INDEX. 



501 



Trottel plant, 123. 



Truffle, hints for the culture of, 480. 

 Tulip bulb, query respecting the changes which 

 take place in, 122. 



bulbs, explanation of their formation, 



379 ; additional information as to their form- 

 ation, 482. 



case, description of, and its uses, by Mr. 



H. Groom, 307. 



manufactory of Mr. Goldham, F.H.S., 470. 



shows about London, 470. 



Tulips, and other flowers, sale of, at Saffron 

 Walden, (advertised^, 382 ; a secret mode of 

 breaking, by Mr. Hogg, (advertised), 356; 

 conjectures as to Mr. Hogg's secret for break- 

 ing, 46 ; culture of, in the neighbourhood of 

 Paris, 215 ; exhibition of, by Mr. Groom, (ad- 

 vertised), 382 ; list of, and directions for storing, 

 planting, &c, 309; ideas for a new plan of 

 breaking, by Mr. Thomas Hogg, 44 ; criti- 

 cised, 379 ; new work on, by Mr. Thos. Butler, 

 (advertised), 356; principles of arrangement of, 

 309; some of the rarest and most valuable 

 sorts enumerated, 46. 471. 



Turnip, on transplanting the, 463. 



Tyrwbitt, Sir Thos., information from, respect- 

 ing the Panicum germanicum/225. 



Tzarsco Celo Gardens described, 385. 



Urbaniste, Henri Quatre, and other new pears, 

 by John Braddick, Esq , F.H.S., 39. 



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

 Gardener's Magazine, viii. 



Valerianella eriocarpa, corn salad, 437. 



Van Diemen's Land, female society there, 229. 



Van Mons, his practice in raising new sorts of 

 fruits from seeds, 62. 



Varietyand mixture,principles of, explained,310. 



Variety, its object and principles, as explained 

 by Uvedale Price, 311. 



Vegetables and fruits sold from the Garden 

 of the Horticultural Society, regulations re- 

 specting, 442. 



Vegetable Market of Edinburgh, 475 ; of Covent 

 Garden, London, for December 1826, 106 ; for 

 February 1827, 244 ; for April, 362 ; for June, 

 475. 



Vegetables, Report on new or remarkable varie- 

 ties in the Garden of the Hort. Soc, 434. 



VegetatingSeason about Edinburgh, temperature 

 of, 418 ; about Perth, 418 ; about London, 419 



Waesserungder Weisen, &c, Anleitung2ur, 79. 

 Waistell's Agricultural Buildings, (advertised), 

 128; reviewed, 212. 



Walls, hollow, of Mr. Silverlock recommended. 

 203. 



Walnuts and Chestnuts, ripened in East Lo- 

 thian, 101. 



Walther's De re Rustica, 80. 



Warsaw, prices of land and produce at, in 

 March 1827, 349. ' 



Water, as regards ornamental scenery, observ- 

 ations on, by Richard Morris, Esq., 286 ; bad 

 and good arrangement of, exemplified, 366-7 ; 

 difference of, between stagnant and in a state 

 of motion, with respect to plants, 429. 



Wax, method of extracting from bee combs, 477. 



Wedge draining in Scotland, 259. 



Weeds, which infest samples of corn, enumer- 

 ated, 70. 



, corn, 71; pasture, 71. 



Weir's Agricultural Implements, (advertised), 

 125. 



Wetton, Esq., of Style House, his mode of irri- 

 gating a vine border, 351. 



Wheat, different species and varieties of, in Eu- 

 rope, 343 ; Dr. Pew's experiments on the smut 

 in, 235. 



Wheelbarrow ladder, notice of, 66. 



Wheeler, Mr. of Aylesbury, a gentleman fond of 

 horticultural pursuits, 44. 



Whitehaven, contemplated Florist and Hort. 

 Soc. of, 230. 



Whitewash for walls and flues, query by M., 254. 



Williams, Mr., at Sevres, Hydrangea introduced 

 by, 59. 



Willock, Mr., British Envoy at the Court of 

 Persia, his eminent horticultural services, 434. 



Willows will not grow in moss grounds, 457. 



Wilmot's fruit garden, Isleworth, 363. 



Wilson, Mr. John, description of a new trap for 

 catching winged insects in gardens, 151. 



■, Mr. William, on improving the gar- 



dens of cottagers, 271. 

 Wines, home made, query by R.S., 255. 

 Winstanley, John, and Joseph Clegg, their ac- 

 count of the different flower shows held in 

 Lancashire, Cheshire, Yorkshire, &c. in 1826, 

 reviewed, 73. 

 Winstrup's Afbildninger af Agerdyrknings- 

 redskaber, noticed, 81. 

 Vegetation, effects on, by heat, and moisture, by I Winter cherry, query respecting, 122. 

 Mr. A. Gorrie, C.M.H.S., 418; of North Winter of 1826-7, mildness of, 231. 

 America, 227 ; round New York, 228. Winter's self-registering thermometer, &c, (ad- 



Verge-cutter, notice of, 66. vertised), 126. 



Verhandlungen des Vereins, &c. Transactions Wisteria Consequana, formerly, Glycine sinen- 

 of the Prussian Gardening Society, &c, | sis, 422. 



notice of, 219 ; reviewed, 444. 

 Vermin, poisoned by arsenic, in Holland, 349. 

 Village Garden Society of Rait, 375. 

 Village Libraries, 373 ; Rait Library, 374 ; letter 



on, by a Female Reader, 248. 

 Vine, a practical essay on the culture of the, 



and a treatise on the melon, noticed, 74. 

 Vine border, subterraneous irrigation of, by Mr. 

 ~ Wetton, 351. 

 Vine, culture of, in Poland and Russia, 88 ; in 



Italy, manuring the, with the shoots pruned 



from it, 225 : note on the winter pruning of, 



by Mr. James Main, 413. 

 Vines in South Brabant, 87 ; on the roofs of 



cottages, description of a mode of training and 



fastening the shoots, by Mr. John Latham, 43 ; 



plan for forcing in borders under glass, by the 



Itev. Blakely Cooper, A.M., 421 ; spurring.in 



method of pruning, recommended, 74. 

 Vineries, with arched hanging trellises, notices 



of, by Mr. W. Smith, 427. 

 Vinery, on a new plan, in the Botanic Garden at 



Hull, 464. 



Withers, Wm. Jun., Esq., his Memoir, &c. on 

 the planting and rearing of forest trees, re- 

 viewed, 75. 



Wittmann and Denglaez's, their Landwirth- 

 schafliche Hefte noticed, 80. 



Wollaton Hall, in its ancient state, figured and 

 described, 481. 



Woollen Netting for fruit trees, a cheap sort 

 recommended by Sir Robt. Vaughan, 242. 



Worms and Slugs, destruction of, i}66. 



in the buds, query by David Taylor, 254 ; 



cure for, 484. 



, notice of an easy and cheap mode of de- 

 stroying, 61. 



Wyken Pippin, notice of the original plant, 486. 



Wyker (correctly Wyken), protection of the 

 stem by hay bands, 276. 



Young's new pears, (advertised), 125. 



Yucca gloriosa, 97. 



Zamias, on the propagation of, by Mr. F. Fal- 

 dermann, C.M.H.S.,425. 



Zoological Society, Garden of, 352. 



