754 



GENERAL INDEX. 



Florists' and Horticultural Society of Notting- 

 ham, April 21st, 383 ; of Darlington, 521. 



Florists of Monkweannouthj August 9th, 632. 



Florists' Societies : 



Ayr and Kilmarnock, competition of the, 637. 

 Cambridge, June 14th ,515 ; July 26th, 625. 

 Exeter, April 15th, 384. 



;- Morpeth, May 27th, 522. 

 Pandon Dean, May 8th, 522. 

 Ponteland, July 10th, 632. 



Flower gardens, designs for laying out, remarks 

 respecting, 219. 



Flower-garden, plan of a, 423. 



Flower-gatherer, figured and described, 5S8 ; 

 hand flower-gatherer, 589. 



Flower-pots, groove-bottomed, 309. 



Flowers, hint on preserving, 229. 



Flower Show of Bolton, April 30th, 525. 



Fonzi's smoke-consuming stove, 479 ; his terro- 

 metallic teeth, 480. 



Food of animals and vegetables, 400. 



Foot-scraper for sandy soils, 318. 



Forcing of earth, 456. 

 • Fore-shortening, Sir. Blaikie's system of, 418. 



Forest trees, management of, 463. 



Fowls, for cottagers, 175. 189. 



Fowler, Mr., his models for markets, 105. 



Fowler's thermosiphon, extract on heating hot- 

 houses by, 334. 



Frame and strike for a tulip bed, figured and 

 described, 684. 



Fraser, Mr., 346. 



. French, Mr. D., cause of the failure of the early 

 Charlton pear, 503. 



French, William, obituary of, 639. 



Frognals, the seat of Lord Sidney, remarks on 

 663. 



Fruit market of Edinburgh, September 2oth, 109. 



Fruit trees, in too rich a soil, by Mr. Robert 

 Errington,54 ; for cottagers, 180; earlier bear- 

 ing of, now than formerly, 229 ; from North 

 America, 338; in churchyards, 595; Ameri- 

 can list of, by Mr.M. Saul, 613 ; remarks on the 

 treatment of, by Mr. Robert Errington, 693. 



Fruits, to increase the size of, 4S1 ; on keeping, 

 more particularly apples, by Mr. John Ferme, 

 700. 



Fuchsias and hydrangeas, query respecting, 

 728. 



Fuel, mode of growing, for cottagers, 144. 



Fulham nursery, June 27th, 507. 



Fulton, Mr. G., answer respecting Strelitzza 

 reglnas, 229 ; vines for a green-house, 232 ; 

 observations on the management of vines in 

 the vinery, 707 ; on keeping a fine bloom on 

 cucumbers, 709. 



Fumigating pot, figured and described, 553. 



Functions of animals and vegetables, 399. 



Fund for gardeners, remarks on, by Mr. James 

 Rollins, 353. 



Funds for general education, 335. 



Fimgi, poisonous effects of, 571 ; "edible, of Bri- 

 tain, 572. 



Garden, cottage, cultivation of, 175; committee 

 of the London Hort. Soc, 246 ; Libraries, cri- 

 tical remarks respecting, by J. Newman, 610. 

 of the Caledonian Hort. Soc, promenade in 

 the, 600 ; royal, remarks on the, 731. 

 Gardener, the continental, compared with the 



English one, 388. 

 Gardener's house and gardens at Worksop Ma- 

 nor, by Robert Abraham, Esq., architect, 34. 



Gardeners and farmers near Paris, personal 

 character of, 9. 



Gardeners sent out by the Hort. Soc, 245. 



Gardens and gardeners, the royal, 489. 



Gardens of Marshal Tallard, answer to query 

 respecting, 224 ; of Prince Metternich, on the 

 Rhine, described, 33; in England and Scot- 

 land, observations made on visiting several, 

 during the summer of 1830, by Mr. Saunders, 

 653. 



Gaulthena Shdllon, 562. 



Gender of botanical names, on the, 496. 



Geometrical forms and lines prevalent in France, 

 3. 



