INDEX. 



493 



Flower Book of 1826, reviewed, 73. 



Flowers, art of cutting, so as not to injure the 

 plants, 484. 



, cut, how to preserve, 378. 



, double, observations upon the natural 



laws which govern the production of, arising 

 out of a remarkable case of preternatural 

 formation in the flowers of an Amaryllis, by 

 John Lindley, Esq. F.L.S., 191. 



Flower Market of Paris, notice of, 224. 



Flower Show, Amateur, of Lancaster, 473. 



Flower Shows, held in Lancashire, Cheshire, 

 Yorkshire, &c. in 182S, account of, by John 

 Winstanley and Joseph Clegg, reviewed, 73. 



, suggestions for reporting, 474. 



Floy Mr. M., C.M.H.S., American fruits sent 

 by 'him to the Hort Soc. of London, 415. 



Fontainebleau, pine and cedar trees grafted in, 

 by M. Larminat, 63. 



Forcing Gardens at Potsdam, 85. 



Forest Trees, a Memoir, &c. on the planting and 

 rearing of, by Wm Withers, jun., Esq., re- 

 viewed, 75 ; details of four experiments on 

 their culture, 75. 



Forrest, Mr. I., C.M.H.S., on the cultureof the 

 Mushroom in hot-house sheds, 406. 



Forster's Perpetual Kalendar, {advertised), 384. 



France, climate and products of, compared with 

 those of England, 222. 



Fraser, Mr. James, on the present state of 

 gardening in Ireland, with hints for its future 

 improvement, continued from Vol. I. p. 265, 

 147. 



French Gardening Instruments, notice of places 

 where they may be purchased, 66. 



Fromont Nursery Establishment, notice of, 59. 

 218. 



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

 notice of his introductory lecture on botany, 

 345. 



Fruits and Seeds, remarks on the general 

 principles of choosing and preserving, 317. 



Fruits, cultivated in Europe in the order of 

 their affinities, 209. . 



cultivated in the garden of the Horticul- 

 tural Society, catalogue of, reviewed, 208. 



, list of those figured in Vol. II. of the 



Gardener's Magazine, viii. 



newly raised, observations on their qua- 

 lities' exemplified in plums, by T. A. Knight, 

 Esq., F.RS.,andP.H.S.,428. 



( notice of new or remarkable varieties, 



&c.,'204. 



t on their classification, by Counsellor 



Burc'khardt, 444. 



f principles of raising new sorts from seeds, 



laid' down by M. Van Mons, 62. 



Fruit-trees, notice of a wild speculation for per- 

 petuating good sorts from seed, 357. 



_! ., on the good effects of protecting the 



stems, by William Howe, Esq., 275. 



, on the importance of adopting and 



pursuing a proper plan for pruning and train- 

 ing, by Mr. Alfred Kendall, 140. 



., recipe for washing the branches of 



to destroy insects, 430. 

 Fuchsza conica, 450. 

 Fuchsza gracilis, Erythrina Crista gain, and 



Salvia splendens, hints for cultivating, by 



Mr. Robert Reid, 16. 

 Fuchsias, on the cultivation of, by Mr. James 



Smith, 426. , ' ,' '. 



Gacon-Dufour's, Manuel complet de la Mai- 



tresse de Maison, 18. 

 Galardza bicolor, Jsclepias tuber6sa, and (Eno- 



thera casspit6sa, query by a constant reader, 



254. 

 Galb's Anleitung fur der Landmann, &c, no- 

 ticed, 81. , . . 

 GarcimVi mangosldna, fruit produced by, in the 



garden of M. Boursault, 223. 

 Gardeners and their Employers, on the relative 



duties of, by G. P. R., 293. 



Gardeners' Apprentices and Journeymen, on 

 the treatment which they receive from master 

 gardeners, by a nobleman's gardener, 266. 



Gardener's House, excellent one at Worksop 

 Manor House, and at Syon, 108. 



Gardeners, on the remuneration of, including 

 some remarks on their education and emi- 

 gration, by W. R. G., 27. 



Gardeners out of place, on the treatment of by 

 nurserymen, in reply to the observations of 

 Sensitivus, by a nurseryman, 268. 



', on the treatment which 



they generally receive from the nurserymen, 

 &c, by Sensitivus of Yorkshire, 36. 



Gardening Amateurs of Paris, notices of some, 

 59. 



Gardening and Agricultural works by Messrs. 

 Longman, Rees, and Co., (advertised), 283. 



Gardening and Botany of Spain, by Professor 

 La Gasca, 393. 



Gardening improvements in France, 83. 



Gardening in Ireland, on the present state of, 

 with hints for its future improvement. Con- 

 tinued from Vol. I. p. 265, by Mr. James Fraser, 

 147. 



Garden, ancient painting of, described, 481.] 



Garden and Park of Yelagen Island in' the 

 Neva, 387. 



Garden Antiquities, 481. 



Garden Basket for nailing trees, notice of, 66. 



Garden in ruins, notice of, by Mr. Cameron, 32. 



Garden Library, catalogue of books for, 108 ; 

 elementary books, 114; professional books, 

 118; professional periodicals, 118. 



Garden Libraries established, 243 ; at Clapton, 

 244 ; Welbeck, 245 ; Walton, 246 ; Northwick 

 Park, 247. 373 ; Shobden Court, 373 ; Foxteth 

 Park, 373 ; Mistley Hall, 373 ; hints for their 

 formation and support, 377. \ 



presents of books to, 247. 



249 ; suitable books for the second class, 247 ; 

 for the third or lowest class, 247. 



Garden of the Marble Palace at Potsdam, 85; 

 of the Prussian Gardening Society, Berlin, 

 by I. Taylor, 84. 



Gardens of the Zoological Society in the Re- 

 gent's Park, 352. 



Gardens, remarks on laying out, 254. 



Gardens and Parks, plans of, list of those given 

 in Vol. II. of the Gardener's Magazine, viii. 



Gardens, Botanical, see Botanic Gardens. 



•, Imperial of Tzarsco Celo and Taurida, 



some account of, 385. 



-, notices of those of Dunolie, Auchna- 



calich, Auchadanach, Tobermory, Cole, Ben 



Nevis, 32. 

 Gardens of cottagers, on improving, by Mr. 



William Wilson, 271. 

 Gardens, small, laying out and planting, 253. 



', system of cropping, query respecting, 



121. 



Garden walls, blocks of stone for building into, 

 431. 



, composition for blacking, 421. 



Garden wall, description of an improved, by 



J.A.B., Esq., 7. 

 Garden walls, on blacking, by Mr. C. Harrison, 



F.H.S., 421. 

 Gauen's early cucumber, (advertised), 125. 

 Gaultherz'a Shdllon, and other rare plants in the 



Botanic Garden of Glasgow, 102. 

 Geel's Sertum Botanicum, notice of, 544. 

 Geological and historical observations on the 



eastern vallies of Norfolk, by J. W. Robbards, 



jun., reviewed, 211. 

 Geraniaceae, for December, 1826, review of, 72; 



January and February, 1827, 206 ; for March 



and April, 335 ; for May and June, 452. 

 Gibson, Mr. James, on the culture of Brugmin- 



sia arb6rea (candida), 145. 

 Gilbert's, Traits desPrairies Artificielles, &c.,77. 

 Ginger, on the cultivation of, in a glazed pit, 



by Mr. Christie Duff, C.M.H.S., 191. 



