| SMOKES | Has a Camel |
| ELK | It has a camel's tail and a kangaroo's head! |
| HOWDAH | A seat on a camel or elephant; in 1859 stone mason John Watson carved pink sandstone into an elephant with a castle-shaped ___; the folly is now on a garden wall at Peckforton (6) |
| CARAVAN | Depicted in several paintings by Edwin Lord Weeks, generic name for a company of travellers journeying across a desert; or, a camel trainA (7) |
| TRAIN | A series of railway carriages; a camel caravan ; or, a cascade of material at the back of gown (5) |
| EYE | Hole in a needle, said to be "easier for a camel to go through ... than for a rich man to enter into the kingdom of God", according to the Gospels (3) |
| HUMP | From "lump of bread", word for a gibbosity on a camel or person's back, thus a fit of depression or the sulks, when one's back is up through annoyance or despondency (4) |
| STRAW | A peduncle of corn said to break a camel's back, be drawn in sortition or be clutched at by a drowning man; or, the golden-honey hue of said petiole (5) |
| FLORENCEOFARABIA | Movie about a woman on a camel |
| GNAT | Strain at a ___ and swallow a camel |
| HORSE | "A camel is a ___ designed by committee" |
| RIDER | Person on a camel or a horse |
| ALPACA | On the mountain, a camel? To a certain extent (6) |
| EYEOFANEEDLE | "It is easier for a camel to go through the ____ than for a rich man to enter the Kingdom of God" (Matthew 19:24) |
| SHIPOFTHEDESERT | Term for a camel travelling at a rate of knots? (4,2,3,6) |
| CLIMATE | It needs a camel to endure such a weather pattern (7) |
| ICESKATED | Did a camel spin... or maybe just gripped the edge of the rink really tightly while scooching forward one foot at a time |
| LLAMA | Call a man about a camel cousin (5) |
| DESERT | Habitat for a camel or a fennec fox |
| AMILE | "... ___ for a Camel" |