| BRACKEN | A native British fern of heath, moor and woodland (7) |
| OAKEGGAR | Moth of heath, moor and hedgerow (3,5) |
| ROEDEER | Buck or doe, a native British mammal with a red relative (3,4) |
| CAMPION | Pinky-red flower of meadows, country lanes, hedgerows and woodlands from spring to early autumn; or, the director of The Piano and Top of the Lake (7) |
| SPARROW | Hedge -; inhabiting gardens, parks and woodland edges, a bird also called a dunnock (7) |
| WALLRUE | Fern of the spleenwort family of North America and Eurasia (4,3) |
| RAMSONS | Wild garlic forming carpets of star-shaped white flowers and lily-of-the-valley-like leaves over riverbanks and woodlands that is often foraged in the spring (7) |
| OTHELLO | Moor and unload in central location next to fancy hotel (7) |
| RANNOCH | Vast moor and SSSI in the Highlands - no ranch involved (7) |
| HEATHER | Common plant of moors and heaths (7) |
| FORAGER | A bramble-picker, mushroomer, nutter, scrumper or other searcher-gatherer of seasonal provender found growing wild in forests, hedgerows and woodlands (7) |
| SHIELDS | Glamorous Erinsborough newcomer who had a photograph of Heath Royce (3,7) |
| LEITRIM | Moor and lake to west, by border county |
| DOGROSE | With pink flowers signalling an approaching summer, a wild climber found intertwined with brambles in hedgerows and woodland edges or with ripening fruit in the autumn (3,4) |
| PRIMULA | Native British flower (7) |
| OVEREAT | Gorge on other side of heath husband repeatedly missed (7) |
| MONITOR | Check on idiot in middle of heath (7) |
| GLENCOE | Highland valley, known for its woods, moors and peat bogs (4,3) |
| CHERRY | A native British fruit whose figurative placement on the top of a cake alludes to a finishing touch to an already excellent situation (6) |
| PRIMROSE | Native British woodland plant with rosettes of yellow or cream petals; county flower of Devon, food of the caterpillars of the rare Duke of Burgundy butterfly (8) |