| BETONY | Plant formerly grown in monastery gardens for its remedial qualities (6) |
| INDIGO | Plant formerly grown as a source of dark blue dye (6) |
| WOAD | Isatis tinctoria, formerly grown in Britain and elsewhere as a source of blue dye (4) |
| SWEETPEA | Twining plant cultivated in cottage or cutting gardens for its fragrant butterfly-shaped pastel flowers (5,3) |
| RAMPION | Common name of a violet bellflower traditionally cultivated in English kitchen gardens for its turnip-like roots, Campanula rapunculus (7) |
| JUJUBE | Fruit of a Eurasian plant, formerly taken as a cure for coughs (6) |
| LAVABO | Hot stuff with bad smell in trough in monastery (6) |
| ABBACY | Swedish group vacating cosy office in monastery (6) |
| OBLATE | Old boy behind layperson in monastery (6) |
| HABITS | Good ones are bearable in monastery (6) |
| FRIARY | Cook using fresh air in monastery (6) |
| PRIORY | Earlier youth leader in monastery (6) |
| DAYBED | Time in the garden for one of those taking it easy in the afternoon, for instance (3,3) |
| WATERS | Maintains a garden for women with wild aster (6) |
| COMMON | Public space or garden for the ordinary (6) |
| OLEANDER | Dogbane family plant - it's been grown in gardens for years despite its poisonous leaves and irritan |
| HATTON | London garden for diamond merchants (6) |
| ARENAS | The United Center and Madison Square Garden for example |
| SCYTHIANLAMB | Barometz plant, plant formerly supposed to be also animal (8,4) |
| ASARABACCA | Low-growing, perennial, evergreen plant formerly used as an ingredient in snuff (10) |