INDEX. 



4-79 



France, botanic gardens of, 48. 



Fraser, Mr. Charles, C.M.H.S., Curator of the 



Colonial Garden at Port Jackson, 86. 

 Fraser, Mr. James, on the gardening of Ireland, 



10. 261. 

 Fredriksborg, a royal seat, Copenhagen, 270. 

 Fromont, garden of, 198. 

 Frost, Mr. John, 89. 



Fruit Grower's Instructor (advertised), 98. 

 Fruit, infested with worms, danger of eating,454. 

 , new varieties of, to raise, 324. 

 , notices of new or remarkable varieties, 

 ripened in the summer and autumn of the 

 year 1822, which were exhibited at meetings 

 of the Horticultural Society, 72. 

 Fruit trees, advantage of summer pruning, 325. 

 , how to distinguish by blossom, 200. 

 , mode of training en quenouille,466. 

 , observations upon the effects of 

 age upon the different kinds of, with an 

 account of some new varieties of nectarines, 

 by T. A. Knight, Esq., &c. 68. 

 Fruit trees, on ringing of, by Mr. It. Werth- 



meister, 187. 

 Fulton, Mr. George, on the use and abuse of 

 watering vegetables in dry seasons, and on 

 the advantages of shade to culinary crops in 

 times of great drought, 399. 

 G., Mrs., query and answer, 359. 

 G. R., on the importance of regularity and 



systematic conduct in gardeners, 278. 

 G. R. G, his remarks on the treatment under- 



gardeners receive from their masters, 410. 

 Game Book, or Sportsman's Journal (adver- 

 tised), 233. 

 Gandy, Mr. Walter, his life and death, 472. 

 Gardens, and state of gardening in Denmark, 



by Mr. Jens Petersen, 269. 

 Garden Botany, review of, 47. 

 Gardens of Copenhagen, 270. 



of cottages, on their improvement, as 



practised by Lord Cawdor, 275. 

 of farm servants in Scotland, 259. 

 Garden of Fromont, 198. 



Sherard, at Eltham, 55. 

 oriental, of Brighton, 211. 450. 

 Gardeners, education of, 225. 350. 463; emi- 

 gration of, 206. 356. 

 Gardener, on the evil effects of being lodged 



any where else than in his garden, 135. 

 Gardeners, young men in the Horticultural 

 Society's garden, 345. 

 under, remarks on the treatment 

 they receive from their masters, 

 by G. R. G, 410. 

 on the importance of system and 



regularity in their conduct, 278. 

 on the remuneration' of, by J. P. 

 Burnard, Esq., 141. 

 Gardener's Magazine, its use, 1. 9. 268. 



of Germany, 81. 321. 

 Gardening and agriculture of China, 448. 

 Gardening in Ireland, present state of, 10. 261. 

 in the Illinois, by Mr. William Hall, 



late of Ewell, Surrey, 327. 

 in Poland, on the present state of, 



by Professor Kitaiewski, 375. 

 , its agreeableness and utility, 1. 268. 

 Society of Prussia, 51. ; transactions 

 of, reviewed, 186, 308. 

 Geraniaceae, review of, 47. 61. ; (advertiseil) 98. 

 German mode of destroying caterpillars, 81. 

 Germany, botanic gardens of, 50. 

 Germination of seeds, 323. 

 Ghent, shew of plants at, 83. 



, society of agriculture and botany, 201. 

 Gibbs, Mr., of the Brompton nursery, 355. 

 Gibson, Mr. William, pine apples grown by him 

 under a frame with the heat of leaves alone, 

 171 ; his life and death, 360. 

 Glasgow botanic garden, catalogue of, 93. 

 Glazing sashes, a new mode proposed by Mr. 



John Read, 307 ; by Mr. Saul, 431. 

 Goats of Thibet, 80. 



Goldie, Mr., of the Monkwood nursery, 84. 

 Goodwin's new system of shoeing horses (ad- 

 vertised), 233. 



Gooseberry plant, a remarkably large, growing 

 in the garden of Mr. William Bates, a mar- 

 ket gardener, at Duffield, near Derby, 171. 

