| HEDGEROW | Flora-rich border/habitat forming the landscape of the countryside, preserved though a traditional pleaching method advocated by the Prince of Wales (8) |
| HEDGE | Originally planted to divide land, a word linked with "row" for a bushy type of habitat forming the British countryside (5) |
| PICKLED | Preserved, though the worse for wear (7) |
| ORPHREY | Rich border hotel invested in gold quarry |
| MARSH | Habitat forming three per cent of the UK with other wetlands including bogs, reedbeds and fens, but home to around 10 per cent of all its species (5) |
| ELM | English -; a once common species of tree forming part of the landscape of the British countryside, Ulmus procera (3) |
| TRENCH | Ditch or channel such as any one of the rhynes forming part of the landscape of the Somerset Levels (6) |
| SCOTSPINES | Dominating the landscape of the Caledonian forests, national trees of a country whose other identifying symbols include thistle, tartan and the unicorn (5,5) |
| SPIRES | Rooftop structures forming the landscape of Oxford; flower spikes; or, tapering parts of tower-shells (6) |
| ACADIANS | The World Heritage site designated as the Landscape of Grand Pre, in Nova Scotia, celebrates the heritage of these French settlers of North America, some of whom became the Cajuns of southern Louisian |
| DALES | Valleys forming the landscape of Yorkshire, each typically named after their stream or river (5) |
| HEATHY | Comprising ling, gorse and bracken, habitats forming part of the natural landscape of areas such as the Quantock Hills or the New Forest (6) |
| CONSTABLE | Painter from Suffolk remembered for his landscapes of the English countryside including The Hay Wain, The Cornfield (The Drinking Boy), Dedham Vale and Salisbury Cathedral from The Bishops Ground (9) |
| OREGANO | Meaning "joy of the mountains" and related to marjoram, a fragrant herb carpeting parts of the landscape of rural Greece, used to flavour horiatiki with tomatoes, olives and feta (7) |
| LAKES | Watery bodies forming part of the landscape of a region associated with Wordsworth, Coleridge and Southey (5) |
| NEVIS | Ben -; munro dominating the landscape of Fort William which is the highest mountain in the British Isles (5) |
| MADEWARSHERE | In 2.2, Antony discusses the political landscape of the country with Caesar. He says, "Truth is that Fulvia, To have me out of Egypt," did something. What does he say she did? |
| WEB | An arachnid's trap to whose intricate network of threads the vast mind- and time-entrapping digital landscape of the internet is likened (3) |
| OASTS | Kilns for drying hops in the farm buildings that form a distinctive feature of the landscapes of counties including Kent, Sussex and Herefordshire (5) |
| RUBENS | Flemish painter whose landscape of a crisp autumn morning in Het Steen details his chateau with a charm of finches, covey of partridges, hunter and a stalking hound set in meadows, parkland, pasturage |