| DOCKLANDS | District surrounding a harbour (9) |
| PARISH | District surrounding a church (6) |
| SELECTOR | Someone who chooses the district surrounding the French (8) |
| MARINADES | They're cooked in a harbour by a guy (9) |
| ENTERTAIN | Log container crossing a harbour (9) |
| FAIRWAY | A smooth area of closely mown grass between a tee box and a green on a golf course; or, the main navigable channel in a harbour (7) |
| PORT | A city or town with a harbour; the harbour itself; or, in nautical terminology, the left side of a ship, opposite starboard (4) |
| NUN | A type of tapering marine buoy, marking the starboard side of a channel into a harbour |
| AORTA | A place with a harbour lacking parking and a main artery (5) |
| MOOR | Anchor a boat in a harbour |
| BUOY | A floating hazard marker in a harbour (4) |
| ATANCHOR | Moored like a boat in a harbour (2,6) |
| BOOM | A bar or chain stretched across a harbour (4) |
| GUANTANAMOBAY | Many a gunboat may be deployed to protect a harbour (10,3) |
| SEAPORT | General name for a town or city with a harbour, such as Bristol, Liverpool or Southampton (7) |
| PORTAL | For an imposing entrance to a harbour, take a left (6) |
| ELLESMEREPORT | Town with a harbour on the estuary of the River Mersey (9,4) |
| FERRY | A boat that takes passengers across a harbour or river (5) |
| TURNER | "Painter of light" whose famous 1842 oil on canvas, Snow Storm: Steam-Boat off a Harbour's Mouth, was dismissed by a critic of his day as "soapsuds and whitewash" (6) |
| NEWPORT | City changed with the addition of a harbour (7) |