INDEX. 



501 



Myrrh, notice of a reward for the discovery of 

 the plant yielding it, 352. 



Nash, Mr. James, on Paabnia moutan, 293. 



Nectarine, red Roman and Newington, charac- 

 ter of their leaves, 32. 



Nelson, Mr. John, on the culture of Gloxim'fl 

 maculata, 141. 



.Nepenthes distillatbria, in flower in the Edin- 

 burgh botanic garden, 226. 451. 



iZephelium Jappaceum, figured and described, 

 144. 



New trellis, notice of some vines selected for, by 

 Mr. C. H. Jessop, 353. 



New York Linnean botanic garden, 210. 



Niven, Mr. Ninian, on a new method of culti- 

 vating the grape vine, 311. 



North British Professional Gardener's Society, 

 June 13th, 104. 



Nurseries of New York, Mr.Hogg's, Mr. Price's, 

 Mr. Floy's, Mr. Wilson's, Mr. Shaw's, 347. 



Nurseries of Philadelphia, of D. and C. Land- 

 reth, of John Bartram, and of Robert Carr, 

 Esq., 348. 



Nursery garden of Caraccas, 98. 



Nutmeg tree, described and figured, 67 ; notice 

 of its culture in Trinidad, 212. 



Nuts and apples, large specimens of, 218. 



Oak, black, 62uercus nigra, notice of, 363. 



Oak coppice woods, observations on, by Mr. 

 Robert Hosie, 303. 



Oak, English, fortunes of defended, by Quercus 

 Secundus, 285. 



Oak, white, Quercus alba, notice of, 363. 



Oatlands, calls at, 124. 



Oats, wonderful stalks of, 226. 



O'lea exeelsa in Ireland, 106. 



Onions, to protect from the grub, by Mr. Elias 

 Hildyard, 174. 



Orache, culture of, by Mr. Wm. Townsend, 178. 



Orange and other trees, on importing from 

 France, 455. 



Orange, rapid and successful mode of grafting, by 

 Mr. James Reeve, 26. 



Orchard in miniature, an account of, by Malus, 

 281. 



Orchard of Clydesdale, notice of, 225. 



Orchardists, remarks on the disappointments 

 incident to, 31. 



Orcbidea?, transportation of, notice on, by W. 



"" Swainson,.Esq. of T ittenhanger Green, 377. 



Orchideous Plants of Chile, 98. 



Orchideous Plants, roots of, dried and packed 

 like seeds, 69. 



Order and neatness, remarks on, 245 ; premiums 

 awarded to gardeners for, 246. 



Orme de Siberie, 313. 



Ornithogalum, use of in Italy, 95. 



O'rnus rotundif blia, 458. 



Otto, Mr. M., on the culture of Tetragbnia ex- 

 pansa, 318. 



O'xalis caprina, notice respecting, 490. 



Paebnia IMoiUan, on propagating, by grafting 



i on Paebnia officinalis, by Mr. James Nash, 

 293. 



Palaiseau's Jardin imaginaire, noticed, 81. 



Papaver i£hce s as, notice of, 73. 



Papworth, John B., Esq , a distinguished archi- 

 tect and landscape-gardener, 34/. 



Paragreles, notice respecting, 465 ; on the em- 

 ployment of, in Britain, by John Murray, Esq. 

 F.A.S. L.S. H.S. G.S., inc., 159. 



Paris quadrif blia, virtues of, 72. 



Pasieka, or log hive of Poland, "470. 



Passiflbra palmata, notice of, 371 ; quadrangula- 

 ris, grafted on P. cserulea, 102. 



Passifioras, on setting the fruit of, by Mr. W. 

 Mowbray, 176. 



Peach, nectarine, and apricot, proposal for 

 grafting on stocks of their own kind, by Mr. 

 Daniel Cameron, 149. 

 Peach, Noblesse and Gallande, character of 



their blossoms, 32. 

 Peach, the Catherine, of Pom. Mag., 459 ; the 

 Malta, P. M., 460. 



Peach-tree, Montreuil, mode of training, 57 ; 

 Dumoutier's method, 57 ; Seymour's mode, 57. 

