| CLEARING | An area of no trees within a forest or woodland (8) |
| INCOMER | A new arrival in an area of no crime, surprisingly (7) |
| SILVICULTURE | The care and development of trees within forest environments (12) |
| SPIDERSWEB | Area of no return for a fly (7,3) |
| PLAIN | Flat area of no great beauty (5) |
| TREEFARM | In agroforestry, forest or woodland managed on a commercial basis (4,4) |
| NUTTREES | A coppice, orchard, forest, garden, hedgerow or woodland's angiospermous arbors characterised by bearing crops of almonds, brazils, cashews, cobs, filberts, hazels, "noyers" or other edible kernels (3 |
| GLADE | A forest or woodland clearing (5) |
| PRIMROSE | Name, from Old French and Latin for "first flower", in allusion to its appearance in early spring, for a meadow or woodland bloom related to cowslip, cyclamen and pimpernel; or, its pale-yellow hue (8 |
| SAVANNAH | Grassy plain with few or no trees (8) |
| BOWER | An anchor at the front of a ship; a shady recess under trees in a garden or woodland; a picturesque country cottage or summerhouse; or, from "farmer", a jack in euchre or 500 (5) |
| LOWLANDS | Areas of no great elevation (8) |
| CONCRETE | Yet there are no trees, conjectures Glen falsely (8,7) |
| ROYALOAK | The tree within which the future Charles II hid to escape the Roundheads following the Battle of Worcester (5,3) |
| TIMBER | Lumber/wood suitable for carpentry or construction; trees collectively; a forest; or, a beam in the framework of a house or ship (6) |
| SHAW | An old or dialect word for a copse, thicket or woodland; Scots for the leafy top of a potato/turnip; or, an assumed name of Lawrence of Arabia (4) |
| PINERY | A forest or grove of cone- and needle-bearing trees; or, a hothouse or pit in which ananases are grown (6) |
| TREELINE | Line past which no trees grow |
| TREEZONE | Line past which no trees grow |
| TREETOPS | High points in forests, or what answers to asterisked clues have (8) |