484 



INDEX. 



Radcliff 's report on the agriculture of Flan- 

 ders {advertised), 232. 

 Radish, carrot, and turnip, rearing seed of, in 

 the East Indies, by W. Ingledew, Esq., 174. 

 Rainier Peter, Esq. Captain R.N., F.H.S., on 

 the treatment of the banyan tree, 67. 

 , on cultivating and cooking the brinjall, 

 (aubergine, Fr.) a variety of egg plant, 307. 

 Ranunculus, the Turkish, observations on forc- 

 ing, by M. P. F. Bouche, commercial gar- 

 dener at Berlin, 186. 

 Rare British plants in the neighbourhood of 

 Dalhousie Castle, 256. 

 North Amer. plants, a collection of, 255. 

 or new plants, which have flowered in 

 the garden of the Horticultural Society at 

 Chiswick, previously to 1824, 802. 

 Rathfarnham Castle, Dublin, 13. 262. 

 Rawson, Mrs., Stoney Royd pippin apple, 73. 

 Reid, Mr. John, his syringe, 171. 231. 



, his description of an instrument for ap- 

 plying tobacco fumigation to plants, 418. 

 , on a new mode of glazing sashes, 307. 

 Red spider, query respecting, 471. 

 Reeve, Mr. James, on the culture of Nerium 



oleander splendens, 402. 

 Regent's Park, improvements in, 336. 

 Reverse grafting, observations on, by Mr. 



William Balfour, 274. 



Rheum palmatum, as a substitute to the other 



species cultivated for culinary purposes, by A. 



T. Thomson, Esq. M.D. F.L.S. H.S. &c, 396. 



Uhododendrae, on the culture of the, by M. L. 



Mathieu, commercial gardener, Berlin, 187. 

 Rhododendron fragrans, S41. 

 Rhubarb, on forcing, in boxes in a dark room, 



&c, by Mr. James Smith, G.M.H.S., 307. 

 Ribes jasminiflorum,'in Sweden, 204. 



query of, 229. ; answer, 464. 

 Richardot's remarks on paragreles noticed, 319. 

 Ringing fruit trees, account of the effect of, 

 from a pamphlet by M. C. Bailly, of Paris, 80. 

 Ringing fruit trees, substitute for, 224. 

 Roberts, Mrs., her mode of manufacturing 



gooseberry wine, 93. 

 Robinia jubata, a curious plant, 52. 

 Robinson's ornamental villas {advertised), 473. ; 



rural architecture, 473. 

 Robson, Mr., Phoenix Park, Dublin, 12. 

 Rockingham', a country seat in Roscommon, 



described, 94. 

 Rollisson, Messrs., list of Cape Heaths which 

 have been in flower in their nursery at Toot- 

 ing, in every month of the year, 366. 

 Rosa Mul. Grevillii and Noisette, 344. 



, account of a remarkable one, 467. 

 Rose-leaves, tarts of, 207. 

 Rose, multiplication of, by cuttings, 198. 



, Scotch, the double varieties of, 256. 

 Roses grafted on oak, 83. 



, how to preserve their improved colours, 



by M. Pronville, of Versailles, 170. 

 , on forcing, by R. A. Salisbury, Esq. 

 F.R.S., 122. , 

 Rosenburgh, a royal seat near Copenhagen, 270. 

 Ross, Mr. William, F.L.S. H.S., his life, death, 

 burial, and daughters, 95. 

 , his seedling Camellias, 96. 

 , on fecundating the blossom of the black 

 Damascus Grape, 3"08. 

 Rural Expenditure, essay on the beneficial di- 

 rection of, by R. Slaney, Esq., reviewed, 175. 

 Russia, botanic gardens of, 51. 

 Rusticus, of Kent, on the cultivation of pear 



trees for perry, 153. 

 Sabine, J., Esq. F.R.S. &c, account of five 



new Chinese Chrysanthemums, &c. 73. 

 Sabine on fig-trees, and an account of their 

 cultivation in a fig-house, in the garden Of 

 the late Earl of Bridgewater, at Ashridge, in 

 Hertfordshire, 169. Some account of the 

 edible fruits of Sierra Leone, 164. 

 Sageret, M., 66. ; Memoire sur les Cucurbita- 



cees, remarks on, 442. 

 Salisburv's British grasses {advertised), 474. 

