GENERAL INDEX. 



751 



tlie great age of Bome fruit trees, 227 ; useful 

 suggestions on planting fruit trees, 542. 



Fuel, domestic, suggestions referrible to, 516; 

 economical, 698. 



Furze contains salt, and is good for horses and 

 cattle, 375 : the brilliant effect of the flowers 

 of, 359. 



Game laws, their odious effects, 527. 



Garbally Park and mansion, an account of, 23. 



Garden, classical, outlines of a plan for the 

 formation of a, 432 ; geographical, described, 

 668 ; public one at Lynn Regis, Norfolk, 222 ; 

 small garden, how to cultivate, 244 ; a query 

 on cropping a new one, 245. See Flower 

 Garden. 



Gardeners, a benefit society for, 109; employers 

 and gardeners, their reciprocal interests, 700 ; 

 hints on obtaining good gardeners, 408 ; jour- 

 neymen gardeners, their accommodation, 414 ; 

 libraries for gardeners should be formed by 

 horticultural societies, 591 ; remarks on the 

 progress of intellect among, 139 ; the beha- 

 viour of some emigrant gardeners on arriving 

 in America, 666 ; wages of gardeners, and 

 wages generally, remarks on, 420 ; wanted at 

 the Cape of Good Hope, 496. 



Gardening ;and vine culture in Touraine, 487 ; 

 reflections on gardening as a pursuit, 20; state 

 of, in New South Wales, 671 ; effect of gar- 

 dening on lunatics, 554 ; primary divisions of 

 the science of gardening, 151 ; state of, in 

 America, 666 ; the best short treatises on gar- 

 dening, 243; the state of, at the Cape of Good 

 Hope, 496 ; in the northern counties, and in 

 Scotland, 537. 



Gardens, criticised and noticed : palace gardens, 

 389. 547; gardens of mansions,549; of villas, 551; 

 of houses in towns, .554 ; of jails, 554 ; cottage 

 gardens, 555 ; nurseries, 555 ; Liverpool bota- 

 nic garden, 556; public promenade gardens, 

 557 ; designs for forming them by subscription 

 in the vicinity of large commercial towns, 605 ; 

 advice on growing plants in gardens in cities 

 solicited, 720; several gardens in Scotland 



i noticed, 679 ; those of the commercial florists 

 of Paris, 129 ; remarks and suggestions on 

 laying out gardens, 251 ; small ones at Bir. 

 mingham, and their effect, 409 ; suburban 

 plants mentioned, of difficult culture in, 720 ; 

 suburban. See Nurseries. 



Garendon Park and gardens noticed, 427. 



Gaultheria ShaLlon, a figure and account of, 

 472. 



Geology, its intimate relation to planting, 372, 

 373 ; the geology of the country between Lon- 

 don and Stockport, 387 ; of the tract of coun- 

 try which intervenes between Manchester and 



■■ Dumfries, 514; west of Scotland, 642. 



Georgia proposed for Georgma, 716. 



Georginas, a mode of cultivating, 38 ; how to 

 manage cuttings of, 123; splendour of flowers 

 of, in 1831, 684. 690. 



Gerardias, useful hints for cultivating, 490. 



Gesnferei^, a mode of cultivating the, 568. 



Ginger, a mode of successfully cultivating, 577 ; 

 a mode of preserving, 578. 



Gladiolus psittacinus, noticed, 61. 



Glazing, Harrison and Curtis's new patent mode 

 of, noticed, and remarked on, 603; an im- 

 proved mode of glazing hot-house sashes, 

 193; oil as a substitute for putty between 

 the laps of panes of glass, 84 ; Stewart's patent 

 copper lap for, 225. 



Glencairn Abbey, in Waterford county, noticed, 

 683. 



Gloxinias, a mode of cultivating, 568. 



Goat moth, its ravages on the alder stated, 604. 



Godefroy's nursery, a notice of, 15. 



Gold worth, Surrey, observations made on a 

 journey from London to, 357. 



Good, John, Esq., a memoir of, 662. 



Gooseberries exhibited at the London Horticul- 

 tural Society, 623 ; heaviest, in Lancashire, in 

 1830, 226 ; in 1831, and new seedlings in Lan- 

 cashire, in 1831, 678. 744 ; book on, 213 ; large 

 kinds of, condemned, 331 ; defended, 332. S55. 



