| FLOWER | Botanical structure with electric fields sensed by bumblebees; or, printer's ornament or fleuron (6) |
| SNAPDRAGON | Antirrhinum with flowers adapted for pollination by bumblebees; or, an old parlour game played with brandy-soaked flaming raisins (10) |
| BORAGE | A mildly cucumber-flavoured herb with azure, cerulean or sky-blue star-shaped flowers beloved by bumblebees and honey bees and used to garnish a claret/Pimm's cup (6) |
| AURA | Personal energy field sensed by a psychic |
| DRONED | From "bumblebees" or "buzzing", bourdons of bagpipes; low hums; burdens of songs; male honey bees; idlers; or, monotone speeches (6) |
| DUMBLEDORES | Old onomatopoeic English dialect term mainly for buzzing or humming insects such as beetles, bumblebees or cockchafers; blunderers; or, dandelions (11) |
| DINGBAT | An ornament, character or spacer used in typesetting, sometimes known as a 'printer's ornament' (7) |
| ROCOCO | Style with ornament or otherwise with 2 2s? (6) |
| FINIAL | From Latin for "end", an ornament or pommel in the form of an acorn, foliated fleur-de-lis, pine cone, poppy-head, spike etc at the end or top of a bench, curtain pole, gable or spire (6) |
| COLONY | Group of cohabiting organisms, such as penguins or bumblebees (6) |
| ENAMEL | A coloured, glossy substance fused to the surface of metal or glass articles for ornament or protection (6) |
| ORKNEY | Archipelago with a diverse range of wildlife including Scottish primroses, great yellow bumblebees, corncrakes and seals, chief town Kirkwall (6) |
| STAMEN | Flower part from which honey bees and bumblebees harvest pollen in their pollen baskets or corbiculae before distributing it between plants (6) |
| AMULET | Ornament or jewellery item thought to give protection against evil (6) |
| ROSETE | Rose-shaped ornament or design, especially a rose window (6) |
| PASTRY | Mixture of flour and butter for piecrusts, feuillet's and fleurons (6) |
| ARMLET | Bracelet worn for ornament or identification (6) |
| NECTAR | What bumblebees collect |
| GNOMES | Garden ornaments or bankers (if they're from Zurich) |
| FEINT | Word for a mock attack; a deceptive thrust or pretended blow in fencing/boxing; pretence or false show generally; or, printers' or stationers' term for paper with pale rules (5) |