498 



INDEX. 



Forest and ornamental trees, notice of some 

 deserving the attention of Scottish cultivators, 

 by Gilbert Laing Meason, Esq., 313. 

 Forest culture of the ancients, 465. 

 Forest management of Germany, notice of, 92 

 Forest trees, on cutting over, when young, by 

 Mr. A. Gorrie, C.M.H.S, 253; queries res- 

 pecting, by Messrs. Bishop, Beattie, and Mit- 

 chell, 306. 

 Forman, W., Esq., his pit for pines, &C, 172. 

 Fountains and jets among the Romans, 479. 

 Frames for protecting fruit trees on walls, ac- 

 count of, by Mr. John Dick, 54. 

 Fraxinus americana, 313. 

 Fraxinus Ornus, or manna ash, 458.' 



French works on botany and gardening, enu- 

 merated, 82. 



Fromont Gardens, horticultural fete in. 443. 



Frost, John, Esq., F.A.S., F.L.S., F.H.S., &c, 

 oration by, &c., reviewed, 324. 



Fruit eaten by rats, 218. 



Fruits, hardy, of Upper Canada, notice of, by 

 Mr. Thomas Blair, 313. 



Fruits, on ornamenting, showing, preserving, 

 packing, &c, by Mr. Robert Gauen, 34; 



' blooming of, by Mr. R. Gauen, 34 ; remarks 

 on the description of, 31. 



Fruit-tree borders, on mulching and watering, 

 by Mr. James Smith, 311. 



Fruit-trees, economical arrangement of, by Mr. 

 John Dick, 192 ; hardy, notice of a selection 

 of names of, 355 ; on scraping the bark off, by 

 Mr. Thomas Thomson, 309; on the disappoint- 

 ments incident to purchasers of, by Super- 

 ficial, 293; on the removal of large ones, by 

 Mr. William Moore, East Ham, 354. 



Eulton, Mr. George, on keeping potatoes through 

 the winter, 405. 



Garcimm Mangostuna, figured and described, 142. 



Gardener and a butler, comparative expenses 

 of, 32. 



Gardeners and labourers, criticism on a state- 

 ment concerning, 370. 



Gardeners and their employers, conduct of, by 

 Mr. J. Cameron, 156; on the conduct of, 291. 



Gardeners' Kalendar, notice of a tabular one, 

 by Mr. Ridgeway, 328. 340. 



Gardeners' Magazine, how to conduct, by Agro- 

 nome, 287. 



Gardening at Exmouth, state of, 218. 



Gardening for ships, 216. 



Gardening of Sorgenfrie, in Denmark, 344. 



Garden hot-houses and pits, notice respecting, 

 378. 



Garden Libraries, Mackav's, 115; Toxteth, 115; 

 Glasgow H. S., 115; Ayrshire, 116. 



Garden of Fromont, notice of, 207 ; of Hamlet, 

 at Elsinore, 96. 



Gardens of Rosenburgh, Denmark, 344 ; Sun 

 Inn, Maidenhead, 481 ; Inn at Salt Hill, 481. 



Garden plants, medicinal qualities of, 382. 



Garden walls, composition for blacking, by W. 

 Green, jun., Stepney, 374 ; mode of painting, 

 by W. Cotton, Esq., 174; on fixing wire 

 against, by Mr. T. Ingram, 13 ; on painting 

 black, by Mr. John Henderson, 315. 



Gas, on heating water by burning, 365. 



Gauen, Mr. R., on a revolving frame, 170; on 

 blooming and otherwise ornamenting, show- 

 ing, and packing fruits, 34 ; on the concen- 

 tration of the sun's rays, 101. 



Genista tinctdria, said to be a cure for hydro- 

 phobia, 218. 



Georgifili Academy of Florence, 95. 



German works on botany and gardening, re- 

 viewed, 82. 



Gesnen'a Douglasw, notice of, 320. 



Gibb, Mr. David, on the preservation of apples, 9. 



Gibbs's nursery, call at, 126. 



Glasgow, prices of fruits and vegetables in, 225. 



Gloxinia maculata, culture of, by Mr. John 

 Nelson, 141. 



