| SPOTTERS | Hobbyists who observe birds, trains etc, or books used to identify the latter; A&R scouts; or, supervisors of weightlifters or gymnasts (8) |
| POTAGE | Call about books used to make hearty dish |
| HIDE | Covered structure from which to observe birds (4) |
| DRESSMAKER | Professional or hobbyist who might use tailor's chalk, pin cushion, seam unpicker, rotary cutter, thimble ... (10) |
| ROOST | Ned, a leading birdwatcher from Broadstone, has discovered a place where he can observe birds at night (5) |
| NOOB | Hobbyist who just started, in slang |
| SPOTTER | Person who observes birds, trees. planes, weather etc as a hobby or job, sometimes using a handbook or field guide of the same name (7) |
| TWITCHER | Informal term for one who observes birds as a hobby (8) |
| PHOTOGRAPHALBUM | A book used to hold personal photo shots (10,5) |
| AVESTAN | Persian 'birds' train regularly (7) |
| TAIL | A posterior extremity, such as a bird's train of feathers, a dog's flag, a fish's caudal fin, a fox's brush, an otter's rudder or a rabbit's scut (4) |
| TRADEMARK | The name or other symbol used to identify the goods produced by a particular manufacturer (9) |
| WEBS | Gossamer or silken nets with patterns that can be used to identify the spiders that spun them (4) |
| IDCARD | A card or badge used to identify the bearer (2,4) |
| GRID | - reference; system of numbers and letters used to identify the position of features on Ordnance Survey maps (4) |
| SHELLS | Outer layers of oological objects whose colours are used to identify the avians which laid them (6) |
| SPOT | Mark used to identify the species of ladybird eg. two___, seven-___, twentytwo-___, and so on (4) |
| CONNECTION | The opportunity or time to change buses, trains, etc. (10) |
| ALBUMS | Collections of songs on CDs, cassettes or vinyl records; or, books of stamps or photographs (6) |
| FARE | The price a passenger has to pay to take a bus, train, etc. |