624 



GENERAL INDEX. 



Fruit-garden : a plan of a garden to be appro- 

 priated wholly to fruit trees, fruit shrubs, and 

 fruit plants, 224. 

 Kitchen-gardens : remarks on the ill effects of 

 standard fruit trees in kitchen-gardens, and 

 a proposition to lessen it by adopting pendent 

 trees with only one shoot, 142; a series of 

 plans for laying out kitchen-gardens of various 

 dimensions, 259. 313. 373. 429. 484. 538. 



Garden school, a, about to be instituted, 394. 



Gardener's Magazine, The, announced as a 

 monthly publication, 179. 



Gardeners : remarks on the importance to gar- 

 deners of their visiting gardens managed by 

 others, and on the impediment thrown, in some 

 cases, in the way of their doing so, J23. 365; 

 gardeners who have prescribed, in publications, 

 modes of culture, should also, if these, in the 

 end, prove inefficient, publish notices of their 

 inefficiency, 179 ; meeting of market-gardeners, 

 regarding the markets of London, 89 ; on gar- 

 deners emigrating, see Emigration ; hints on 

 the treatment which a British gardener has re- 

 ceived in the south of Russia, 162; tyranny to 

 gardeners, 235 ; kindness to gardeners, 236. 



Gardeners' houses, designs for, 24. 261. 375. 



Gamier, see Gardens. 



Gates : mechanical means of opening gates, with- 

 out applying the hand to the gates themselves, 

 80. 



Gate-stoppers, remarks on, and a figure of one, 54. 



Genl\ana v£ma, on cultivating the, 83. 



Georglrca, see Dahlia. 



Geography, its relation to the culture of plants, 

 noticed, 448. 



Germany : the landscape-gardening of Germany 

 compared with that of England, 197 ; the names 

 of certain plants, in the garden at Hurlach, 

 brought from Mexico, 323 ; a note on the gar- 

 dens of General Vandamme at Cassel, 272. See 

 Munich, and see Hertz. 



Ghent, Agricultural and Botanical Society of, 55. 



Gibside, a short notice of the garden and grounds 

 at, 364. 



Gladioli, a note on the culture of, 134. 



Glass cases, closed, see Plants. 



Godalming, an allusion to three gardens at, 331. 



Gooseberry, information on the culture of, and 

 the fruit of, 42. 96. 518. 



Gordbnz'a pub<§scens and Lasianthus, a query on 

 the culture of, 83. 



GBttingen, information relative to the University 

 Botanic Garden at, 169. 



Grafting, various modes of performing, upon her- 

 baceous plants, 310; grafting wax, the ingre- 

 dients of, 312 ; opinions on, the effect of the 

 stock upon the cion, 406 ; a mode of flute-graft- 

 ing practised in India, 442. 



Grangemoor, the seat of the Hon. W. Keith 

 Douglas, notes on the gardens at, 528. 



Grape vine : a diary of the course of culture ap- 

 plied by Mr. Dowding to the grape vines at 

 Oakhill, East Barnet, in Herts, 547.'; Mr. Dow- 

 ding's mode of planting grape vines for a vinery, 

 499 ; Mr. Mearns's description of his mode of 

 cultivating the grape vine by means of long 



, cuttings coiled into pots, 138 ; an instance of a 

 result of Mr. Mearns's mode, 606; notes on 

 grape vines and vineries, 266 ; the damping or 

 premature shriveling of the footstalks of the 

 berries and bunches, opinions on the cause of it, 

 137. 529 ; and modes of preventing it proposed, 

 137. 529 ; the fit mode of culture in educing 

 grape vines from layers, 318 ; a mode of packing 

 grapes intended to be sent to a distance, 84. 242 ; 

 the characteristics of certain rare varieties of 

 grape which have been experimentally culti- 

 vated in the garden of the Caledonian Horticul- 

 tural Society, 397; one of these, named Loudon's 

 seedling, is stated to bear a second crop, which 

 property is disputed, 577 ; the state of the grape 

 vines in the colony at Swan River, 56 ; a notice 

 of the method of treating the grape vine at Bom- 

 bay, 443 ; instances of forced grapes early ripe 

 in 1834, 235 ; information on a society formed at 

 Chichester for encouraging the cultivation of 

 the grape vine on open* walls, and a notice of 

 some Hamburgh grapes produced, 602; in- 

 stances of fine crops or fine bunches of grapes, 

 591. 599. 601. 612. 



Greenhithe, notes'on residences and objects in the 

 neighbourhood of, 167 ; notes on the villa of 

 Mr. Forster at Greenhithe, 283 ; on the cottage 

 villa of Mr. Wilson at Greenhithe, 283. 



