500 



INDEX. 



Soils, influence of compression and "expansion 

 on, 40G ; influence of, on plants, 405 ; effect of 

 in changing the colour of the flower of a 

 hydrangea, 405. 



Solanum Quitense, a splendid plant, described, 

 449. 



Soot, as an ingredient in liquid manure, 18. 



Surbus, culture of, with a view to spirituous li- 

 quors, 444. 



Soulange-Bodin, M. Le Chevalier de, F.H.S., 

 Discours sur l'lmportance de 1' Horticulture, 

 &c, 342; on the state and progress of horti- 

 culture in France, 223. 



Spade, Flemish, notice and figure of, 66. 



Spanish hoe, notice of, 106 ; described and 

 figured, 233. 



Sparrows, new trap for, 120. 



Spartium nutoigenum, a very fine species in the 

 Canaries, 462. 



Spinach, Flanders, 436 ; New Zealand, or Tetra- 

 gonia, 436 ; Sea Beet and Chenopodiurn Bo- 

 nus Henricus, as a substitute for, 436. 



St. Cloud, gardens of, 223. 



Stained glass for conservatories, by Messrs 

 Horwood and Oliver, {advertised), 356. 



Steam, mode of applying to the culture of the 

 pine-apple at Gunnersbury, by Mr. W. J. Shen- 

 nan, 362. 



Steele, Andrew, Esq., natural and agricultural 

 history of peat moss, &c, reviewed, 214 ; re- 



• view of, in the British Farmer's Magazine, 456. 



Stephenson, John, Esq., M.D., and James Morss 

 Churchill, Esq., surgeon, Medical Botany, &c, 

 reviewed, No. I., 211, 337, 454. 



Stewart, Mr. A., F.H.S., on a pit for early and 

 spring forcing, 416 ; on the culture of Nelum- 

 bium speciosum, 416. 



Stowe, Win., Esq., on the good effects of pro- 

 tecting the stems of fruit trees, 275. 



Strachan, Mr. James, on the destruction of the 

 mealy bug, Coccus lanigera, on vines and 

 plants in pots, 166. 



Strawberries, early crop, and main -bearing crop, 

 252 ; mode of forcing the roseberry by Mr. G. 

 Meredew, 429 ; Mr. Wilmot's mode of forcing, 

 364 ; best house for early forcing, 364 ; mode 

 of watering on the top shelves, 364; in the 

 open garden, 364; notices respecting those 

 cultivated for the market in Scotland, by Mr. 

 James Smith, C.M.H.S, 425; on a mode of 

 preparing for early forcing, as practised at 

 Courtlands, in Devonshire, by Mr. William 

 Mitchinson, 390 ; on forcing, by Mr. Andrew 

 Morton, 393 ; on forcing, by Mr. William 

 Nott, 392; on the culture of, by Thomas 

 Andrew Knight, Esq., 484; ripe fruit of, in 

 the open air in January, 1827, 231 ; selection 

 of for a small garden, 252 ; on improving the 

 alpine, 252. 



Straw plait for hats, on the growth and manu- 

 . facture of, 456. 



Street, Mr. John, C.M.H.S., on the cultivation 

 , of plants in moss, 419. 



Strong, Mr., his bed of tulips, 471. 



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

 Gardener's Magazine, viii. 



Stuart, David, Esq., a distinguished horticultu- 

 rist, 452 ; tribute of respect to, by Mr. Sweet, 452. 



Sturm's Kreuzungen and Veredelungen, &c, 80. 



Subterraneous irrigation of a vine borc'.er, 351. 



Succory, mode of raising and blanching in 

 Flanders, 460. 



Summer of 1826, influence of its extraordinary 

 drought, 92. 



Sutherland, Mr., an eminent landscape gar- 

 dener, notice of his works, 149. 



Swedish turnip, 84. 



