| CRAWS | Crops of a bird |
| MAW | The crop of a bird |
| CRAW | Crop of a bird or insect (4) |
| GORGET | From Old French for "throat", a piece of armour or part of a wimple worn to cover/protect the neck, hence a band of colour on the craw or crop of a hummingbird or other avian (6) |
| BUMPER | A big crop of a car part (6) |
| ROWEN | Second crop of a growing season |
| CASHEW | Crop of a kind we raise (6) |
| GORGE | Ravine such as that in Cheddar, Somerset; or, the crop of a hawk (5) |
| CORN | Word for the chief cereal crop of a district; or, something old-fashioned or hackneyed (4) |
| TRAINERS | Cordons, espaliers, trees, bushes or vines, but yielding bounties of Bramleys, crops of Conferences, gluts of grapes, harvests of honeydews or rich pickings of pippins; orchardists growing nature's ri |
| NUTTREES | A coppice, orchard, forest, garden, hedgerow or woodland's angiospermous arbors characterised by bearing crops of almonds, brazils, cashews, cobs, filberts, hazels, "noyers" or other edible kernels (3 |
| ORES | Crops of the pick? |
| YAMS | Staple crops of West Africa |
| SWITCHEARS | Rotate crops of corn? |
| THIN | It's time to ___ out heavy crops of apples, pears and plums (4) |
| ESTIMA | Popular potato producing heavy crops of large oval tubers with light yellow skin (6) |
| DOCKS | Crops of plants reputed to treat nettle stings (5) |
| FIELDOFBATTLE | It could produce a crop of casualties, of course (5,2,6) |
| YAM | The ___ festival celebrated in Ghana, Papua New Guinea, and Nigeria is named for a starchy tuber, which is a staple crop of the region |
| SCULPTURE | Small amount of phosphorus found in a crop of microorganisms and mould (9) |