INDEX. 



54.1 



Florida, orange trees in, 396. 



Florists' and Horticultural Society of Darling- 

 ton's meeting of May 21, 29i ; future intention 

 of, 295; August 4, 415. 



Florist's Guide and Cultivator's Directory re- 

 viewed, March, 34; April and May, 142; 

 June, 255 ; July and August, 376. 



Florists' Society of Bradford, show of October 

 8, 526; Broomfield, April 21, 175; Ripon, 

 meeting of, June 26, 412; York, July 3, 411. 



Flower-garden, plan for, 214: at Bagshot Park, 

 433. 



Flower masses at the Royal Lodge figured, 177. 



Flower stand, description of one for the convey- 

 ance of flowers to flower-shows, 14. 



Flower stands at the Royal Lodge figured, 177. 



Floy's nursery, 195. 



Flues, account of Mr. Hiort's circular chimney, 

 160 ; to cleanse, by M. Saul, 318. 



Fluids of plants, description of, 131. 



Flushing, Linnean garden at, notice of, 194 ; 



t^ Bloodgood's nursery at, 191 ; Mills and Law- 

 rence's at, 194. 



Fodder for cattle, leaves and bark as, 273. 



Forbes, F. Esq. R.N., on the culture of sea- 

 kale (Cr^mbe marltima), 359. 



Forbes, Mr. Robert, on salt as a manure, 82. 



Forbidden fruit, scions of, 445. 



Forest culture of the ancients, 391. 



Forest trees, on planting, by Mr. William 

 Thorn, jun., 36. 



Forrest, Mr. John, method of forcing cucum- 

 bers by fire heat, 362. 



Forster, Dr., his address to the Chelmsford and 

 Essex Horticultural and Florists' Society, 173. 



Forster, Mr. W. T., on improving asparagus by 

 irrigation, 235. 



Forsyth's composition, query respecting, by J. D. 

 Parks, 320. 



Eraser, Mr. James, description of a double sunk 

 fence in Garbally, 334 ; on the ^^bies alba as 

 a nurse in plantations, 216; on the Lombardy 

 and Canadian poplars, 217 ; on tlie holly and 

 hazel as underwood, 96. 



Frederiksdal, some account of, 500. 



Fredewicks, nosegay at, 396. 



Frogmore gardens, call at, 176. 



Frost, critique on the effect of, on vegetables, 

 312. 



Fruit and vegetable market of Edinburgh for 

 June, 282. 



Fruit, easy method of delineating, 113; query 

 respecting a Norwegian kind of, 448. 



Fruit-garden, plan for, 214. 



Fruits, glossary of terras for describing, 232 ; of 

 . New Holland, 399 ; of New South Wales, 

 503 ; on measuring, delineating, and describ- 

 ing, 230 ; on procuring improved, 309 ; on the 

 art of improving, 392 ; price of in Edinburgh, 

 405. 



Fruit trees on the Rhine, 49. 



Fruit trees, removing of, by puddling, 315. 



Fruit walls, movable coping and coverings for, 

 by Mr. A. Caldecott, F.H.S., 355. 



Functions, view of vegetable, 129. 



Fungi, edible, 50. 



Fiirstenburg, gardens of the Prince of, 492. 



Furze, notices respecting the Irish, 341. 



Garden crops, on scaring small birds from, 

 224. 



Garden in order, query on keeping, 447. 



Garden libraries, remarks on, by Agronome, 309. 



Garden, plan for a kitchen, fruit, and flower, 

 with the buildings, &c. &c., 214. 



Garden pots, size of, at Liverpool, by Mr. James 

 Rollins, 485. 



Garden violet, cultivation of, 99. 



Gardener, jobbing, life of, remarks on, 533. 



Gardener's cottage, 44; conveniences proper 

 for, 47. ■ 



Gardeners, the improvement of, 58 ; of Bavaria, 

 remark on, 496 ; in Denmark, system of ex. 

 amining and giving characters to, by Peter 

 Lindegaard, Esq., F.H.S. 76. 



