GENERAL INDEX. 



755 



626; and the result of planting a group of 

 species of Cape heaths in the open soil and 

 air of Cornwall, 584. 



Ermenonville, noticed, 132. 



Ersklne, a fine house at, noticed, 11. 



Esher churchyard, notes on, 478 ; Esher Place, 

 the residence of J. Spicer, Esq., noticed, 479. 



Ettlingen, notes on the kitchen garden of the 

 old castle of, 268 ; notes on the villa and gar- 

 dens of Watthaklen, near Ettlingen, 260. 



Farming, the condition of in stated parts of 

 England, 514 ; Mr. Lance's proposal to supply 

 instruction in the sciencei; which explain the 

 processes of nature in farming, 615; Mr. 

 Mallet's economical mode of constructing 

 farm buildings, 193. 



Filtering machine, a very cheap one, described, 

 723. 



Fishes, gold and silver, on managing, 723. 



Floricultural and botanical notices of plants, 

 104. 235, 363. 483. 616. 701. 



Floriculture, notes on the state of, in a part of 

 Germany, in 1828, 403; considerations by 

 Dr. Lindley, in relation to floriculture, 438. 



Florists and amateurs of flowers, the establish- 

 ment of a metropoUtan society of, stated, 

 462. For florists' societies, and floral societies, 

 see Horticultural Societies, and Metropolitan. 



Forest Hill, and gardens at, notes on, 651. 



Fountains for gardens, figures and descriptions 

 of, 208 ; strictures on fountains generally, with 

 a design for a fountain, 538. 



Frame, a protecting, for use in forcing aspara- 

 gus, &c., in the open ground, 346; plans of 

 arched iron frames for bestriding walks, and 

 for sustaining roses, georginas, and other 

 plants to be trained over them, 466. 



France, the Conductor's tour through a part of, 

 129. See also Trees, Mirbel, and Rohault. 



Frogmore Lodge, notes on, 651. 



Fromont on the Seine, the villa and exotic 

 nursery of M. Soulange Bodin, described, 141. 



Fruit, a query on packing, for travelling, 723. 



Fruit trees, Mr. T. A. Knight's modes of pro- 

 longing the duration of valuable kinds of, 86. 

 See also the various kinds of fruit trees under 

 their English generic name. The practice of 

 disbudding much avails in training, and anti- 

 cipates pruning, of fruit trees, 671. 



Ftichs;a gracilis, nearly hardy in Yorkshire, 98; 

 notes on F. globbsa, 475 ; and on a very pleas- 

 ing kind, presumed to be a variety of F, gra- 

 cilis, 476. 



i'lingi, various species (some of them constitut- 

 ing the " mildew" of unscientific persons) of, 

 figured and noticed ; parasitic upon the herb- 

 age of plants, shrubs, and trees, 325 to 332; a 

 notice of a species of i^iingus, termed a mil- 

 dew, parasitic on the leaves of Cape ericas, 

 and of the causes of, and means to prevent, 

 its appearance, 241. 



Gardeners, certain volumes in Dr. Lardner's 

 Cabinet Cyclopeedia useful to gardeners, 

 named, 375; notification of a society at 

 Guernsey, for purchasing and circulating 

 books on the art and science of horticulture, 

 376. See also the index to books reviewed 

 and noticed, 752. Mechanics' Institutes and 

 lectures recommended to gardeners, 376 ; the 

 disabilities experienced by young gardeners in 

 acquiring professional and general knowledge, 

 165. 173; remarks on the advantages which 

 would result in not occupying gardeners at 

 work longer on a Saturday than artisans are 

 occupied, 427 ; considerations commending 

 to young gardeners the improvement of their 

 professional and general knowledge, 432 ; a 

 method of keeping food warm, so that a 

 working gardener may lose as little time as 

 possible at breakfast, 4.35 ; hints to gardeners, 

 incentive to their educating themselves in a 

 knowledge of English grammar, and of other 

 subjects of essentially useful knowledge, 536 ; 

 means by which a young gardener may rapidly 

 improve himself in his profession, 477; 

 young gardeners advised to exercise them- 



selves in landscape gardening; by means of 

 miniature symbols, 749 ; the importance to 

 gardeners of their acquiring the earliest in- 

 formation of improvements in gardening, 

 491 ; on the fraudulent practices of gardening 

 authors, 116. 492; pecuniary disabilities of 

 working gardeners, 623; the prospects in the 

 United States of America to gardeners who 

 would emigrate thither, 29. 32; in Canada, 

 164 ; the decay of noblemen's places should 

 not discourage gardeners, 515. 



