756 



Heppe, Madame, the gardens of, noticed, 397. 

 Hickory nut tree, facts on the black, 712. 

 Hitchen, Mr. Thomas, at Norwich, an enumer- 

 ation of the species and varieties of succu- 

 lent plants lately possessed by, HI; now pos- 

 sessed by Mr. Frederick Mackie, 751. 

 Hoe, a kind of, derived from Jersey, 473. 

 Hogg, Mure, death, and facts in the life of, 128. 

 Holly, effects of pruning on the, 371 ; the wood 

 of the silver striped leaved holly is whiter 

 than that of the green leaved, 371. 

 Honey dew, facts on, 325. 339. 

 Horses, the healing effect of the Barbadoes 

 naphtha on certain diseases of, 300 5 farming 

 horses fed on steeped barley, 3S0. . 

 Horticultural Society of London, reports of its 

 exhibitions and proceedings in Regent street, 

 127. 247. 382. 507. 632. 725 : strictures on the 

 public exhibitions at the Society's garden, 

 509. 511 ; notes on the garden, 234. 471. 

 Horticultural Societies, provincial, their ex- 

 hibitions. 



EvGLAND: Bedfordshire, 729; Birmingham 

 botanical and horticultural, 462. 740 ; Bris- 

 tol and Clifton, 250. 463. 733 ; Buckingham, 

 729; Bury St. Edmunds, 251. 739; Cam- 

 bridge florists', 729, 730; Cambridgeshire 

 horticultural, 729, 730; Chelmsford florists', 

 733 ; Cheltenham horticultural and floral, 

 733, 734; Chichester, 251; Deritend and 

 Bordesley floral and horticultural, 740; 

 Devon and Exeter botanical and horticul. 

 tural, 731 ; Devon and Exeter floricultural, 

 731; Devon, north, 732; Devon, royal, and 

 Cornwall botanical and horticultural, 731 ; 

 Diss, 7.'i7; Doncaster, Retford, and Baw- 

 try, 741 ; Dorking, 740 ; Durham, south, 

 and Cleveland, 732 ; Finchley florists', 737 ; 

 Guernsey, 744; Hereford, 734; Hexham 

 botanical and horticultural, 739 ; Hull floral 

 and horticultural, 252. 742; Huntingdon, 



248. 735 ; Ipswich, 250 ; Jersey agricultural 

 and horticultural, 745; Lancaster floral and 

 horticultural, 735 ; Lancaster pink and ra- 

 nunculus, 735 ; Leeds exhibition ofcnrna. 

 tions and picotees, 742 ; Leicestershire flo- 

 ricultural, 737; Lichfield florists', 739; 

 Liverpool floral and horticultural, 736; 

 London, north, see Finchley ; Lynn, 737 ; 

 Manchester botanical and horticultural, 



249. 736; Manchester floral and horticul- 

 tural, 248; Morpeth florists', 739; North- 

 amptonshire united, 250. 738; Norwich, 

 737 ; Newcastle botanical and horticultural, 

 739; Newick, 251; Rochdale floral and 

 horticultural, 249; Ross, 735; Sheffield, 

 742 ; Stockport floral and horticultural, 

 730; Taunton and West Somerset, 250. 

 732; Tunbridge Wells, 735; Wallingfbrd 

 royal Berkshire, 729; West Riding, 742; 

 Whitby, 98. 253; Whitehaven, 730 ; Wilts 

 and general, 251. 741 5 Wolverhampton 

 horticultural and floricultural, 739; Wor. 

 cestershire horticultural and floral, 252. 

 741 ; York floral and horticultural, 743 ; 

 York florists', 744; York horticultural, 252. 



Ibeland: Belfast, 256; May 21, 1833, 749; 

 Dublin fruit and flower, 750 ; Dublin hor. 

 ticultural, 750 ; Waterford, 751. 

 Scotland: Aberdeenshire, 254. 745; An- 

 drews, St., horticultural and floral, 747; 

 Ayrshire horticultural and agricultural, 

 745; Caledonian, 253. 747; at the experi- 

 mental garden at Inverleith, 253 : Edin- 

 burgh, 748; Cupar, 747; Dumfries and 

 Galloway, 254. 746; Dundee, 255; Fal- 

 kirk, 256; Glasgow, 748; Melrose, Selkirk, 

 and Galashiels, 255 ; North British profes- 

 sional gardeners, 254; Perthshire, royal, 

 255; Renfrewshire, west, 255; Stirling, 

 256. 749. 

