1228 



GENERAL INDEX. 



seeds, osier-grounds, coppice-woods, 6936. to 

 6940. 



Trees, season for cutting, 6941 ; mode of cutting, 

 barking, pollards, period of felling, operation of 

 felling, season of felling, 694-2. to 6957. 



Trees, uses of their roots, 6961 ; method of char- 

 ring, 6962. 



Trees, valuation of, 6955; as plantations, as timber, 

 measurement of, 6967. to 6972. 



Trees, nursery for, — see Nursery. 



Trees, their nursery culture, 6982 ; coniferous, nut- 

 bearing, berried stoves, berries and capsule bear- 

 ing trees, with small seeds, with leguminous 

 seeds, small soft-seeds, general culture of, 69S3. to 

 7026. 



Trefoil, — see Trifolium. 



Trelawney House, Cornwall, 7601. 



Tremadoc House, a seat in Merionethshire, 7612. 



Trenching, 1870. 



Trent Place, Middlesex, 7521. 



Trentham, a seat in Staffordshire, 7570. 



Trevirana, didynam. angios. and scrophularinese, a 

 S. peren. Jamaica, which flowers freely in sandy 

 loam and peat, the pots being kept dr\- as soon as 

 the flowering season is over till the roots begin to 

 vegetate. 



Trew ehret, Plantce selectae, quarura Imagines, 



pinxit Ge. Dion. Ehret. Collegit et illustravit 



Christ. Jac. Trew. 

 Trewia, dioec. polvan. and , a S. tr. E. 



Ind. which grows in loam and peat, and cuttings 



root in sand under a hand-glass. 

 Trianon grand, a royal garden near Paris, 172. 

 Trianon petit, a royal garden near Paris, 169. 

 Trianthema, decaii. dig. and portulacete, S. an. E. 



and W. Ind. of common culture. 

 Tribuhis, caltrops, decan. monog. and rutaceae, a S. 



peren. and an. and H. an. Eur. and Amer. which 



grow in light soil, and cuttings root freely in 



sand under a hand-glass. 

 Trichilia, decan. monog. and meleacese, S. tr. W. 



Ind. which thrive in loam and peat, and cuttings 

 ■ root in sand under a hand-glass in heat. 

 Trichodesma, pentan. monog. and boragineEe, a S. 



an and H. an. E. Ind. and C. B. S. of common 



culture. 



Trichodium, trian. dig. and graminea?, H. peren. 



N. Amer. and Brit, of easy culture. 

 Trichomanes, crj-ptog. filices and filices, a H. pe- 



ren. Brit, of easy culture in loam and peat in the 



shade. 



Trichonema, trian. monog. and iridese, G. peren. 

 and a H. peren. bulbs which may be treated as 

 ixia. 



Trichophorum, trian. monog. and cyperacea;, H. 

 peren. Brit, and X. Amer. grasses of easy culture 

 in moist soil. 



Trichosanthes, snake-gourd, moncec. monad, and 

 cucurbitacefe, a S. peren. and F. an. ; the S. spe- 

 cies thrive best in rich sandy loam, and cuttings 

 root freelv under a hand-glass in a moist heat ; 

 the others may be treated as cucumis. 



Trichostema, didvn. gvmnos. and labiateas, a H. 



bien. and an. N.' Amer. of common culture. 

 Trientalis, winter green, heptan. monog. andprimu- 



. lacece, a H. peren. Brit, and N. Amer. which 

 grow best in light soil, and are increased by divid- 

 ing at the root or by seeds. 



Triewald, Martin, his writings on gardening, page 

 1103. A. D. 1729., and page 1130. A. D. 1740. 



Trifolium, trefoil, diadelph. decan. and legumi- 

 nosese, H. peren. bien. and an. Eur. Afr. and X. 

 Amer. of easy culture, and increased by dividing 

 the roots or bv seeds. 



Triglochin, arrbwgrass, hexan. trig, and alismacese, 

 a G. peren. and H. peren. C. B. S. and Brit, marsh 

 plants of easy treatment. 



Trigonella, fenugreek, diadel. and legummoseas, S. 

 an. and H. peren. bien. and an. E. Ind. and Eur. 

 of easy culture. 



Trillium, hexandria trigynia and smilacea, a G. 

 peren. and H. peren. N. Amer. which do best ni 

 a bed of peat in a moist shady simalion, and are 

 increased, though slowly, by dividing at the root. 



Tring Park, Hertfordshire, 7544. 



Triodia, trian. dig. and graminese, a H. peren. Bnt. 

 of easv culture. 



Triosteu'm, feverwort, pentan. monog. and capri- 

 fole£s, H. peren. N. Amer. which grow freely ni 

 rich, light soil, and are increased by cuttings under 

 a hand-glass, or by dividing the root. 