 Gooseberry shows, 211. 450. 

 Gorrie, Mr. Archibald, C.M.H.S., on the Hun- 

 tingdon willow, 44. 

 Gourds and pompions, on the cultivation of, by 



Mr. Henry Gray, 150. 

 Gowen, J. R. Esq. F.H.S., on a hybrid amaryllis 

 produced between A. vittata and A. regina 

 vittata, 70. 

 Grafting and budding, in the Illinois, 329. 

 , modes of, in France, 323. 

 the cedar on the larth, 199. 

 the pine and fir tribe, 79. 

 wax, utility of, by D. Powell, Esq., 67. 

 Grain, preservation of, on a new plan, 446. 

 Granadilla, on setting the fruit of, 15. 

 Grange, Mr., fruiterer, London, 35. 

 Grape, an account of a new seedling, by Mr. 

 Henry Burn, F.H.S., 415. 

 , a large plant of the Hamburgh variety 



noticed, 453. 

 and fig, an account of a method of ob- 

 taining very early crops of, by T. A. 

 Knight, Esq. F.R.S. Sec, 426. 

 , a moveable trellis for, by Mr. Long, 



noticed, 454. (advertised), 473. 

 , cultivation of, at Inistioge, 340. 45S; 



in Sicily, 82. 

 ", -Tottenham Park muscat, 87. 

 , Frontignac, a peculiarity in the treat- 

 ment of, at Dalhousie Castle, 253. 

 , on fecundating the blossom of the black 



Damascus, by Mr. W. Ross, 308. 

 , on forcing, as practised in Denmark, by 

 Mr. Peter Lindegaard, C.M.H.S., 168. 

 on open walls, on hastening the maturity 



of, by Mr. Thomas Fleetwood, 169. 

 , sorts grown near Copenhagen, 271. 

 , Elford seedling, 72. 

 , West's St. Peter, 36. 

 Grass garden at the New Cross nursery, 115. 

 Grasses, culture of, in Holland, 445. 



of the Netherlands, work on, 442. 

 , on cultivating a collection of, in 

 pleasure-grounds or flower-gardens, &c. by 

 Mr. George Sinclair, F.L.S. H.S. &c, nur- 

 seryman, 26. 112. 

 Gray, Mr. Henry, on the cultivation of gourds 



and pompions, 150. 

 Great Britain, garden botany of, 53. 

 Grece's Facts and Observations on the Hus- 

 bandry of Canada (advertised), 232. 

 Green fly and other insects, a simple, effectual, 

 and expeditious mode of destroying, by Mr. 

 Thomas M'Laurin, 390. 

 Green-house, description of a, in the garden of 

 Sir Robert Preston, Bart, at Valleyfield, in 

 Perthshire, by Mr. Alexander Stewart, 

 C.M.H.S., 423. 

 Green vegetable manure, on the effects of, 20. 

 Greenshields, Mr. William, on the culture of 



the pine-apple, 426. 

 Greville, Robert K, LL.D. &c, review of his 



Scottish Cryptogamic Flora, 62. 

 Grierson, W. Esq., Secretary to the Dumfries 



and Galloway Horticultural Society, 217. 

 Grisenthwaite's new Theory of Agriculture, 



(advertised), 233. 

 Groom, Mr., F.H.3., of Walworth's Florists' 



garden, 349. 

 Guilding, the Rev. L., B.A. F.R.S., his account 

 of the Botanic Garden of St. Vincent, re- 

 viewed, 193. 

 Gyllenborg's Principles of Agriculture (adver- 

 tised), 233. 

 Hackney Nursery Garden catalogue, by Conrad 



Loddiges and Sons, remarks on, 318. 

 Hail and thunder protectors, remarks on, 318. 

 In Savoy, 325. 

 , Society for assurance against, 444. 

 Hall, William, Esq., late of Ewell, Surrey, his 



letter from the Illinois, 327. 

 Hall's concise treatise on destroying heath 



(advertised), 232. 

 Halliday, Mrs., a Scotch botanist, 2j6. 



