| ANNUAL | Many a garden flower |
| GREENHOUSE | Part of many a garden center |
| HOED | Like many a garden |
| WEEDS | Common bane of many a garden |
| GNOME | Many a garden figurine |
| AROSE | A garden flower moved out of bed (5) |
| ASTER | Revised rates for a garden flower (5) |
| SNAP | Word linking with "dragon" for a garden flower in shades of pink, peach, lemon and violet, Latin name Antirrhinum (4) |
| STOCK | The main stem of a garden flower is in store (5) |
| EASTER | After the end of wintertime a garden flower festival (6) |
| STAROFBETHLEHEM | Informally, Ornithogalum umbellatum, a garden flower with six slender petals, or another in the same genus (4,2,9) |
| TEAROSE | A typically fragrant hybrid garden flower with varieties including a whiter shade of pale, black beauty, freedom, ice cream, National Trust, peace and royal William (3,4) |
| NIGELLA | Genus of love-in-a-mist, a self-seeding cottage garden flower often appearing in paving or herbaceous borders (7) |
| HOLLYHOCK | Cottage garden flower Alcea, often lining a path or forming a border with alchemilla, aquilegia, delphinium, foxglove, honeysuckle, lupin, rose and other perennials (9) |
| PEONY | Garden flower ... or a coin with a "small change"? |
| WILDING | Word for a crab-apple tree, self-sown/seeded garden flower or other uncultivated plant growing naturally; an undomesticated animal; or, a restoration of nature (7) |
| RESEDA | Garden flower, or L.A. suburb |
| HYDRANGEA | Garden flower - garden hay (anag) (9) |
| IRIS | Garden flower sometimes known as a flag (4) |
| TOASTER | One proposing a salute to garden flower (7) |