| GAPS | Breaches in hedges or fences or walls |
| STILE | Feature of the countryside in the form of a set of steps built into a hedge or fence or a "squeeze belly" built into a dry-stone wall (5) |
| BARBEDWIRE | Protection on fences or walls (6,4) |
| GATE | Northern dialect for a path, street or way; a wicket or other hinged barrier in a fence, hedge or wall; a portal; a hole or aperture, such as the eye of a needle; or, a mountain pass (4) |
| MAZE | Puzzle sometimes made with hedges or in cornfields |
| CLIP | Trim, as in a hedge or the edge of a lawn (4) |
| MEND | Fix, like fences or clothes |
| MURI | Wall's or walls |
| GENE | Man in hedge nearby (4) |
| CROP | Trim a hedge or photograph |
| FUND | "Hedge" or "slush" follower |
| HAHA | Type of sunken wall or fence that provides a barrier with an uninterrupted view (2-2) |
| GATES | Wickets in fences, garden walls or hedges; or, passages into cities (5) |
| HAY | An old word for a hedge or fence; a winding country dance; a weaving or serpentine choreographic figure in such a reel; or, etymologically linked to "fennel", a word for alfalfa, clover, grass etc, cu |
| SNICKET | A passageway between walls or fences, in Northern English dialect (7) |
| WATTLE | Stakes interwoven with twigs or branchlets to form fences or hurdles; a comb-like caruncle of a cockerel or turkey; or, an Australian acacia (6) |
| HAWTHORN | A shrub or tree of the rose family often used in hedges in the UK (8) |
| SEASLATER | Large nocturnal crustacean that lives in cracks in rocks or walls around the high-water mark (3,6) |
| ENCLOSURES | Areas of land surrounded by walls or fences, used for a particular purpose (10) |
| PEEPHOLES | Small openings in doors or walls used to observe the surroundings |