Gardener's Remembrancer, reviewed, 39. 



Gardeners' Society, North British Professional, 



April 16th, lo3. 

 Gardening and bctany of Spain, by Don Mariano 



La Gasca, 65. 

 Gardening, vegetable physiology with reference 



to, by Mr. Main, 202; in America, remarks 



on, 268. 

 Gardens and grounds, comparative notices of 



302 ; at Wilford Hall, plan of, by Mr. William 



Smith, 90. 

 Gardens in the neighbourhood of Luxembourg, 



by M. Charles Rauch, 272. 

 Gardens of the town, 308. 

 Gas, on heating by, 159. 



Geraniacea^ reviewed, March, 34; April, 141. 

 Gern, agricultural establishment at, 272. 

 Ghazeepon, rose gardens at, 503. 

 Gironella, garden of Don Antonia, 76. 

 Glaciere de Saint Owen, notice of the, 158. 

 Glass case for the winter protection of orange 



trees, camellias, &o., by Mr. J. Haythorn, 480. 

 Glass, on fixing, in sashes without astragals, 178. 

 Gooseberry, on the great height to which its 



culture has arrived, with some remarks on 



their different peculiarities, by Mr. Joseph 



Clarkson, 481 ; early green hairy, 144. 

 Gooseberry show held at Southwell on July 22d 



431. 

 Gordon's, Mr. A., remarks made during a visit 



to the United States, 463. 

 Gorrie, Mr. Archibald, on certain varieties of 



pear tree considered with reference to their 



effect in landscape-gardening, as well as to the 



quality of their fruits, 11. 

 Grafting, description and origin of the mode 



formerly called by tlie French Greffe Kew, by 



M. Oscar Leclerc, 7. 

 Grafting under the bark, critique respecting, 



312. 

 Grape, common muscadine, 35 ; Cambridge bo. 



tanic garden, 143. 

 Grape seed used as coffee, 532. 

 Grapes, cause of the imperfect ripening of forced 



ones, 236 ; early ones, 159 ; notice of some 



ripened in December in Denmark, 51 ; review 



of fifty kinds of, by Mr, Joseph Thompson, 



C.M.H.S., 366. 

 Grape vine, barrenness of, within the tropics, by 



J. A. M., 533. 

 Green-houses at Bagshot Park, 434. 

 Greenland, vegetation in, 274. 

 Greffe Blaikie, described, 7. 

 Greffe Kew, origin of, 7. ' ^"^ 



Grey, Mr. William, on the management of pear 



and apple trees, 245 ; on the cultivation of 

 i asparagus, early cauliflowers, management of 



auricula, and management of orange trees, 246. 

 Ground in landscape-gardening, 471. 

 Grubs, remark on the brown ones, 445. 

 Grubs and wire-worms, mode of destroying, 191. 

 Hamilton, Dr., plants introduced by, from Car- 



thagena, 278 ; critique respecting the Cam. 



panilla, 442; Arracacha plant grown by him 



in the open air, 402 ; notice of a cOw-cabbage, 



403; of the Achira plant, 403; of the El 



Achira, 158; of the Pita plant, 161; query on 



the Duffm bean, 190. 

 Harrow, answer to query on Morton's revolving 



brake, 186. 

 Haycroft, Mr. John, on training the vine on 



wires downwards, 237. 

 Hay's, Mr. John, C.M.H.S., description, with 



plans, of a hot wall, 243. 

 Haythorn's, Mr. J., description of a movable 



glass case for the winter protection of orange 



trees, &c., planted in the open air, 480. 

 Hazzi's kneading machine, 497. 

 Head-gardeners, defence of, against the Com- 

 plaints of a Journeyman, 210. 

 Hedge-row timber, on the advantages of plant- 

 ing, by Mr. W. M'Murtrie, C.M.H.S., 92. 

 Henderson, Mr. Walter, on managing peach 



trees in an early peach-house, 241. 

 Hendon Independent Florists' show of June 9th, 



416'. 



