| BERTHS | Cabins or fixed bunks for sleeping in ships, trains or caravans; or, places of anchorage assigned to boats at docks, wharfs and other moorings (6) |
| BERTH | A ship's place of anchorage |
| AWNINGS | Canvas canopies often attached to shop fronts or caravans |
| SOURCES | Word, homophonous with a term for flavourful culinary dressings, relishes or toppings, for fountainheads, risings or springs, thus beginnings or places of origin (7) |
| RELOCATIONS | Acts of moving to new places, areas or places of employment (11) |
| BUNK | A bed that is fixed to a wall, especially in a ship or caravan (4) |
| TRAILER | General name for a vehicle designed to be towed such as a horse-box or caravan (7) |
| DWELLINGS | Houses or places of residence (9) |
| TRAIN | Coach or caravan |
| STATEROOMS | Word for grand/palatial apartments or suites for formal occasions that also refers to captains' cabins; or, ships' private compartments generally (10) |
| SOLE | Underside or bottom of a boot, clubhead, foot, oven or plough; the floor of a ship's cabin; or, the end of the chanter of a set of bagpipes (4) |
| DEPOT | A place of distribution; a store or warehouse for arms, food, goods or other supplies; a regiment's HQ; or, a building where buses, trains or tramcars are housed or serviced (5) |
| CAMEL | "Oont" forming part of a caravan or train; yellowish-fawn colour of said animal or of a style of overcoat; or, a Cornish river inhabited by otters that flows through Wadebridge (5) |
| NODE | A swelling or "knot" in the state of a point of zero amplitude in a standing wave; a vertex or place of intersection; a lymph gland; a leaf's growth zone on a plant stem; or, an orbital point (4) |
| STRAPS | Narrow lengths of leather or cloth for binding hampers, steadying passengers on buses/trains or holding up brassieres, for example (6) |
| CRIB | Word for a wickerwork basket; a manger for fodder; an ox-stall; a cabin or a hovel; a child's bed or a baby's cot; or, a Nativity display or creche with a manger as a bed (4) |
| GUARDS | Fenders placed before open fires; watch chains; or, officials in charge of trains or, formerly, stagecoaches (6) |
| GROUP | A ___ of camels is known as a caravan, flock, train or herd. For example, when travelling in single file under human control they form a caravan or train. When unorganized and on their own, a herd. |
| SHREWS | Mammals in an order with moles and hedgehogs that form "caravans" or conga lines behind their mothers and eat their bodyweight in food each day (6) |
| TENTS | Portable or temporary shelters known collectively as a caravan; or, webs spun by a company of caterpillars (5) |