Tripsacum, moncec. trian. and grammes, a H. 

 nercn. N. Amer, of easy culture. 



Trisetum, trian. dig and gramineae, a H. peren. 



and an. Eur. of common culture. 

 Tristania, polyad. icos. and myrteaceje, G. tr. 



N. S. W. which grow in sandy loam and peat, and 



cuttings, not too much ripened, root readily in 



sand under hand or bell glasses. 

 Triticum, wheat-grass, trian. dig. and gramineas, 



H. peren. and an. Eur. and Asia, of common 



culture. 



Tritoma, hexan. monog. and hemerocallideae, a F. 

 peren. C. B. S. which thrive best in peat soil, and 

 are increased by dividing at the root. 



Tritonia, trian. monog. and irideae, Br. G. peren. 

 C. B. S. bulbs which may be treated as ixia. 



I'riumfetta, dodec. monog. and tiliacese, S. tr. and 

 an. E. and W. Ind. which grow in loam and 

 peat, and cuttings root in sand under a hand- 

 glass. 



Trollius, globe-flower, polyan. polyg. and ranuncu- 

 laceae, Eur. and N. Amer. of easy treatment. 



Tropeeolum, Indian cress, octan. monog. and gera- 

 niace£e, G. tr. bien. and an. Peru, which grow in 

 light, rich soil, and are of easy increase by cuttings 

 or seeds. 



Tropseolum majus, common Inc.ian cress, 4116. 



Trophis, ramoon-tree, dicec. tetran. and , 



S. tr. E. and W, Ind. which grow freely in loam 

 and peat, and cuttings root under a hand-glass in 

 sand. 



Trowel, Samuel, his work on gardening, page 1104 



A. D. 1739. 

 Trowel, the garden, 1308. 



Troximon syngen. polyg. a?qual. and cichoracea;, 

 H. peren. N. Amer. which grow freely in rich, 

 light soil, and are increased by seeds. 



Troy House, Monmouthshire, 7567. 



Troxelius, Charles Blechort, his work on gardening, 

 page 1130. A. D. 1780. 



Trumpet-flower, — see Bignonia. 



Trumpton Hall, Cornwall, 76U1. 



Truncheon {tronqon, Fr. from truncus, Lat), a 

 pole or rod cut to the length of a staffer longer, 

 sometimes adopted in making willow planta- 

 tions. 



Tschoudi, I. B. L. Baron de, his work on gardening, 



page 1118. A. D. 1768. 

 Tuber cibarium, the truffle, 4346. 

 Tuberose, polyanthes tuberosa — see Polyanthe.s. 

 Tuilleries (tile-grounds, or tile-kilns), gardens of 



the, at Paris, 161. 

 Tulbagia, hexan. monog. and hemerocallideae, H. 



peren. C. B. S. which grow in sandy loam, and are 



increased by offsets from the bulbs. 

 Tulip, — see Tulipa. 

 Tulip-tree, — see Liriodendron. 

 Tulipa, tulip, hexan. monog. and liliacese, H. peren. 



bulbs, Eur. which grow best in sandy soil, and are 



increased by offsets. 

 Tulipa gesner'iana, the common tulip, 6242. 

 Tupelo, — see Nyssa. 



Tupistra, hexan. monog. and aroidea», a peren. 

 Amboyna, which may be grown in loam and 

 peat. 



Turf, the superiority of British, 5399. 

 Turf-raser, &c., 1317. to 1319. 



Turfing, the transplanting or laying down turf, 

 2101. 



Turmeric, — see Curcuma. 

 Turnip, — see Brassica. 



Turnera, pentan. trig, and portulacese, S. tr. an. and 

 H. an. which grow in rich, light soil, and are 

 increased by cuttings under a hand-glass or by 

 seeds. 



Turnsole, — see Heliotropiura. 



Turritis, tower-mustard, tetrad, siliq. and crucife- 

 rece, H. peren and an. Eur. of easy culture. 



Tussilago, colt's foot, syngen. polyg. super, and 

 corymbiferese, a S. bien. and H. peren. W. Ind. 

 and Eur. of easy culture. T. fragrans is a desi- 

 rable plant for a green-house during winter, on 

 account of the odor its flowers diffuse at that 

 season. 



Twav-blade, listera ovata. 



Tweedale, county of, as to gardening, 762.3. 



Tivickenham, village of, in Middlesex, 7520. _ 



Twickenham Park, Middlesex, 7520. 



Twinstead Hall, Essex, 7541. 



Tvford House, Middlesex, 7520. 



Tynningham, a seat in Haddingtonshire, 7619. 



Tvpha, cat's tail, moncec. trian. and aroidea», H. 

 peren. Brit, marsh plants of easy treatment. 



Tzaritzina, or Zaritzina, an imperial residence near 

 Moscow, 262, 