Gardener's house, a design for a, to be situated 

 on the north side of a walled kitchen garden, 

 46 ; Mr. Mallet's economical mode of con- 

 structing houses for gardeners^ 193. 



Gardtnja radlcans, a mode of propagating and 

 cultivating, 377. 



Gardens for the use of pensioners and persons 

 affected with hypochondriasis, &c , .568; 

 strictures on provincial botanical and horti- 

 cultural gardens, 463 ; remarks on laying out 

 flower gardens, 60 ; a plan for a flower garden, 

 62. On laying out gardens, see Landscape- 

 gardening, 599; see also Tour. Mr. Mallet's 

 economical mode of constructing the build- 

 ings required in gardens, 193. 



Gas, carbonic acid, considerations on the action 

 of, on the processes of vegetation, 709. 



Gate, Cottam's cheap iron gate for fields, 81. 



Germany, notes and reflections on gardens and 

 other objects, inspected in 1828 in, 257. 385. 



Gilston Castle, noticed, 7. 



Glastonbury thorn, the, facts on, 123. 



Gleditschia h6rrida for hedges, 595. 



Godalming, notes on a mansion and its grounds 

 at, 479 ; on villas in, 480 ; on objects seen in 

 a journey from London to Godalming, 477 to 

 480 ; in one from Godalming to Epsom, 482. 



Goitre, facts on, 27. 



Goldielee, noticed, 12. 



Gooseberry, the kinds of, which, in 1832, pro- 

 duced the heaviest berries, 98. For those of 

 1833, see the shows of Horticultural Societies. 



Grape vine and fruit ; a mode of producing a 

 successive supply of grapes through the year, 

 70 ; valuable remarks in relation to the cul- 

 ture of the grape vine, 321 ; a Prussian prac- 

 tice to increase the productiveness of grape 

 vines, and one to protect them from spring 

 frosts, 592 ; the characteristics of the Cannon 

 Hall muscat grape, 348; considerations on 

 the importation in 1833 of grapes from the 

 south of Europe, 699. 



Gray the poet, information on, 528. 



Gunnersbury House, park, and gardens, notes 

 on, 518 ; on a villa between Gunnersbury and 

 Brentford, 520. 



Gymn6cladus canadi^nsis, the, described, 298. 



Hailstorm at Edgbaston on May 9, 1833, 464 j 

 hailstorm and hurricane at Lancaster, 465. 



Hall Barns, notes on, 647 ; Little Hall Barns, 647. 



Hampton Court Palace and Gardens, 478. 



Hand glasses, a cheap mode of making, 446 ; 

 and forms of, 446. 580; a query on square 

 blown bell glasses, 628. 



Hannavfield, noticed, 12. 



Haworth, A. H., Esq., the death, and facts in 

 the life of, 635—640 ; his collections of plants, 

 &c., noticed, 614. 



Hawthorn, the fittest of plants for live hedges 

 and fences, 495, 496 ; the result of some ex- 

 periments made to expedite the germination 

 of seeds of hawthorn, 496 ; enquiry on an 

 evergreen species of hawthorn, 496; this 

 shown to be, probably, the Cratas^gus stipu- 

 licea, 630; between 70 and 80 sorts of Cra- 

 ta^'gus are cultivated by the Messrs. Lod- 

 diges, 468; the hawthorn, in hedges, on the 

 coast, is less injured by winds and spray from 

 the sea than most woody plants, 717 ; the 

 origin of a variety of the common hawthorn, 

 with pendulous branches, 597. 



Heating. See Water, hot. 



Heartseases, Messrs. Young's collection of, 482; 

 Messrs. Brown's, 524. ; Mr. Hogg's, 689. 



Hcdsor House and grounds, notes on, 646. 



2 



