| SMIDGEN | Fly between poles a bit (7) |
| HANSARD | Difficult getting a couple of Poles a Parliamentary report |
| MIGRATE | Flamingos fly well and many flamingos ___ or regularly fly between the best food sources and nesting grounds |
| WASTREL | Walter Cook takes in Pole - a good-for-nothing (7) |
| SARACEN | An Arab in a contest between Poles (7) |
| NUMBERS | Book of grayling between poles (7) |
| NARROWS | Pointer between poles to small channel. (7) |
| NESTERS | Home-making birds perhaps use trees between Poles (7) |
| NOUGHTS | Zeros ought to be between poles (7) |
| NONSTOP | Continuously running between poles at first (7) |
| NEMESIS | I seem to wander between poles? That's fate |
| CHAIR | Office of a bishop or judge; a professorship; a sedan on poles; a prize at an eisteddfod; or, a general word for a seat derived from the Latin word "cathedra" (5) |
| ROD | Whether an angler's fishing-pole, a cane for a stroll or a Rock and Roll Hall of Fame singer of blue-eyed soul, it is a word or name synonymous with a stick for punishment or control (3) |
| LEDGER | A book or collection of financial accounts; a horizontal scaffolding pole; a slab; or, a sinker for fishing (6) |
| SPARKS | They fly between lovebirds? |
| ALLOTMENT | Traditionally measured in rods, perches or poles, a plot of land rented for use as a potager or for hen- or bee-keeping (9) |
| VANS | Covered wagons from outside Victoria, poles a part |
| TONS | To the Poles, a substantial amount (4) |
| LOLLIPOPLADY | Has a job crossing the road with a Pole - a sweet type even on bleak days (8,4) |
| ANODE | Here's a pole - a swell one! (5) |