478 INDEX. 



Dall, Mr. James, on raising and fruiting pines 

 with the heat of leaves, without dung or tire 

 heat, 305. 

 Dalmatian strawberry, 82. 

 Darnell, T. F., Esq. F.R.S., 38, 39. On climate 



with regard to Horticulture, 287. 

 Daphne laureola, in Corsica, 199. 

 Day, Mr. P., on the tree cabbage, 307. 

 Dearn's improved mode of building {advertise- 

 ment), 233. 

 Decandolle, Professor, 49 ; his memoirs on Le- 



guminoseae, 319. 

 Denmark, Botanic gardens of, 52. 



Horticulture of, 84. 

 Deptford Nursery, 87. 

 Dern, Mr., of Scarbriick, his mode of ticketing 



plants, 187. 

 Desfontaines, Professor, 49. 

 Dickens, C. S. Esq., hot-bed for forcing cucum- 

 ber constructed by him, 169. 

 Dickson, Mr. R., a spirited intelligent farmer 



from East Lothian, 88. 

 Dingwall, Miss Anne, communication from 

 her on the winter management of bees, 153. 

 Distillation from plums, 80. 

 Dodder, French mode of destroying, 79. 

 Dombasle, M. Mathieu de, his translation of 



the Code of Agriculture, 80. 

 Dombasle, M. Mathieu de, son Annates Agri- 

 coles de Roville, account of, 195. 

 Domestic animals in France, society for the 

 amelioration of, 444. 

 economy, 353. 

 Don, Mr. George, A.L.S , 56, 62, 164, 304. 

 Donald, Mr. Robert, National and Practical 

 Agriculture, &c, in rhyme, account of, 316. 

 Donald, Mr., on a mode of keeping apples, 268. 

 Douette-Richardot, Nicholas, de la Pratique 



de P Agriculture, &c, account of, 195. 

 Douglas, Mr. David, 63. 

 Down lands, enrichment of, in Holland, 445. 

 Drip in hothouses, plan to prevent, by J. R. 

 Neame, Esq., F.H.S., 431 ; by Mr. Saul, 481. 

 Drummond's First Steps to Botany {adver- 

 tised), 234. 

 Dry rot, mode of preventing, 336. 

 Dublin, gardens of, 10. 

 Dudgeon, Mr. John, 44. 



Duff, Mr. Christie, C.M.H.S., on the cultiva- 

 tion of the English and American cranberry 

 and the water-cress, at Bretton Hall, 151. 

 Duff, Mr., and Mr. W. Seymour, a new mode 

 of training the peach tree, communicated by 

 them, 128. 

 Dunbar, Professor, F.R.S.E., catalogue of 



Erica? in his collection, 131. 

 Duncan, Mr. Andrew, sen., M.D., Vice-Pre- 

 sident of the Caledonian Horticultural So- 

 ciety, remarks on his discourse, &c, 218. 

 Dunne, Mr., at Marley, 262. 

 Du Petit Thouars, M., 48. 

 Durham, General, of Largo, in Fife, vinery 



designed for, 254. 

 Dutton, Hely, Esq., landscape-gardener, 358. 

 Eaton Hall, near Chester, described by Mr. 



Lenne, 309. 

 Eaux et forets, traite general des chasses et 



peches, &c, par M. Baudrillart, 196. 

 Eddison, Mr. John, of Penzance, 342. 

 Edible fruits of Sierra Leone, some account of 



them, &c, 164. 

 Edinburgh Amateur Florist Society, 219. 

 Education of gardeners, 8. 225. 268. 

 Edwards, Mr., Sydenham, F.L.S., botanical 



draughtsman, 47. 60. 

 Egan, Mr., gardener, Mount Merrion, 261. 

 Egger, translation of, by Bornholz, on the 



culture of the truffle, 320. 

 Egg plant, on cultivating and cooking a par- 

 ticular variety, &c, by P. Rainier, Esq., 

 R.N., F.H.S., &c, 307. 

 Elm trees in Camberwell Grove, Surrey, on a 

 disease which has attacked certain, by a con- 

 stant reader, 378. 

 Embankment at Rosslare, 495. 

 Emigration of gardeners, 206. 

 Endives, description of the different varieties 

 cultivated in the garden of the Horticultural 



Society, London, in the year 1824, by Mr. 

 Andrew Matthews, 418. 

