| ORCHARDS | Gardens for cultivating apple, pear and nut trees (8) |
| QUINCE | Fruit with fragrant flesh related to apple, pear and rose, used to make the manchego accompaniment membrillo (6) |
| ORCHARD | Garden for cultivating fruit trees (7) |
| CHAMBERS | George III's architect who designed the pagoda and orangery at Kew Gardens for Princess Augusta and the Royal Academy's first purpose-built home, Somerset House (8) |
| ARBORETA | Botanical gardens for trees (8) |
| ORANGERY | Garden building traditionally for cultivating citrus trees and exotic plants (8) |
| ESPALIER | With shapes including cordon, Belgian fence and candelabra, an apple, pear or fig tree trained to grow flat against a wall (8) |
| SKEWBALD | Scholar with limited extremes goes after south London gardens for the horse (8) |
| OLEANDER | Dogbane family plant - it's been grown in gardens for years despite its poisonous leaves and irritan |
| WINDFALL | Apple, pear etc blown off a tree by a gust; or, a piece of good fortune such as a sum of money received unexpectedly (8) |
| IMPERIAL | Pear and lime recipe from the Romans, say (8) |
| ROZENDAL | Zero land for cultivating vinegar (8) |
| DRAINAGE | Waste water system for cultivating gardenia (8) |
| SWEETPEA | Twining plant cultivated in cottage or cutting gardens for its fragrant butterfly-shaped pastel flowers (5,3) |
| BABYCHAM | Sparkling perry made with pears and soda water (8) |
| POMONA | The Roman goddess of fruit and nut trees |
| MAGS | House & Garden and Better Homes and Gardens, for short |
| ZOOLOGICALPARK | Unknown old couple stop and leave bottles hanging together in gardens for collection |
| TREES | Pear and apple, e.g. |
| CACTI | Prickly pear and stapelia, for example (5) |