610 ; remarks on providing a .succession of the 

 best.flavoured, 329; the kinds deemed best in 

 the Pomological Magazine, 113; the merits of 

 the large kinds declared, and a selection of, in 

 four colours, named, 555. 



Gooseberry caterpillars destroyed by heat, 196 ■ 

 by limewater, 336. ' 



Gourd, an extremely large one noticed, 101 • 

 Cucdrbita verrucosa, its hybrid effect on the 

 smooth green Spanish melon, 87 ; edible spe- 

 cies of, the modes of dressing them for table 

 189. See Hybridising. ' 



Grafting and budding defined, 586; knife used 

 in approach grafting, 218; dovetail grafting 

 de.scribed, 712. 



Grafts of all kinds of fruits recommended to be 

 taken from the Horticultural Society's collec- 

 tion, 253. 



Grape vines and grapes, grown well in the neigh- 

 bourhood of Liverpool, 538; training grape 

 vines in pots for forcing, .574 ; successful me- 

 thod of cultivating the white Tokay grape, 

 604; barking the stems of, 662; fruit of the 

 Frontignac sets very imperfectly, the causes 

 sought, 730; grown over pines, satisfactory in- 

 stances of, 550 ; grown under rafters in pine- 

 ries, a mode of wintering, 411 ; better shown, 

 539; in pots, Mr. Stafford's remarkably effect- 

 ive mode of cultivating, and of renovat- 

 ing plants of, 602; culture of the grape vine 

 in Touraine, 487 ; notice of a theory on prun- 

 ing the, 353; cultivating by spur-eyes, 484; 

 a mode of stopping from bleeding, 484 ; supe- 

 rior kinds cultivated by Mr. Money, 688 ; the 

 culture of grape vines attempted in America 

 318 ; the Esperione very hardy and prolific' 

 and truly suited to culture in the open air' 

 677. 688 ; the Esperione thought to be identi- 

 cal with the black muscadine, 677; contra- 

 dicted, 677 ; grizzly Frontignac ripened on a 

 south wall, 678 ; the mode of pruning and 

 training those at Thomery, Fontainebleau 

 622 ; very fine ones at Finborough Hall, Suf! 

 folk, and the mode of cultivating, 498 ; win- 

 tering vines grown under rafters in pineries 

 not a new practice, 718. 



Grape wine, a receipt for making, 698. ' 



Grapes, bagging of, in France, 17 ; preserving 

 them best and longest after they are cut 248 • 

 the Horsforth and Isabella kinds, 239. ' ' 



Grass on lawns and grass-plots, a machine for 

 cutting, 611. 



Grasses, spirit distilled from, 249. 



Green-house, a very useful span-roofed one fi- 

 gured and described, 348 ; another, 350 ; a 

 mode of growing large plants in the inside 

 front of a green-house, 614. 



Green-house plants eligible for the decorations 

 of open flower borders in summer, 610 ; green- 

 house plants in pits in winter, 350, and planted 

 in borders in summer, 350. 610 ; green-house 

 plants may be kept through the winter in the 

 frame described, 459. 



Grevillea conclnna of Brown, Grevillea con- 

 cinna of Lindley, 506. 



Groups, small ones, rules for placing, 403. 606. 



Guaco plant, Mikanza Guaco, noticed, 69. 99.' 



Guavas successfully fruited, 676. 



Guelder rose, the uses of its wood, 234. 



Hammer, improved one for garden purposes,468. 



Hand drill, a new kind described, 283. 



Hares eat the garden plants as stated, 219. See 

 Rabbit. 



Haricots verts, 249. 



Hawthorn or whitethorn, weeping, noticed, 375; 

 tea from leaves of the common hawthorn, 698. 



Haymaking, the relative state of the art of, in 

 various places, 534. 



Heath mould distinguished from peat, peat 

 earth, and bog earth, 285; remarks on this 

 distinction, 714; mode of providing heath 

 mould artificially, 714. 



Heat destructive of insects, 196; waste heat 

 from domestic fires applied to gardening and 

 other purposes, 651. 



Hedge, ornamental and useful, fittest plants for 