Gloridsa superba, culture of, by Mr. James 

 Fringle, 140. , 



Glycyrrhlza glabra, culture of, in France, 91. 

 Godsall, Mr. W., on a horticultural plough, 139. 

 Goldworth nursery, call at, 122 ; perfect order 

 of, 247. 



Gooseberries, merits of the large sorts, by Mr. 

 Saul, 121 ; select list of, 114 ; select list of, by 

 Mr. Saul, 122; improvement of, by cultiva- 

 tion, 122 ; on training and managing, by Mr. 

 M. Saul, 421 ; show of Lancaster, 114 ; show 

 of Newark, July 26, 113; the Crompton's 

 Sheba Queen, P. M., 459. 



Gordon Castle, holly trees at, 185. 



Gordon's kettle, on heating pits and frames by, 

 by Zig-zag, 365. 



Gorrie, Mr. A., C.M.H.S., on cutting over fo- 

 rest trees, 253. 



Gourds, notice of some large ones sent to the 

 Conductor, 352. 



Grafting Passifloras, 102 ; geraniums, 102. 



Grafting under the bark, advantages of, by Mr. 

 Benade, 63. 



Grain, principles of preserving, 208. 



Grape, cannon, query respecting, 379. 



Grapes and wine making, 117. 



Grapes, early ripening of, on the Lower Rhine, 

 in 1827, 208; notice of some ripened in the 

 open air, in October, at Elgin, 354 ; on the 

 growth of early and late crops of, by Mr. 

 James Aeon, C.M.H.S., 43; ripe, on the pro- 

 longation of, by J. M., 12; sorts preferable for 

 late crops, 46. 



Grape vine, account of a method of cultivating, 

 by Mr. Ninian Niven, 311 ; notice of some, 

 by Mr. C. Hale Jessop, Cheltenham, 353. 



Grass garden at Woburn Abbey, correction of 

 an error respecting, 255. 



Grass turf, or sward, utility of employing, in 

 forwarding early vegetables, by Mr. A. Bisset, 

 193. 



Green fly, to destroy, on peach trees, 119. 



Green-houses, suggestion for heating by a lamp, 

 244. 



Green, Mr. William, on raising the vine by 

 layers, 24. 



Greenshiells, Mr. William, F.H.S., on the cul- 

 ture of melons in an open border, 182. 



Gregory's self-supported ladder, notice of, 230. 



Grosvenor Palace, notice respecting, 477. 



Grubs and wire worms, query respecting, 381. 



Hainault scythe, notice respecting, 226. 



Halls, Charles, Esq., notice of his garden in the 

 neighbourhood of New York, 347. 



Hamelin, Baron, on the production of hybrids, 

 444. 



Hamilton, W., Esq. M.D. Of Fareham, plants 

 of South America wanted by him, 98 ; direc- 

 tions for preserving seeds and flowers by, 99 ; 

 on the culture of Hyperanthera Moringa in 

 the West Indies, 157. 



Hardy fruits, on prolonging the season of, by 

 Mr. J. Forbes, 11. 



Harrison, Mr. C, F.H.S., his excellent Treatise 

 on Fruit Trees, and its coincidence with that 

 of the Comte Lelieur, 57 ; on the apple tree, 

 as trained against a wall, 1. 



Harrison, Mr. Joseph, on the cultivation of 

 Camellias in an open border, 181. 



Hartwig's Hortus Carlsruhanus, reviewed, 204. 



Hawkins, Mr. Thomas, on a moveable cucum- 

 ber bed, 22. 



Hay stealers, traps for, 103. 



Heating by hot air and hot water, query re- 

 specting, 375 ; models for, in the library of the 

 Horticultural Society, 474 ; in Messrs. Cottam 

 and Hallen's manufactory, Winsley Street, 

 474 ; origin of, in France, 429 ; history of, in 

 England, 430 ; first displayed in England by 

 the Comte Chabannes, 430 ; applied to the 

 heating of baths, 432 ; account of experiments 

 made by William Atkinson, Esq., by Mr. John 

 Barrow, 423 ; W. Atkinson, Esq. proved to 

 have been the first who successfully applied 

 this art, by T. Tredgold, Esq., 427. 



Hemp, transformation of sexes in, 90. 



