774 



INDEX. 



Tiles, various kinds of, 572 — employment of, 

 for edgings in gardens, 590. 



Timber, on the preservation of, as used in hot- 

 house-building, 567 — the causes of its decay, 

 ib. — means for the prevention of decay in it, 

 kyanising and its defects, 568 — Burnettising, 

 569 — preparing it with sulphate of copper, 

 ib. — Bethell's preparation, 570 — Boucherie's 

 method, ib. — Boyd and Miller's antisceptic 

 paint, ib. — Gemini's method, 571 — various 

 qualities of it, and their comparative values, 

 ib. — prices and qualities of it in different 

 localities, 742. 



Tinker's system of tank-heating, 207. 



Todd, Mr, aquarium constructed at White 

 Knights by, 417. 



Todd's patent protoxide paint, 562. 



Tomlinson, Mr, on tank-heating, 212 — on the 

 conduction and radiation of heat, 213 — on 

 the joints of hot-water pipes, 248 — on the 

 causes, &c. of the circulation of hot water, 270. 



Tonsile style in flower-gardening, the, 573, 574, 

 611. 



Tottenham park gardens, size of, 12 — pinery at, 

 333 — the orangery at, 400. 



Toward, Mr, designs laid out at Bagshot park 

 by, 629 — account of moss-house constructed 

 by, 688. 



Towers, Mr, on shelter, 35. 



Town gardens, employment of vases for culture 

 in, 639 — laying out of them, 725 — disadvan- 

 tages of laying them down on grass, 726 — 

 forms of parterres, &c. for them, ib. — filling 

 them with plants in a portable state, 727 — 

 proposed covering them over with glass, ib. 

 — covered verandahs for them, 728 — means 

 of providing artificial heat in them, 729 — 

 plants and flowers suitable for them, 731. 



Toy's system of tank-heating, 205. 



Trainers for climbing plants, 686. 



Tredgold, Mr, on the quantity of pipe required 

 to heat a given surface, 238 — on the construc- 

 tion of furnaces, 252 — on the causes of the 

 circulation of hot water, 263. 



Tree-guards, kinds of, for the gardenesque gar- 

 den, 686. 



Trees and shrubs, kinds of, suited to the dif- 

 ferent styles of flower-garden, 581 — the 

 planting and grouping of them, ib. et seq. — 

 kinds of them suited to the gardenesque 

 style, 657 — and to the picturesque, 698 — for 

 the suburban garden, 735. 



Trellis-work, formation of, in the gardenesque 

 style, 683. 



Trellises, hothouse, construction of, 134 — for 

 vineries, 330. 



Trellising, application of, to garden walls, 74. 



Trent park, the garden at, 663. 



Trentham hall, situation of the garden at, 19— 

 new conservatory at, 131 — mode of ventila- 

 tion employed at, 286 — heating vine borders 

 at, 326 — pineries at, 344 — peach-houses at, 

 353 — melon and pine pits at, 455 — curvilinear 

 espaliers used at, 559 — the flower-garden at, 

 613 — the mausoleum at, 654 — flower-borders 

 at, 673. 



Triangular garden, plan of a, 614. 

 Triewald, Sir M., mode of heating proposed by, 

 153. 



Triton fountain, the, from the Barberini palace, 

 627. 



Trivial picturesque style in flower-gardening, 

 the, 573, 577. 



Tropical fruit house, construction of the, 358. 



Tudor style, flower-garden in the, 575. 



Turner, Mr, the Kew palm-stove erected by, 

 119 — mode of ventilation employed by, 292 

 — conservatory for first-class residence de- 

 signed by, 375, and Plate xix. — conservatory 

 with fruit-houses at Killikee by, 376, and. 

 Plate xx. — domical conservatory by, 377, and 

 Plate xxi. 



Tweed, wire bridge over the, 679. 



Tweedie, Mr, mode of ventilation employed by, 

 280. 



Twickenham, Pope's garden at, 8. 

 Tysson, Mrs, description of Lawe's hot-air stove 

 by, 217. 



Unicombe observatory hive, the, 530. 



United States, present state of gardening, &c, 

 in the, 6 — the ice trade of the, mode of pre- 

 paring the ice, &c, 497. 



Ure, Dr, on the theory of artesian wells, 17 — 

 hot-air stoves described from his dictionary, 

 218, 219 — on hot-air stoves, 228 — on insen- 

 sible combustion, 259. 



Ure's asphalt, 566. 



Ure's ventilating fan, 279. 



Urns, distinction between, and vases, 642. See 

 Vases. 



Valentia slates, qualities of, 572. 

 Valleyfield pit, the, 438. 



Vanbrugh, Sir John, the gardens at Claremont 

 laid out by, 92. 



Vanhuysen, the flower-pieces of, 599. 



Varden, Mr, designs of parapets by, 647. 



Vases, heating by radiation from, 112. 



Vases and urns, introduction of, into the geo- 

 metrical style of flower-garden, 637 — examples 

 of different styles of them, 638 — their employ- 

 ment in town gardens, 639— plants suitable 

 for growing in them, 640 — Sir Uvedale Price 

 on their introduction into the garden, 641 — ■ 

 the Dove Tazza, 642 — cast-iron one from the 

 Coalbrooke-dale Company's works, 643 — two 

 in terra-cotta, ib. — one by M. Garnaud, 644 

 — one by M. Ducel, ib. — one by J. Pulham, 

 ib. — urn from the Grangemouth Company's 

 works, 645 — employment of them in the gar- 

 denesque style, 674 — specimen of the kinds 

 suited to it, 675. 



Vegetables, pits for the preservation of, during 

 winter, 473. 



Vegetation, effects of smoke on, 259. 



Veitch, Messrs, mode of tank-heating employed 

 by, 198. 



Veitch, Mr, cultivation of mosses at Arniston 

 by, 667. 



Ventilation, provisions for securing, in the Pol- 

 talloch hothouses, 55 — difficulty of providing 

 it in curvilinear houses, and means of doing 

 so, 124 — difficulty of effective, in large con- 

 servatories, 130 — neglect of it generally pre- 

 valent, 271 — general theory and principles of 

 it, ib. — modes of it first adopted, ib. — Pro- 

 fessor Lindley on it as generally practised, 



