760 



GENERAL INDEX. 



Visiting of gardens, improving to the visiter and 

 visited, 421. 430. 



Vitry, in France, remarks on the nurseries at, 11 



Walker, C. J. S., Esq., of Longford, near Man- 

 chester, his excellent wall fruit, and mode of 

 cultivating, 542; public esteem for him, 706. 



Walks, remarks on the edgings of, 404 ; errors 



. In v^ralks, 405. 543. 545 ; rules for the formation 

 and management of, S4G. 



Wallet, leathern, used in nailing wall trees, 613. 



Walls, hollow ones for fruit trees, on heating 

 them by hot water, 124 ; peaches and necta- 

 rines grown on flued walls, 592 ; varieties of 

 apple ripening best against walls, 590 ; wallet 

 used in nailing, 613 ; borders for wall trees, 

 never to be digged or cropped, 542 ; to be freed 

 from dead leaves, and the chrysalises and eggs 



' of insects in winter, 196 ; blossoms of wall 

 ' trees defended by frames of oiled paper, 192 ; 

 "by straw protectors, 86 ; by projecting boards, 

 85 ; by branches of birch, 322, 



Wall trees ; see Fruit Trees, Peaches, Necta- 

 rines, and Protecting. 



Wanlip Hall, and gardens, noticed, 426. 



Warwick Castle, noticed, 389. 



Warwickshire Agricultural Society, 224. 



Washington, George, notice of a tree of the 

 sweet chestnut planted by the hand of, 497. 



Water on all hills applicable to the propulsion 

 ■of machinery, and to be collected as described, 



516. „ „ , . 



Water-closets, a great deficiency of, and imper- 



fectionsin, at inns and public-houses in the 



country, 530. 

 Waterer, or aquarian, figured and remarked on, 



219; Saul's watering despatcher, 654. 

 Waterford, gentlemen's seats near, 682; Fen- 



nessy and Son's nursery at, (583. 

 Watering the highways, and with salt water, 



225 ; watering trees, a hand-engine for, 612. 

 Watering-pot, Money's inverted rose, 87 ; Saul's 



watering despatcher, 654. 

 Watson, P. W., Esq , F.L.S., author oi Dendro- 



Ibgia Britdnnica, an obituary of, 512. 

 Weare's nursery at Coventry, 410. 

 Weather at Annat Garden, Perthshire, during 



March and April, 501 ; at Howick, Northum- 

 berland, 503 ; a tabular formulary for regis- 

 tering weather, 232 ; criticised, 618 ; weather 

 from the 24th of April to the 24th of .Tune, 

 1831,388 ; telegraphic communications on com- 

 ing weather, 109. 



Weeds beside roads injure the adjacent fields, 

 535 ; most important as man\ire,"702. 



Weeping trees, miusual kinds of, 375. 



Westphalian Society at Minden, a notice of, 91. 



Whately, Thomas, Esq., author of Observations 

 on Modern Gardening, some account of, 430. 



Whatton House and gardens, 427. c 



Wheat and clover, hints on the culture of, 705. 



Wheelbarrows, Mallet's patent iron ones, 483. 



White bug in hot-houses destroyed by steam, 

 508 ; by ammoniacal liquor of coal gas, 557. 



Williams, Mr. John, his obituary, 256. 



Willow trees, their dissemination by their wing- 

 ed seeds, 9; removed when large, 451; their 

 roots not injurious to apple trees, 722. 



Winds, ascertaining their velocity, 619. 



Windsor Castle, its parks and landscapes, 145. 



Wine from blackberries, 698; a receipt for mak- 

 ing grape wine, 698. 



Wireworm destroyed by crops of white mustard, 

 674. 



Wistow Hall and gardens, in Leicestershire, 

 reported, 424. 



Witty's improved furnace, mentioned, 225 j 

 figured and described, 482. 



Wood, Mr. James, obituary of, 384. 



Woodhouselee, residence of J. Bell, Esq., 553. 



Woodlice, a mode of destroying, 280 ; another 

 mode, 486 ; newts destroy, 486. 



Woodpecker, green, its utility, 604. 



Worms, the efficiency of limewater in destroy- 

 ing, 682; wireworm destroyed by crops of 

 white mustard, 674. 



Xanthochymus diilcis, noticed, 593. 



Yam, the Surinam, 249. 



Zealand, New, the^eligibility of its soil and cli- 

 mate for promoting the happiness of man, 93. 



Zigad{;nus glab(5rrimus, its true habitat, 237. 



Zoological Gardens, Regent's Park, 691 ; Cross's 

 Surrey Zoological Gardens,'.692, 



END OF THE SEVENTH VOLUME. 



London : 



Printed by A. & R. Spottiswoode, 



New-Street-Square, 



