| BOWNESS | Sawbones without a fracture, on Windermere shore (7) |
| SKIRUN | Risk fractures on a French Alpine slope? (3,3) |
| MARGINAL | Alarming fractures on the outside |
| WEIGHTLESS | A rowing team down on Windermere, initially floating (10) |
| FLAKE | A bit of snow starts freezing on Windermere (5) |
| SHIPLAKE | Vessel on Windermere, perhaps - or Oxfordshire village on the Thames Path (8) |
| SURGEON | Formerly, a 'sawbones' (7) |
| BREAKER | What gave the surf rider a 'fracture?' (7) |
| NATASHA | Woman's brown back has a fracture (7) |
| INACAST | Like an arm with a fracture that needs to heal: 3 wds. |
| DOCTOR | An old word for a teacher; slang for a ship's cook; a cool sea breeze in a warm country, thought conducive to health; a surgeonfish; a "sawbones" known to the Anglo-Saxons as a leech; brown sherry; or |
| SPLINT | A strip of wood for fire-lighting; a chip for basketry; a support for a fracture; or, a segment of armour (6) |
| BREAK | A pause for rest or refreshment; a fracture; the start of a horse race; the opening shot in snooker that scatters the balls; or, a golden opportunity (5) |
| FAULT | From "to deceive", a word for a lack or failing, such as a defect of character; an error; culpability; or, a fracture (5) |
| TIMEOFF | It's a break, but not a fracture (4,3) |
| HAIRLINE | With such a fracture, husband has a business getting up |
| ORS | Places for a sawbones to saw |
| CAST | There may be a fracture inside |
| XRAY | Hospital picture that may show a fracture: Hyph. |
| TRACTION | Use of weights and pulleys to heal a fracture (8) |