498 



INDEX. 



PassinYira quadrangularis, on the cultivation of, 



by Mr. William Mitcheson, 203. 

 Paupaille's Discours sur les Applications de la 



Chimie a 1' Agriculture, et a la Botanique, 



character of, 77. 

 Peaches and Apricots, budded on almond stocks, 



observations on Mr. Anderson's experiments 



with, by Hortulanus, 168. 

 Peaches and Grapes, Mr Haytborn's wooden 



structure for, described, and figured, 281. 

 Peaches, list of some American sorts, sent 



to the Garden of the Horticultural Society, 



415. 

 , on budding, on almond stocks, by I 



Causidicus, 167. 

 Peach trees, advantages of budding on almond | 



stocks, 168. 

 on green 



gage plum stocks, 169. 



. explanatory remarks on Mr. Sey- 



mour's mode of training, by Mr. John Sey 

 mour, 295. 



Pea, different early varieties in the Garden of 

 Gunnersbury House, 363 ; early Spanish 

 dwarf, 93 ; golden Hotspur, 93. 



Peas and beans, mode of transplanting in Flan- 

 ders, 461. 



Peas, second crops of, 93, 94. 



Pear, a huge, in Dumfriesshire, 101. 



- — , Duchesse d'Angouleme, 94; John Mon- 

 teith, 98; on the cultivation of an early and a 

 late variety on the same tree, by Mr. Duncan 

 Montgomery, C.M.H.S., 199; Stuyvesant's, 

 from America, 415 ; Uvedale's St. Germain, 

 an extraordinary one from Jersey, 241. 243 ; 

 wild sort, uses of, in Russia, 89. 



Pears, account of some new ones, by John Brad- 

 dick, Esq., F.H.S., 39; account of some new 

 seedlings, by T. A. Knight, Esq. F.R.S. Pres. 

 H.S., &c, 419 ; Belle Lucrative, and Beurree 

 Kirk, 42 ; Colmar and Crassane, a particular 

 mode of training recommended, 262 ; French, 

 observations on the management of the finer 

 sorts, &c, by F. N. B., 257; Henri Quatre, 

 Urbaniste, 39 ; list of new and superior sorts, 

 which will succeed as standards about Lon- 

 don, 253; list of select new ones, by John 

 Braddick, Esq. F.H.S., 159 ; new French 

 sorts, planted at Bristol, 463 ; note on the 

 keeping qualities of different sorts, 41 ; setting 

 the blossoms of the more shy-bearing kinds, 

 by Mr. James Michie, 320. 



Pear tree, an extraordinary, 94. 



Peat Moss, natural and agricultural history of, 

 reviewed, 214. 



, best sorts of trees for planting on, 



214 ; review of Steele's History of, in the 

 British Farmer's Magazine, 456. 



Peckra, the country-residence of the Prince 

 M. P. Galitzin, near Moscow, S9. 



Pectic Acid, method of preparing, by Dr. A. T. 

 Thomson, 677. 



Pennsylvania Agricultural Society, memoirs of, 

 noticed, 344. 



Petersen, Mr. J. P., on the cultivation of Cele- 

 riac, 415. 



Petit's Nouveau Dictionnaire du Jardinage, 

 &c., 78. 



Petunia, now Nicotw«ia, 446. 



Phalangium esculentum, as a substitute for 

 bread, 102. 228. 



Pheasants, blackbirds, and thrushes, to feed in 

 winter, 123. 



Phellandrium, its poisonous qualities, 454. 



Photinia glabra, a most desirable hardy ever- 

 green shrub, 239. 



Picridiura vulgare, as a salad lettuce, 437. 



Pike, Mr. "William, on an improvement, in the 

 propagation of the Double Camellia, 33. 



Pine and fir tribe, directions for grafting, 64 ; 

 plants raised from layers, 65. 



Pine pits, construction of, in Mr. Wilmot's 

 Garden at Isleworth,364. 



Pinus Laricio, grafted on Pinus sylvestris, 63, 



Pinus, new species of, in North America, dis^ 

 covered by Mr. Douglas, 228. 



spectabdis, described, 462. 



Pirolle's Jardinier Amateur, reviewed, 215. 