 Salisbury, R. A., Esq. F.RS. L.S. H.S. &c, on 

 the cultivation of vines in the open air, 43, 



Salisbury on forcing roses, 122. 



Salm-Dyke, prince of, 51. 



Sinclair's Hortus Gramineus Woburniensis 



{advertised), 474. 

 Salt as a manure, 335. ; in Denmark, 446. 



as a manure for arable lands, use of, and 

 for renovating grass lawns, &c, by William 

 Collyns, Esq., 401. 

 Salt, testimonies in favour of {advertised), 97. 



, influence of, on vegetation in France, 323. 

 Saul, Mr. M., of Lancaster, his transplanting 

 instrument, 267. 

 , plan for preventing the drip in hot- 

 houses, 431. 

 , his account of an experiment which serves 

 to show that hothouse flues may draw very 

 well, without terminating in an upright shaft 

 or chimney, 152. 

 Samouelle's Entomologist's Useful Companion 



{advertised), 361. 

 Saunders, Mr. B., nurseryman, Jersey, 87. 



, Mr. H, on the Kitley Shaddock, 205, 

 Savi, M. Gaitano, Plantes fourrageres de la 



Toscane, account of, 196. 

 Scotch farming in Kent, 88. ' - 



Sea or shore cale, Crambe maritima, on the cul- 

 ture and use of, by Mr. Brash, 189. 

 Sebright's art of improving the breeds of do- 

 mestic animals {advertised), 233. 

 observations on breaking and ma- 

 naging hzw'ks(advertised),233A7'i. 

 , on breeding domestic animals, 474. 

 Seeds and plants, their packing and expedition 

 from foreign countries, according to a pam- 

 phlet prepared by Mr. Lindley, 335. 

 Seeds, on packing and preserving, 210. 

 Sennebier's plan for rendering trees perma- 

 nently fruitful, 88. 

 Seton, Alexander, Esq. F.H.S., his mode of 



numbering plants, remarks on, 437. 

 Seymour, Mr. William, and Mr. Duff, new 

 mode of training the peach tree communi- 

 cated by them, 128. 

 Shaddock, the Kitley, some account of, by Mr. 



H. Saunders, 265. 

 Shaw, Sir Robert, Bart., 263. 

 Sheep, a remarkable disease in, 442. 



of Thibet, 79. 

 Shelton Abbey, Co. Wicklow, described, 94. " 

 Shennan, Mr. W. J., on the treatment of Cac. 

 tus speciosus, speciosissimus, and other or- 

 namental succulent plants, 398. 

 Shugborough, large pine apple cut there, 89. 

 Sibbald, Sir R.,, discovery of Rosa ciphiana, 256. 

 Silk worms and cochineal insects in Spain, 204. 

 in France, 199. 

 , culture of, in Ireland, 95. 

 , culture of, in Sweden, 83. 

 , remarks on the cultivation of, by 

 John Murray, Esq., F.S. A. L.S. 

 H.S. &c, reviewed, 317. 

 Sims, John, M.D., F.R.S.L , editor of the Bo- 

 tanical Magazine, 47. 60. 

 Simson, Mr. J., on the best mode of washing 



water-cresses, 29. 

 Sinclair, Mr. George, F.LS. H.S., his Hortus 

 Gramineus Woburniensis {advertised), 98. - 

 Sinclair, Mr. George, F.L.S. H.S., on cultivat- 

 ing a collection of grasses in pleasure grounds, 

 26. 112. 

 Sinclair and Holditch, their essay on weeds 



{advertised), 98. 

 Sion House, notice respecting, 349. 

 Slaney, Robert, Esq. his essay on the beneficial 

 direction of rural expenditure reviewed, 175. 

 {advertised) 233. 

 Smith, Mr. James, C.M.H.S., on forcing onions 

 to produce bulbs in clusters 307. 

 Mr. James, C.M.H.S., on forcing rhu- 

 barb in boxes in a.dark room, &c, 307. 

 Smith, Sir James Edward, F.R.S., Pres. L.S., 

 &o., 26. ; his English Flora {advertised), 234. 

 Smith, Mr., C.M.H.S., on charcoal dust, 293. 

 Snowdrop, abundance of, at Arniston, 256. 

 Sondermarken, a royal park, Copenhagen, 270. 

 Sorgenfrie, a royal seat near Copenhagen, 271. 

 Soulange-Bodin, Chevalier Etienne, of. Fro. 



