| TOWED | Brought back to shore, as a boat |
| SEASIDE | Shore, as a resort |
| EBB | Draw away from shore, as a tide |
| ROEDEER | "Say, take us back to shore, darling, to see Bambi?" |
| YARNS | Fishermen bring them back to shore |
| EBBED | Went back to shore |
| PADDLE | Walk by the shore, as theologian looking unwell getting about (6) |
| EBBS | Moves away from shore, as the tide (4) |
| WASHUP | Arrive on shore, as marine debris |
| WAKE | A moving line of water that can make a boat ride choppy (or what people do from the shore to silently say goodbye as a boat sets sail) |
| STINGRAY | Undersea children's puppet programme with Troy Tempest and Atlanta Shore as characters (8) |
| JIG | The note of the nightingale; a prison or jail; a glass, tankard or Toby of beer; an instrument forming part of a skiffle band; or, a spouted vessel, such as a boat, ewer or pitcher (3) |
| RAFT | Word for a beam first, later a floating mass of fallen trees; or, a flat platform of logs as a boat (4) |
| MOOR | Tie up as a boat to a pier |
| PLY | Go back and forth, as a boat between two ports |
| YAR | Easy to handle, as a boat |
| CAPSIZE | To overturn as a boat |
| SCREWED | Start to swim as a boat may be ruined |
| TOW | Bring to port, as a boat without power |
| CRAFT | See a floating structure as a boat (5) |