| CORNFLOWER | Blue bloom found in meadows and arable farmlands; a French symbol of remembrance sometimes worn as a |
| BUTTERCUPS | Related to delphiniums, marsh marigolds, lesser celandines and wood anemones, wild flowers of meadows, woodlands and arable farmland(10) |
| WATTLE | Power with the French symbol of Australia (6) |
| RAGGED | ____ robin, perennial plant with pink flowers often found in meadows and marshy ground (6) |
| BARNOWL | Inhabiting open countryside and farmland, a protected species of "indicator" bird of prey with a heartshaped face and buff/white plumage (4,3) |
| BUDAPEST | A nuisance is after an unopened bloom found in Hungary (8) |
| ASTER | Bloom found in Connemara's terrain (5) |
| ARABLE | In farmland, a mob, only one British |
| COWNFLOWERS | With edible petals used in tea blends, blue blooms known as bachelor's buttons; botanical symbols of Estonia and of remembrance in France (11) |
| OXEYE | Leucanthemum vulgare, daisy (and perennial weed) which grows in meadows and fields (5) |
| LORRAINE | Region of France with a cross that became the Free French symbol in WWII (8) |
| WILDFLOWERS | Plants growing naturally and forming an intrinsic part of the ecosystem of woodlands, meadows and country lanes such as bluebells, cowslips, ramsons, wood anemones or violets (4,7) |
| VIOLET | Growing in woodlands, meadows and hedgerows, a plant with flowers symbolising modesty, sometimes crystallised for cake decorations (6) |
| CORNFLOUR | Basis of a mould that sounds like blue bloom? |
| MARGUERITE | From Greek or Latin for "pearl", the French name for a white-rayed wild flower of field margins, grassland, meadows and verges, also called an ox-eye daisy or moonpenny (10) |
| DOME | Was missing from meadows and is found on top of The Rotunda (4) |
| RUNNYMEDE | Area of riverside meadows and grassland associated with the signing of the Magna Carta |
| DESIGN | A drawing of French symbol (6) |
| BACOPA | Trailing plant, genus Sutera, with tiny blooms - found in Cuba, Copacabana (6) |
| DAISY | Flower often found in meadows ? (5) |