| NERINE | Plant related to the amaryllis, grown as a garden or pot plant for its beautiful, bright flowers (6) |
| SCHEFFLERA | Evergreen tropical shrub widely grown as a pot plant for its decorative foliage (10) |
| NERINES | Plants in a genus related to the amaryllis, including Guernsey lilies |
| CYCLAMEN | Colourful garden or pot flower |
| GAZEBO | Summerhouse or belvedere built at height to provide a central vista of a garden or landscape (6) |
| DURHAM | City on the Wear, known for its beautiful Norman cathedral (6) |
| SAVORY | Summer -; grown as a companion to broad beans, one of the culinary plants used for herbes de Provence (6) |
| CRINUM | Any of various plants of the Amaryllis family, characterised by luxuriant clusters of lily-like flowers (6) |
| SCAPE | The cry of a snipe when flushed; the snipe itself; an old word for a getaway, slip or transgression; a suffix indicating a scene, as in land, moon or sea; or, the leafless flower stem of the amaryllis |
| DAHLIA | Garden plant with bright flowers (6) |
| SCRUMP | To steal fruit from a garden or orchard (6) |
| ALSIKE | White or pink-flowered clover grown as a forage crop (6) |
| INDIGO | Plant formerly grown as a source of dark blue dye (6) |
| RADISH | Salad plant - genus raphanus - grown as a peppery tuber (6) |
| LEGUME | U.S. writer consumes sticky stuff, plant grown as a crop (6) |
| GROTTO | Imitation cave in a garden or park (6) |
| PRIVET | Shrub commonly grown as a hedge (6) |
| PROTEA | South African plant with large, bright flower heads (6) |
| ROCKET | Eruca sativa, grown as a salad vegetable in Italy since Roman times |
| PRETTY | It's beautiful in Nice (6) |