| FOOTPATHS | Public rights of way for pedestrians through the countryside, national parks, mountains or farmlands, often with stiles or kissing gates (9) |
| STILE | Structure erected by landowners to provide public right of way to ramblers, now generally built as a |
| ESPLANADE | One of the Jasper National Park mountains on the Canadian $10 bill |
| ZEBRACROSSING | Striped right of way for pedestrians (5,8) |
| SHOOTS | Photographic sessions; emerging stems or buds; or, areas of woodland or farmland for hunting game (6) |
| LAPWING | Shore or farmland bird |
| SIGN | "YIELD RIGHT OF WAY," for one |
| FOOTPATH | Right of way for walkers |
| EASEMENTS | Property rights of way |
| NYMPHS | Mythical nature deities such as the anthousai of the flowers, dryads of the trees, oreads of the mountains or nereids of the sea (6) |
| TRAIL | Type of footpath through the countryside with long-distance examples including the Cotswold Way, Pennine Way, South West Coast Path and the Yorkshire Wolds Way (5) |
| BOTHY | Originally for itinerant farm workers, a cottage or hut in the Scottish Highlands, mountains or remote parts of Britain as a refuge or temporary dwelling (5) |
| RAMBLER | Person who enjoys ambulating through the countryside or over coastal paths (7) |
| RANGE | Series of mountains or hills; or, a type of stove such as an Aga (5) |
| ICECAPS | White peaks on the tops of mountains, or covering the poles (7) |
| PASS | Route through mountains; or. a hand movement of a mesmerist, magician or prestidigitator (4) |
| PERMANENT | The kind of way for making tracks (9) |
| LEVELCROSSING | Meeting of ways for sticky fixer in the French grass (5,8) |
| CORNFLOWER | Blue bloom found in meadows and arable farmlands; a French symbol of remembrance sometimes worn as a buttonhole by the Prince of Wales (10) |
| NATURE | ____ trail, a path through the countryside usually with signposts (6) |