 61 ; Sieulle's method, 60 ; remarks on the 

 French method of cultivating, by Mr. John 

 Smith, 56 ; stocks used for, by the French, 60. 

 Pear, Beurree d'Aremberg, 215 ; JDuchesse 

 d'Angouleme, origin of, 207 ; Forme de Marie 

 Louise, the best standard one, 353; Muirfowl- 

 egg, character of its shoots and footstalks of 

 leaves, 32 ; the Summer Bonchretien of Pom. 

 Mag., 460. 

 Pears, advantage of gathering, before they are 

 ripe, by Sir George Mackenzie, 175 ; Mr. Brad- 

 dick's new sorts, 126 ; select varieties of, 182. 

 Pears on quince stocks, query respecting, 380. 

 Pear trees, advantage of twisting and breaking 

 down their young shoots, by the Rev. John 

 Fisher, 175. 

 Peas, to protect from mice, 117. 

 Pelargbnium tricolor, grafted on other species, 



102. 

 Perforator, a planting instrument invented by 



Sir R. Colt Hoare, 214. 

 Persimon, Diospyros virginiana, notice of, 363. 

 Petersburg, tricks performed on culinary vege- 

 tables there, as related by Storch, 41. 

 Petersen, Mr. J. P., on the Gardening of Den- 

 mark, 344. 

 Petit-Thouars, M. du, notice respecting works 

 presented by him to the Paris Horticultural 

 Society, and also his Chronological Biography 

 of Gardeners, 448. 

 Petunz'a nyctaginiflbra, on the culture of, by 



Robt. Sweet, F.L.S., 297. 

 Phurmium bulbiferum, culture of, in Sicily, 209. 

 Pine-apple, culture of, by Mr. James Dall, 183 ; 

 culture of, in Brazil, by Mr. Beyrich, 442 ; 

 waved-leaved of Pom. Mag., 330"; query re- 

 specting, 120. 

 Pine-apples, great number and large size of those 

 cut at Shugborough, by W. M'Murtrie, 352 ; 

 notice of, 102 ; mode of keeping and increasing 

 the flavour, 216. 

 Pine, Scotch, query on, 378 ; notice respecting, 



from the Quarterly Review, 350. 

 Pines and firs, collection of, query respecting, 

 378 ; figures of various species in the Pinetuin 

 at Dropmore, 265. 

 Pinetum at Dropmore, account of, 257. 

 Pinks and carnations, Mr. Hogg's show of, 113. 

 Pinks, injury done to, by the caterpillars of cer- 

 tain moths in the winter months, 456 ; lists of 

 choice sorts,111.113 ; the best variety grown,456. 

 P'inus laricio, 313. 



Pinus resinbsa, and rigida, remarks on, 211. 

 Pipes, earthen, query respecting, 374 ; answer, 



490. 

 Pit, economical, for preserving vegetables during 



winter, by Mr. A. Stewart, 193. 

 Pit for pines of W. Forman, Esq., figured and 



described, 171. 

 Plane, occidental, Platanus occidentalis, notice 



of, 363. 

 Plantations of trees, on filling up the gaps of, by 



M. Bosse, 317. 

 Planting by mudding in, 217. 

 Planting, on preparing the soil for, from the 



Quarterly Review, 350. 

 Plants, chemical relationship of, 218. 

 Plants, culture of, in pots of Hypnum mosses, 



by Mr. John Street, C.M.H.S., 61. 

 Plants, effects' of frost on, in the winter of 



1822-3, by Prof. Link, 62. 

 Plants, garden, medicinal qualities of, 382. 

 Plants, law of nature as to the regeneration of 

 shoots, 345 ; male and female, metamorphoses 

 of, 90 ; natural law of succession exemplified 

 in Australasia, 214 ; natural law of succession 

 of in the same soil, 208 ; prices of, &c, 117 ; 

 universal history of, proposed in preference to 

 a new edition of Miller's Dictionary, 340. 

 Plough, excavation formed by, for a canal, 94.' 

 Plum, Coe's golden drop, notice of, by T. Ri- 

 vers, jun., Hertfordshire, 353 ; purple gage, 