 Wales: Glamorgan and Monmouthshire, 

 745 ; Swansea and Neath, 745. 

 Hungerford Market, a notice of, 512. 

 Huniiemanma/umarijelulia increases by deci- 

 duous fcceds, 465. 



GENERAL INDEX. 



Hybrldisement cannot be effected between the 

 melon and the cucumber, 119; a portion of 

 Professor Herschel's experiments on hybri- 

 dising, 598 ; M. Bosse's hybridising of several 

 kinds of passion flower, .099 ; the origination 

 of new varieties of corn by, 125. 

 Hydrangea hort^nsis, a remarkably large plant 

 of, 586 ; on inducing H. hort(5nsisto produce 

 blue flowers, 95. 

 Impostor, the. Gem, facts on, 230. 491 ; on an 

 impostor professing landscape gardening, 

 491. 

 Insects, by what means can the ravages of, on 

 oak trees, be prevented ? 246 ; a notice of 

 Messrs. Taylor and Robinson's newly in- 

 vented liquid mixture for destroying insects, 

 246. 695 ; the results of trials of its effects, 

 697 ; various recipes for destroying various 

 species of insects, 334 to 341 ; a check to the 

 caterpillars of the /"halas'na brumita minor, 

 95 ; a notice of the ravages of the Yponomeiita 

 pa.d.6\ia.Latr, ,and some suggestions for preserv- 

 ing plants from the ravages of insects generally 

 570. 573 ; facts on the cuckoo-spit insect, 574 ; 

 facts on the oat grub, 505 ; and Tlpula cor- 

 nicina, 506; facts on the turnip beetle, 504, 

 505. 631 ; the effects of the attack of the 

 CurculionidcB on turnips, 504 ; of the Tri- 

 phte^na pronuba on turnips, 504 ; on cab- 

 bages, STi J possibly on onions, 573 ; soot dug 

 into the soil preserves from its attacks, 572 ; 

 it does not, 718 ; Mr. Dennis's mode of 

 collecting the insects which ravage the 

 flowers of georginas, 476 ; Tenthrfedo ery- 

 throcephala is very injurious to the species 

 of the genus Plnus, 599 ; what is the best 

 method of destroying millepedes ? 629 ; Mr. 

 Smith's mode of destroying woodlice, 692. 

 See, besides. Aphides. 



Jardine Hall, noticed, 4. 



Kilkerran, noticed, 9. 



Kirk-AUoway Cottage, noticed, 13. 



Kirkmichael House, noticed, 4. 



Kneller Hall, 523. 712. 



Knevett's, Mr. H., fruit garden, notes on, 521. 



Knight, T. A., Esq., Mr. Pearson's remarks on 

 the garden of, 17. 



Labelling of plants in gardens, Mr. Mallet's 

 devices for, 43 ; a formulary for a kind of 

 label for aquatic plants, 578 ; to render labels 

 durable, 578 ; labels made of malleable zinc, 

 578 ; metallic labels for plants to be sent 

 abroad, 579. 



Labourers' gardens in Warwickshire, the value 

 of the crops from, and their consequences to 

 the occupants, 97; the letting of land to la. 

 bourers is the best means of benefiting them 

 and the proprietors of the land, 369. See Scot- 

 land. 



Landscape-gardening in France, the state of, in 

 1828, 156; suggestions for the improvement 

 of, 157 ; the state of landscape gardening in 

 Bavaria in 1828, 385 ; M. Sckell's observa- 

 tions on the character of the regular and 

 natural styles of laying out gardens, and the 

 application of these styles, 599 ; young gar- 

 deners advised to exercise themselves in land- 

 scape gardening by means of miniature sym- 

 bols, 749. See also Arboriculture. 



Langley Park, notes on, 650. 



Larch tree, suggestions on the disease prevail- 

 ing in plantations of the, 551 ; what is the 

 nature of the disease in the larch tree called 

 pumping ? 722 ; the larch tree is, in some 

 situations and seasons, infested with the 

 Coccus laricis, 445 note*; on forming live 

 fences with the larch tree, 59 ; dead lences, 

 resembling chevaux de frise, made of young 

 larch trees, 662. 



Lavender for yielding oil, the course of culture 

 applied to, 651. 



Lavender Cottage, notes on, 662. 



Layers, an improved mode of tongueing of, 

 Sol ; a mode of laying a cutting explained, 40. 



Leaves of plants, a mode of taking impressions 

 of, 629 i additional iufounation on, 719. 