Georgina, painted lady anemone-flowered 

 figured and described, 77. 



Geraniums, marking, 210. 



Ginger, culture of, &c, described, 233. 



Glass, substitute for, in hot-houses, 353 ; crack- 

 ing, preventive for, 500. 



Glazing with lead laps, answer to query re- 

 specting, 726. 



Godsall, Mr. William, his new budding-knife 

 figured and described, 308 ; notice of a small 

 economical green-house, 667. 



Goldfinch, change of colour in a, 601. 



Goldworth Nursery, May 11th, 380. 



Gooseberries, queries respecting a collection of, 

 by Edmund Vallance, 727. 



Gooseberry Shows : 

 of 1829, M. Saul, 337. 

 Haddrick's Mill, July 31., 631. 

 Burnopfield, Aug. 14., 632. 

 Ovingham, Aug. 9., 632. 



Gordon, Mr. Alexander, remarks on a defect in 

 the ripening of grapes, 221 ; chemical ^and 

 geological elevations of plants corrected, 359. 



Gorrie, Mr. A., C.M.H.S., remarks on Sir Henry 

 Steuart's Planter's Guide, 43 ; on destroying 

 slugs, 69 ; on preserving tender plants in win- 

 ter, 402; crops in the Lothians, 495; critical 

 remarks respecting the functions of leaves, 

 724. 



Gould, Mr. John, obituary of, 256. 



Grafting on the large branches of old trees, Mr. 

 Alexander Diack's mode of, 698. 



Gram, query respecting, 224 ; answer to, 368. 



Grape, the Rhodes, figured and described, by 

 Thos. Appleby, 599; the Tokay, setting of, 

 by- D. Wright, 602. 



Grapes, defect in ripening, remarks on, by Mr. 

 Alexander Gordon, 221 ; Muscadine and 

 Muscat, answer to query respecting, 232; 

 early, 343; on the visible cause, and easy and 

 effectual cure, of the bad setting of some sorts 

 of, by Mr. James Craig, 687 ; cause of the 

 shrivelling of, in hot-houses, 709. 



Green fly in the blossoms of peach trees, on the, 

 by Mr. James Craig, 552. 



Green-house Society of Ayrshire, April 22d, 

 384; May 27th, 526; June 24th, 636; July 

 8th, 637. 



Green-house, design for a small one, 664 ; no- 

 tice of a small economical one, by Mr. God- 

 sail, 667. 



Greffe des Charlatans, 211. 



Greig, Mr., account of a patch of Cobbett's corn, 

 60. 



Groom's flower-garden, May 4th, 378 ; tulip 

 bed, description of, 683. 



Ground, preparation of, for the reception of 

 plants, 462. 



Guaco plant, 326. 



Guard for trees, new, by Mr. John Hislop, 47. 



Guinguettes, the, or tea gardens of Paris, 

 648. 



Haarlem, account of the forcing and floriculture 

 at, by J. Rinz, 592. 



Habranthus Andersbm', 562. 



Hamilton, W., M.D., his address to the S. De- 

 von and E. Cornwall Bot. and Hort. Soc, 256 ; 

 circumstances respecting Argembne mexi- 

 cana, 315 ; the Dolichos tetragonolobus, 315; 

 the Meloncito d'Olor, 315 ; seeds from Car- 

 thagena, 493. 



Hammersmith Nursery, April 4th, 378. 



Happiness, temporal, 344. 



Harewood House, and its gardens and grounds, 

 description of, 649. 



Harrison's method of pruning the peach and 

 nectarine, remarks on, by Jos. Harrison, 220. 



Harrison, Mr. George, critical remarks on Ver- 

 bena Mel'mdres, 222. 



Hawkins, Mr. Thos., suggestions respecting the 

 caterpillar on the oak coppice, 223. 



Haworth, A. H, query respecting hardybulbous 

 plants, 368. 



Hawthorn, Mr., on the birch rind of the Ame- 

 rican Indians, 405. 



Hay, John, on forcing by means of steam acting 