 Entomology, an introduction to, by W. Kirby 

 M.A., F.R.S., F.L.S., and W. Spence, Esq., 

 F.L.S. {advertised), 99. 361 ; remarks on, 192. 

 Entomology, British, a nomenclature of {ad- 

 vertised), 361. 

 Epipactis palustris, found near Dalkeith, 257. 

 Epsom nursery, 25. 



Ericas, catalogue of, in the collection of Pro- 

 fessor Dunbar, F. R. S. E. , &c. , 131. 

 classification of, according to their na- 

 tive soils and habitations, 364. 

 in flower in the Tooting nurserv, from 



Oct. 1st, to Nov. 26th, 1825, 88. 

 in flower in the Tooting nursery, during 

 a whole year, 364. 

 Espalier for fruit trees, invented by Mr. A. 



Stewart, C.M.H.S., 340. 

 Evaporation, heat and moisture, on the rela- 

 tions of, 27. 

 Excursion Horticulturale, Recit d'une, fait a 

 Londres, dans le mois d'Avril, 1824, par 

 M. Soulange-Bodin, reviewed, 189. 

 Exotic Flora, by Professor Dr. Hooker, 47. 60. 

 Experiments, hints for, 355. 

 Falk, Baron, 52. 



Farm buildings, book of designs for {adver- 

 tised), 97. 

 royal, in Denmark, some account of, 446. 

 Farmer's account book {advertised), 232. 

 magazine, 8. 



memorandum book {advertised), 232. 

 Farming Society of Ireland, April 8, 339. 

 Felton, S. Esq., queries and suggestions by, 469. 

 Fence, a formidable one, by Mr. Groom, 350. 



American, 327. 

 Ferraria Pavonia, on the culture of, by Mr. 



L. Mathieu, 188. 

 Ferussac, Baron de, 81. 

 Field beet, art of obtaining sugar from, 319. 



gardening, and on the gardens of farm 

 servants in Scotland, by Verus, 259. 

 Fig and grape, an account of a method of ob- 

 taining very early crops of, by T. A. Knight, 

 Esq., F.R.S., &c, 426. 

 Fig-trees, on, and an account of their cultiva- 

 tion, &c, by J. Sabine, Esq. F.R.S. &c. 169. 

 Fig-trees, the Rev. G. Swayne's mode of pro- 

 tecting the branches of, during winter, 306. 

 Finlayson, Mr. John, his British Farmer an- 

 nounced, 99; reviewed, 192. 

 Fischer, Dr., of Petersburg}), 51. 84. 

 Fish, idea of naturalizing, by Mr. Bakewell, 335. 

 Fishing Book {advertised), 474. 

 Fleetwood, Mr. Thomas, on hastening the ma- 

 turity of grapes on open walls, 169. 

 Fletcher, Mr. R., his garden and vinery, 254. 

 Flora Conspicua, review of, 48. 61. {adver- 

 tised), 99. 474. 

 of Dalhousie Castle, &c. 256. 

 , Society of, at Brussels, 352. 

 , the Scottish Cryptogamic, by Robert R. 

 Greville, LL.D., &c, review of, 162. 

 Florist Society, Edinburgh amateur, 219. 

 Flower, artificial, maker of, 341. 

 Flower-garden, Chilian, 206. 

 Flower-pots, ornamental forms for, by Mr. Wil- 

 mot, of the Lewisham nursery, 336. 

 Flower-shows, Islington, 346 ; Windsor, 346 ; 

 Hammersmith, 347 ; Chelsea, 347 ; Dulwich, 

 347 ; Newington, 347 ; Lancaster, 347. 450 ; 

 Manchester, 450 ; Preston, 450 ; Uxbridge, 

 450; Windsor, 450; York, 450. 

 Floyd's Essay on Dog Breaking {advertised), 

 233. 474. 

 Game Book {advertised), 474. 

 Fonthill Abbey, 210. 

 Forbes, Mr. John, A.L.S., 56, 62; inscription 



to his memory, 360. 

 Forbes, Mr., on country seats in Ireland, 

 omitted in the Encyclopedia of Gardening, 94. 

 Forrest, Mr., of Sion House, 349. 

 Forsyth, Mr., gardener, Dublin, 13. 

 Forsvth's Treatise on Fruit Trees {advertised), 



234. 

 Foulk, Mr. W., on the Madeira vaccinium, 302. 

 Fountains proposed for St. James's Park, 283. 



