| COACHPARTY | Group going by train may alight in the park of a stately home (5,5) |
| BUSSTOP | One may alight here to put boss out (3-4) |
| LENOTRE | Depicted in Alan Rickman's film A Little Chaos, the French landscape architect who designed the park of the Palace of Versailles (2,5) |
| NADDER | Tributary of the River Avon that flows through the park of Wilton House (6) |
| AVIARY | One going by train is for the birds (6) |
| NIGHTRAIL | Some old dressing-gown used after dark, going by train? (5-4) |
| PARK | Grounds of a stately home; or, a green space in a city or town (4) |
| PETWORTH | Town in West Sussex, site of a stately home depicted in paintings and sketches by J. M. W. Turner (8) |
| ICEHOUSE | Before about 1920, an underground chamber or insulated building, possibly in the grounds of a stately home |
| CHATSWORTH | House a stately home near Bakewell in Derbyshire is the seat of the dukes of Devonshire |
| LOCALSTOPS | Some trains may pass them by |
| BANNISTERS | NB: Southeast Trains may be used for rail-flight connections (10) |
| OPERATIONS | Vital procedures interest group going on a spin (6,10) |
| HINTERLAND | Suggest queen alight in backcountry (10) |
| MOTHERLAND | Parent to alight in native country (10) |
| APPALOOSAS | Horses shock ducks - aggressive group going in? (10) |
| INFRINGING | Disobeying one far-right group going around (10) |
| RAISIN | From "bunch of grapes", one such a berry, traditionally dried, chocolate-dipped, prepared in mincemeat or set alight in the game snapdragon (6) |
| POPPINS | Statue in Ashfield Park of a character created by P. L. Travers (4,7) |
| VIADUCT | Structure by which a train may cross a valley (7) |