goose- 

 berry plant growing in his garden at Duf- 

 field, near Derby, 171. 



Bavaria, agriculture of, 445. 



Bayldon's art of valuing rents and tillages 

 (advertised), 233. 



Bayswater garden, Comte de Vandes, notice 

 respecting, 349. 



Beattie, Mr. William, C.M.H.S, his descrip- 

 tion of a vinery, and mode of training prac- 

 tised in it, 172. 



Bees, on the winter management of, commu- 

 nicated by Miss Ann Dingwall, 153. 

 quality of their honey and wax relatively 

 to the flowers they are selected from, 323 



Begbie, Mr., of the botanic garden, Kew, 352. 



Belgrave nursery, notice respecting, 221. 



Berberis fascicularis, 220. 



Bicheno, James Ebenezer, Esq. F.L.S. , remarks 

 by, on methods and systems of natural his- 

 tory, 461. 



Biographies wanted for the Gard. Mag. 95. 



Biography of some early horticulturists sug- 

 gested, 470. . . 



Bishop, Mr. David, his history, description, 

 and mode of treatment of Bishop's early 

 dwarf pea, 126. 



Blakie's essay on the conversion of arable land 

 into pasture (advertised), ib. 

 essay on the management of farm- 

 yard manure (advertised), 233. 

 treatise on hedges and hedge-row tim- 

 ber (advertised), 232. 



