| RINGDOVE | Another name for a wood pigeon |
| CUSHAT | Another name for a wood pigeon (6) |
| DRYAD | Doctor on day shift (just doing a turn) for a wood nymph (5) |
| IVY | Providing nectar for bees and butterflies and a bounty of winter berries for blackbirds, thrushes, redwings and wood pigeons, the evergreen vine Hedera helix (3) |
| SYLVA | Latin word for a wood that also refers to a Spanish poetic form (5) |
| CUSHIEDOO | Scots term for wood pigeon (6-3) |
| STOCKDOVE | British bird resembling a small wood pigeon |
| THROWINTHEDOWEL | Charge Tim nothing for a wood cylinder? |
| FUEL | Logs, e.g., for a wood stove |
| CHISEL | Part of the bench is electric for a wood cutting tool (6) |
| MAPLE | Wood pigeon's head cradled by bloke (5) |
| OAKENSHAW | Little wood pigeon's half worried with hawks beginning to attack |
| RINGDOVES | European wood-pigeons |
| SEEDS | Grains, kernels, pips, stones... embryonic plants constituting the diet of granivorous birds including goldfinches, turtledoves, wood pigeons and tree sparrows (5) |
| BOWER | From the Old English for "dwelling" and the German for "birdcage", a shady spot under trees in a wood or a garden; a picturesque country cottage; or, a lady's private boudoir (5) |
| JENGA | Fun family game (with a Swahili name meaning "to build something") which challenges players to remove and replace a wood bar without toppling a precarious tabletop tower |
| MAHOGANY | A large number keeping a pig in a wood |
| HOBBEMA | Dutch painter of sunlit woodlands and tree scenes including A Road Winding Past Cottages, A Stream by a Wood and The Avenue at Middelharnis (7) |
| BOWL | Vessel for cereal, punch, soup etc; or, a wood rolled on a green (4) |
| FEDIN | Gave, as wood to a wood chipper |