2668
INDEX TO MISCELLANEOUS SUBJECTS,
Cranberries, mode of growing, ii. 1169, 1170.Crayons of charcoal, ii. 497.
Cup-shaky timber, iii. 1992.
Curious substances found in the oak, iii. 1783.Curled maple wood, i. 426.
D.
Dancing leaves, i. 558. 560.
Dead Sea apple, iii. 1931.
Deals, mode |of cutting out of entire trees, iv.2170.
Death’s head moth, ii. 1253.
Deciduous cypress, knees of, iv. 2484.
Dialling of wood, iii. 1999.
Divining rod, iii. 2020.
Dogwoods in America, iii. 1018.
Dool trees, iv. 2542.
Drifting sands, modes of planting in, ii. 5S2.; iv.2219.
Drip of trees, shrubs that will thrive under, i.403. 512.; ii. 718.; iii. 1001. 1309. 1339.; iv.2088.
Dwarfs, Chinese, i. 279.
Dye from walnuts, iii. 1429.
Dye, yellow, from the quercitron, iii. 1886.
Dying, trees and shrubs suitable for, i. 299. 302.307. 427. 465. 493.; ii. 530. 532. 537. 540. 549.552. 564. 583. 687. 744.; iii. 1261. 1313. 1364.1429. 1458. 1525. 1681. 1886.
E.
Ebony, substitute for, iii. 1681.
Edging, shrubs fit for, i. 356.; iii. 1333.
Elm, diseases and insects of, iii. 1385.
Emperor moth, iv. 2052.
Ericacetums and American grounds, ii. 1173. to1186.
Ericetums, or heatheries, ii. 1095. 1098.
Ermine moth, ii. 906.; iv. 2564.
Eustache Dubois, knives of, iii. 1961.
F.
Fevers, remedies for, i. 268. 274. 288.; ii. 543. 550.1019.; iii. 1525.
Figs, as an article of commerce, iii. 1367. Modeof drying, iii. 1369.
Figues-caques, what made of, ii. 1197.
Filberts, to keep, iii. 2027.
Fir tree, why so called, iv. 2303. ♦
Flambeaux'of the beech (tourteaux), iii. 1963.Flambeaux of the pine, iv. 2175.
Flax, substitute for, ii. 577.
Forest, New, first planting of. Mode of manag-ing plantations in, iii. 1750. 1803.
Forest of Dean, iii. 1750.1805.
Forest of the Black Mountain, iv. 2327-Forest of Orleans, iii. 1989.
Forest of Tarnawa, in Scotland, ii. 509.; iii. 1752.Forests of oak in Britain, iii. 1750.
Forests of pines and firs, iv. 2113. 2165. 2220.2300.
Fox covers, ii. 571.
Fragrant horsechestnut, i. 474.
French berries, ii. 532.
French plums, mode of preparing, ii. 689.
Fungi figured. See the List of Fungi in the Tableof Contents, clxxxi.
Fungus, eatable, on the evergreen beech in VanDiemen’s Land, iii. 1982.
Furze, as fodder, mode of bruising, ii. 572. Dil-lenius’s admiration of, ii. 572. Gigantic, ii. 571.See Hedges.
G.
Galette, la, to make, iii. 1996.
Galls, American, iii. 1881.
Gall nuts, iii. 1929.
Galls on the oak, iii. 1823. 1843.1929.
Games and country sports relating to the apple,ii. 901.
Goats, trees eaten bv, ii. 477. 591.; iii. 1513.; iv.2325.
Goule sheaves, iv. 2057.
Grafting clay, ii. 805.
Grafting, herbaceous, i. 253.
Granada, arms of the city of, ii. 940.
Grippling, custom of, ii. 901.
Growth, rate of, of the larch, iv. 2392. Of thelocust, ii. 612. Of the oak, iii. 1783. Of thepoplar, iii. 1658. Of the silver fir, iv. 2332.Of the willow, iii. 1466. 1526.
Gum Arabic, tree producing it, ii. 664.
Gum benjamin, iii. 1303.
Gum benzoin, iii. 1303.
Gum of the cherry tree, ii. 698.
Gum olibanum, iv. 2503.
Gum sandarach, iv. 2463.
Gum tragacanth, ii. 638.
Gunpowder, charcoal used for making, i. 537. ;
ii. 1011. j iii. 1682.200912024.
Gun-stocks, wood for, iii. 1427.
H.
Hair-streak butterfly, iii. 1869.
Half-hardy plants, remarks on the treatment of,ii. 570, 667.
Half-hardy heaths. See Cape heaths.
Hardy heaths, lists of, ii. 1086. 1088. 1097.
Hares and rabbits, trees eaten by, ii. 592.Hayforks, wood used for making in France, iii.1415.
Hazel rods, use of in ornamental buildings, iii.2023.
Heathery in the open ground, ii. 1095.
Hedges, shrubs and trees suitable for: —
Atesicia. See Locust.
Alaternus, ii. 530.
Althsea frutex, i. 362.
Arbor Vita, iv. 2457.
Berberry, i. 302.
Beech, iii. 1965.
Box, ii. 1340.
Bramble, ii. 744.
Buckthorn, ii. 532.
Christ’s Thorn, ii. 528.
Crab, ii. 896.
Elder, iii. 1029.
Evergreen oak, iii. 1904.
Furze, ii. 573. In Guernsey, iv. 2549. Inthe Isle of Man, iv. 2549.
Gleditschfa, ii. 651.
Hawthorn, ii. 836.
Hazel, iii. 2023.
Holly, ii. 518. Mode of cutting, ii. 514.Hornbeam, iii. 2010.
Ivy, iii. 1003.
Juniper, iv. 2493.
Larch, iv. 2373.
Laurel, ii. 718.
Laurustinus, iii. 1033.
Lilac, iii. 1210.
Locust, ii. 615, 625.
Lombardy poplar, ii. 1668.
Maple, i. 429.
Mulberry, iii. 1355.
Myrtle, ii. 963.
Oak, iii. 1799.
Pear tree, ii. 885.
Privet, ii. 1200.
Portugal laurel, ii. 715.
Roses, ii. 772. 790.
Sea buckthorn, ii. 1326.
Sloe thorn, ii. 687.
Spirae’a, ii. 727.
Spruce fir, iv. 2306.
Willow, iii. 1476.
Yew, iv. 2089.
Helianthemum wall, i. 349.
Hemlock spruce, singular effect of in Americanwoods, iv. 2323.
High Clere seedling rhododendrons, ii. 1140.1143.
Honey, poisonous, i. 369.; ii. 1129. See Bees.Honeysuckle, a classical architectural ornamentii. 1043.
Hoops, wood for, iii. 1441. 1467. 1697. 1711, 1712.1994. 2023.
Hop-poles, wood for, ii. 621.; iii. 1219. 1460.1653. 1996.; iv. 2371.i Hops, substitute for, ii. 596. 946.
! Hortensfo, why this name was applied to thehydrangea, ii. 996.