Pit and stoves, heated by fire and steam jointly, 

 description of, by Mr. William Mac Murtrie, 

 C.M.H.S, 419. 



Pit, flued, for growing cucumbers and melons, 

 &c, by Mr. John Haythorn, C.M.FI.S., 279; 

 for winter and early spring forcing, description 

 of, by Mr. A. Stewart, F.H.S., 414. 



Planting, great advantages of duly preparing 

 the soil previously to, 75 ; in France, 87. 



Plants, anatomical preparations of, by Mr. F. 

 Crowe, {advertised), 356 ; equivocal production^ 

 of, 346 ; from China, suggestions for accli- 

 mating, 122 ; in pots, treatment of, 483 ; in the 

 Garden of the Horticultural Society, report 

 on the effect produced on, by the frost of 

 April 29lh, 1826, by Mr. John Lindlev, F.L.S., 

 424 ; list of those figured in Vol. II. of the 

 Gardener's Magazine, viii. ; new or rare, 

 which have flowered in the Garden of the 

 Horticultural Society at Chiswick, from 

 March 1824 to March 1825, report upon, by 

 Mr. Lindley, F.L.S., 186 ; notice of im- 

 provements in printing the scientific names 

 of, in the Gardener's Magazine, 488 ; number 

 of, necessary to exemplify the natural system 

 in a garden, 302 ; of New Holland, Mr. 

 Sweet's proposal for a work on, 82 ; on the 

 cultivation of, in moss, by Mr. John Street, 

 C.M.H.S., 419 ; progress of the love of, 303; 

 rare, added to the Garden of the Horticultural 

 Society, from Colombia, by Mr. David Dou- 

 glas, 442 ; rare, which have flowered in the 

 neighbourhood of Paris 60 ; splendid and 

 select sorts, which have flowered at Bury 

 Hill, 297; that will grow in London, 484; 

 worth possessing by every one who has a 

 garden, list of, 370. 



Poiteau, A., and Vi'.morin, Le bon Jardinier for 

 1S2S, by, reviewed, 58. 



Pollockshaws, Florist Club of, 465. 



Polyanthuses, new sorts of, made public, and for 

 sale, 74. 



Pontier's Connaissance des Terres en Agricul- 

 ture, noticed, 341. 



Portuguese Cabbage, or CouveTronchuda.query, 

 124 ; culture of, 434. 



Potato blossoms, advantage of pinching ofiv 

 94 ; early crop raised in Mr. Saul's manner, 

 464; raised near Penzance, by planting in 

 December, 464 ; extraordinary increase of a 

 single one, 232; golden, of Peru, 435; red 

 golden, 435; asparagus potato, 436; mouse,436 ; 

 pine-apple or cone, 436. ; Spanish dwarf, 436 ; 

 notice of a second crop of, planted in August, 

 48 ; on the field culture of, in Argyleshire, by 

 VV. M.,316; the eariy Foxley, Nelson, and 

 Rufford kidney, 171. 



Potatoes, an early crop grown 'among rags, 

 232 ; artificial watering of, 102 ; second crop 

 of, 94 ; early, on the culture of, in Cornwall, 

 by Mr. James Mitchinson, 174; early, on the 

 mode of growing ihem in the North of Lan- 

 cashire, by Mr. Mathias Saul, 47 ; early, on 

 the mode of cultivating, in Denbighshire, by 

 a Denbighshire Gardener, 171 ; raising new 

 sorts from seed, 124 ; remarks on the choice 

 of, for seed, by a Denbighshire Gardener, 

 317; Scotch,superior flavour and dryness of,107. 



Prevost's Essai sur l'Education des arbres 

 fruitiers, &c, 78. 



Prevot de Rivolta's Nuovo Metodo di Agricul- 

 tura, noticed, 81. 



Prince, Mr., C. M. H.S., account of his nursery at 

 Flushing, near New York, 90; catalogue of 

 fruit and ornamental trees, &c, notice of, 345. 



Propagation Shelf, description of, in the Clapton 

 Nursery, with the mode of using it, &c, by Mr. 

 Hugh Lowe, 25. 



Provincial Horticultural Society, querv respect- 

 ing, by C. F. W., 255. 