Green-house plants : considerations on the evil 

 effects of exposing them to the open air of Bri- 

 tain, during the summer months, 31. 



Grottoes, a mention of those at Painshill and 

 Ascot Park, 81 ; a mention of others, 338. 



Gunpowder, the advantage of employing it as a 

 means of splitting large roots, 82. 185. 



Hampstead Park, formerly Hampstead Marshal, 

 notes on, 115. 



Heartseases, various information on, 6. 181. 335. 

 396. 452. 601. 



Heating : modes of heating the atmospheres of 

 conservatories, hothouses, &c, 80. 228, 229. 



Heating by circulating hot water : Kewley's 

 mode and the level system deemed preferable 

 to other modes, 61 ; an instance of great saving 

 in coal from the adoption of the mode of heat- 

 ing by the circulation of hot water, at Walling- 

 ton, where the level system of circulation has 

 been adopted, 395 ; a notice of an apparatus 

 used for circulating hot water for heating, in- 

 vented by Mr. J. Darkin, 302 ; a mention of 

 another mode, 600 ; a description of Mr. Major's 

 portable apparatus for heating water and then 

 circulating it to heighten temperature in any 

 apartment, either horticultural or domestical ; 

 facts in the history of heating hot-houses by 

 circulating hot water, 179. 301. 



Heating by steam for horticultural purposes, a 

 description of various modes of, 226. 



Hedges, several species of trees or shrubs eligible 

 for constituting, named, 185. 188. 332. 



Hedsor churchyard, facts on the arrangement of 

 the grave stones in, 290. 



//eraclezwra giganteum, dimensions of a plant, 453. 



Hertz, Wm., his statement of his prospects and 

 intentions in Germany, 158. 



Highclere, notes iiVdetail on the gardens, grounds, 

 park, and mansion, at, 245. 350. 451. 572. 



Himalaya mountains, information on, and on some 

 of the plants of India, 392. 



Hollick, Cornish, see Allium. 



Holnicote, plants in blossom at, in the winter of 

 1833, 453. 



Hop poles and copper wires attached to them, 

 queries on, 578. 



Horsechestnut tree, its pubescence, 169; its de- 

 corative character, 292. 



Horticultural Society of London, reports of its 

 exhibitions and proceedings in Regent Street, 

 188. 244. 298- 355. 410. 468. 523. 579 ; reports 

 on the four exhibitions at the Society's garden, 

 299. 356. 410. 523. 



Horticultural Societies, provincial, notices of 

 their exhibitions, — 



Horticultural Societies, England: Barton, 92; 

 Bath, royal, 600 ; Bedale, 610 ; Bedfordshire, 

 589; Berkshire, royal, 589 ; Beverley, 607 ; Bir- 

 mingham, 91 ; Brighton and Sussex, 603 ; Bris- 

 tol and Clifton, 596 ; Buckingham, domestic, 

 589; Bury St. Edmunds, 601; Cambridge florists', 

 590 ; Cambridgeshire, 87, 589 ; Chelmsford and 

 Essex, 88; Chester florists', 590; Chichester, 602; 

 Cornwall, royal, 87.580; Deritend and Bordesley, 

 91 ; Devon and Exeter, 451. 573. 592 ; Devon and 

 Cornwall, royal, 595 ; Devon, North of, 88. 594 ; 

 Diss, 598 ; Doncaster, 606 ; Doncaster, Retford, 

 and Bawtry, 92 ; Dorking, 90; Durham, South, 

 and Cleveland, 596 ; Evesham, 605 ; Finchley 

 and North London, 597; Frimley and Farnbo- 

 rough, 601 ; Gainsborough, 607 ; Glastonbury, 

 599; Kackney, 324. 405; Henley, 90. 589; 

 Hereford, 596 ; Hinckley, 597 ; Holloway, 601 ; 

 Holt, 597 ; Hull, 92 ; Hull, 608 ; Huntingdon, 

 596 ; Hindbury, 87 ; Lancaster, 597 ; Launditch, 

 Norfolk, association for promoting industrious 

 habits among servants, cottagers, and labourers, 

 89 ; Leeds, 609 ; Leicester, 88 ; Lewes and 

 East Sussex, 603 ; Manchester, 597 ; Melton 

 Mowbray, 88 ; Metropolitan, 235. 323. 396. 516. 

 597 ; Newcastle, 90. 599 ; Newick, 90. 602 ; 

 Northampton, 598 ; Northamptonshire, united, 

 598 ; Norwich, 597, 598 ; Nottingham, 90 ; 

 Oxford, 90; Reading, 589 ; Ripon, 609 ; Roch- 

 dale, 596 ; Salisbury, 92 ; Sheffield, 92 ; Silwood, 

 599 ; Tamworth, 89 ; Taunton, 601 ; Wake- 