Sweet's Flora Australasica, No. 1. for June 1827, 

 reviewed, 336, Geraniaceae for December 1826, 

 reviewed, 72; for January and February 1827, 

 206 ; for March and April, 335 ; for May and 

 June, 452 



Sweet's Cistinca; for November, reviewed, 72, 

 for January, 207, for March, 335, for May 453. 



British Flower Garden for Deccmbei 



1826, reviewed, 72 ; for January and February 



1827, 206, 207 ; for March and April, 335 ; for 

 May and June, 452. 



Sweet's Hortus Britannicus, Botanical Culti- 

 vator, Cistineae and Geraniaceae, (advertised), 

 127. 



Sweet, Robert, F.L.S., his Hortus Britannicus, 

 reviewed, 207. 



Syon Gardens, notice of improvements in, 107. 



Tallipot tree, (Corypha umbraculifera), 95. 



Tamworth Florist Society, notice of its esta- 

 blishment and objects, 361. 



Tarpaulins, &c. exhibited at the Smithfield cat- 

 tle show in December, 1826, 231. 



Taste, good or bad, always relative expressions, 

 303. 



Taurida Gardens, described, 387. 



Taylor, Mr. J., on the garden of the Prussian 

 Gardening Society, 84. 



Temple, Sir Win., interment of his heart, &c, 

 481. 



Tetragonia expansa, 436. 



Thistle, scarlet Mexican, figured and described, 

 298. 



Thoburn and Son's catalogue of kitchen garden, 

 herb, flower, tree, and grass seed, &c, notice 

 of, 345. 



Thomson, Anthony Todd, M.D., on the growth, 

 of the foliage of bulbiferous plants, 283 ; on 

 preparing the pectic acid, 477. 



Thongs of twisted leather, preparation of, in 

 Poland and Russia, &c, 80. 



Thornton's Introduction to Botany, (adver- 

 tised), 127. 



Ticket for naming plants, 66. 



Timber trees, comparative cultivation of, 84. 



Titford, W. I., M.D., his sketches towards a 

 Hortus Britannicus Americanus noticed, 75; 

 (advertised), 127. 



Tobacco for destroying insects, 121. 



Tobacco water, on its application in the destruc- 

 tion of insects, by Mr. Joseph Harrison, 

 F.H.S., 428. 



Tobermory Gardens, Isle of Mull, 32. 



Tomalin's Artificial Manures, (advertised), 126. 



Touraine, the garden of France, 222. 



Townly Hall, near Drogheda, some account oil 

 148. 



Tozzetti's Dizionario Botanico Italiano, &c 5 

 notice of, 81. 



Tradescant, John, biography of, 487. 



Training trees, en quenouille, in the Nether- 

 lands, 226. 



Transactions of the Horticultural Society of 

 London, Vol. VI., Part III., reviewed, 184; 

 Part IV., 333 ; Part V, 339. 



Transactions of upwards of two hundred country 

 horticultural societies noticed, 73. 



Transplantation of plants with spindle-shaped 

 roots, on the, by T. A. Knight, Esq. F.RS., 

 Pres. H.S., &c, 199. 



Trap for catching winged insects in gardens, 

 description of a new one, by Mr. John Wilson, 

 151. 



Tredgold, Mr., his excellent treatise on warming 

 and ventilating, &c., 156.200. 



Tree Pceony. See Paeonia moiitan. 



Primrose, CEnothera biennis, as a ram- 



pion, 437. 



Trees and shrubs, on the importance of ascer- 

 taining the simultaneous flowering of, by 

 W. T., 33. 



Trees for planting by public roads, &c. in Ger- 

 many,' 347. 



, hedges, &c, their management in the 



Netherlands, 226 ; in public walks in Flanders, 

 461 ; needle-leaved sorts, which do not stole, 

 remarks on their propagation and future 

 growth, 411 ; ornamental, deserving a place 

 in every shrubbery, 34 ; pine and fir tribe, 

 remarks on, 411 ; resinous, or coniferous, re- 

 marks on, 411 ; to remove in the summer 

 time, 83. 

 Trellises, hanging, for vines, notices of, by Mr. 

 W. Smith, 427. 



