| RETEL | Juniper in the Old Testament |
| RETEM | Old Testament juniper |
| THOMPSON | Author who fictionalised her birth hamlet Juniper Hill in Oxfordshire as Lark Rise in her Lark Rise to Candleford trilogy of semi-autobiographical novels (8) |
| CADE | A species of juniper; or, the leader of a revolt whose rebellion was dramatised by Shakespeare in Henry VI, Part 2 (4) |
| MOSS | Glittering wood, pincushion, swan's-neck thyme, juniper haircap, feather... general word for a 400 million year-old bryophyte typically growing in ancient woodlands (4) |
| REDCEDAR | Any of several coniferous North American trees, especially the juniper Juniperus virginiana or the cypress Thuja plicata (3,5) |
| GIN | Word from the French for "juniper" |
| CISCO | Juniper rival, in Silicon Valley |
| GINTHEBEGINNING | First book in a series about juniper berries? |
| ENPLEINJOUR | Lone juniper shot in broad daylight near Mont Blanc? |
| CAJUN | In America, juniper comes from bayous. (5) |
| OBOE | Wind instrument in Donovan's "Jennifer Juniper" |
| JURA | Heads of juniper artist ground up in water (4) |
| UNRIPE | Green growth in the centre of junipers (6) |
| SALMON | Known during its life cycle as a fry, smolt or parr, a fish sometimes smoked in peat, sweet gale, heather or juniper (6) |
| EVERGREEN | Type of tree that photosynthesises during the winter ensuring persistently-verdant needles or leaves - pine, yew, juniper, fir or cypress, for example (9) |
| NOAH | Juniperus communis 'Compressa' is the ark juniper of this particular biblical character (4) |
| BERRIES | Term used loosely for the small round fruits of holly, juniper etc (7) |
| SABINA | Juniper |
| SAVINE | Juniper |