760 



GENERAL INDEX. 



th§ Conductor's, in Scotland, in 1831, 1 ; in 

 England, in 1833,477.513. 6«. 



Tour and Taxis, gardens of the prince of, 396. 

 Trafalgar House, seat of Earl Nelson, 15. 



Transplanting of large trees, Mr. Munro's 

 method of, 217 ; in transplanting trees their 

 various phases should be placed in the same 

 relation to the points of the compass as they 

 had before they were transplanted, 580; a 

 utensil for transplanting of plants, in use in 

 the Island of Guernsey, 575 ; an instrument 

 to facilitate transplanting without obliging the 

 operator to trample on the soil about the 

 plant, 575. 



Trees, shrubs, and economical plants on the 

 Rhine and in France, notes on the, 89 ; on 

 the preparation of the seeds for sowing some 

 kinds of trees, 593; considerations on the 

 origin of trees with pendulous branches, 596. 



Tuberose, clumps of jilants of the, 561 ; M. 

 Falcke's extensive trade in bulbs of the, 409. 



Tulips, modes of obtaining varieties of, 689. 



Turnips, queries and information on diseases of, 

 fingers and toes, in, 504 ; marl reported to be 

 a cure for, 504 ; information on the grub 

 which sometimes ravages turnip plants ; on 

 the fly, flea, or beetle which eats up turnips in 

 the seedling state, 504, 505. 631 ; a Norfolk 

 tankard turnip grown in Ireland to the weight 

 of 36 lbs. avoirdupois, 591 ; the several weights 

 of selected individuals of various kinds of tur- 

 nip, 99. 



Twickenham, the present state of the botanic 

 garden of the late Mr. Swainson at, 521. 



United States of America, on the emigration of 

 gardeners to, 29. 32 ; price of provisions in 

 32. 



Vegetation, considerations on the processes of 

 vegetation effected in plants through the 

 instrumentalitv of air, 437. 709 ; electricity, 

 179; humidity, 437; light, 437. 709 to 712; 

 magnetism, 179 ; terrestrial radiation, 287. 

 499; temperature, 436. In what course is 

 assimilation effected in plants, 529 ; are the 

 organs of plants, both the elementary and the 

 compound ones, pre-existent in the system of 

 every plant, and only developed by growth, 

 or both formed and developed by the pro- 

 cesses of vegetation ? Discussions of these 

 questions, 186. 283. 529. Considerations on 

 pruning as studied in connection with a know- 

 ledge of the processes of vegetation, 48 to 

 59. 317. 370. See, besides, the additional refer- 

 ences under Pruning. 



Ventilating, to expel stagnant or foul air, 369. 



Villeneuve d'Etang, near Marne, 135. 



Vind^, M. Morel, the park and house of, 144. 



Virginia Water, and the grounds about it no- 

 ticed, 615 ; criticised, 653. 



Walks, plans of arched frames for bestriding 

 walks, and for sustaining over walks, rose 

 trees, plants of georginas, &c., 466. 



Waller, the poet, notes on the tomb of, 647. 



Walls, Mr. Mallet's economical mode of build- 

 ing, 193; considerations, by Mr. Oorrie, on 

 coping for garden walls, 520, 564 ; cast iron 

 coping to walls upon bridges disapproved, 649. 



Walnuts, mode of preserving asked, 124. 



Water, hot : heating hothouses by hot water, 

 a review of the modes of, invented by Messrs. 

 Kewley, CottamandHallen, Perkins, Weekes, 

 34; strictures on a statement of the results of 

 Mr. Cottam's apparatus for heating by hot 

 water, as in performance at the Earl of Egre- 

 mont's, at Petworth, 117 ; Mr. Perkins's ex- 

 culpation of his method of heating by hot 

 water, from the objections expressed against 

 it, 202; Mr. Carpmael's mode described, 

 206 ; a notice of W. D. Holmes's method of 

 heating by the circulation of heated oil, 207 ; 

 a criticism on this method, repudiating the 

 employment of oil, 277 ; a notice of Dr. Ure's 

 application of muriate of lime as a means of 

 communicating heat, 207 ; Mr. Weekes's re. 

 butment of the objections offered to his mode, 

 and a notice, by Mr. Weekes, of other modi- 

 fications invented by him, 369 ; Mr. Busby's 

 method of circulating water, hot or cold, by 

 the aid of machinery, 38 ; Mr Mallet's device 

 for burning lime in an apparatus for heating 

 by the circulation of hot water, and for appro- 

 priating the heat evolved by the lime under 

 slacking, usually wasted, to the warming of 

 the water, 280; Mr. Mallet's strictures on 

 methods of heating by the circulation of 

 fluids, 277; and description of a method, pro- 

 posed by himself, of heating by the circula- 

 tion of melted metallic alloy, 278. 



Watering,Esee Pot. 



Watthalden, near Ettlingen, notes on the villa 

 and gardens of, 260. 



Weekes's horticultural bazaar noticed, 477. 



Wheat of the neighbourhood of Victoria, 700. 



White Knights, grounds and gardens at, 664. 



Whitehill, a favourable report of, 502. 



Whitton Dean, notes on, 523. 712; Whitton 

 Place, notes on, 523 ; facts on the large hick- 

 ory nut tree at Whitton, 712. 



Wind, the effects of, on trees, see Coast. 



Windsor Castle, and the flower garden at, 654. 



Williamsford noticed, 10. 



Woburn Abbey, a list of the objects in the gar- 

 dens and grounds of, 601 ; a mistake by the 

 Conductor respecting the wages of the assist- 

 ant gardeners employed in, 455. 623. 



Wooburn House and grounds, notes on, 646; 

 on a garden at Wooburn, 647. 



Work, what quantity of, should a workman per- 

 form of the kinds of work specified in, p.375? 



Wormwood produces much potash, 598. 



Xanthochj*raus tincturius Max., the mode of 

 culture which induces it to bear fruit in a 

 hothouse near Paris, 722. 



Zamia h6rrida, male, a note on the flowering 

 of a, 595. 



END OF THE NINTH VOLUME. 



Printed by A. Spottiswoode, 

 New-Street- Square. 



