| DELPHINIUM | Tall plant also known as larkspur (10) |
| HOLLYHOCK | Tall plant also called rose mallow (9) |
| STAVESACRE | Southern European larkspur; at crevasse (anagram) |
| COWPARSLEY | A tall plant used in traditional medicine, also known as wild chervil (3,7) |
| SUNFLOWERS | Tall plants with bright yellow heads (10) |
| LADYORCHID | Tall plant of Europe and North Africa with spikes of purple and white flowers (4,6) |
| LARCHTREES | Tall plants shelter car in storm (5,5) |
| PURPLE | Colour in larkspur, pleasing |
| URAL | Some larkspur, a lovely flower |
| PEACOCKBLUE | Color similar to larkspur |
| BLUE | Like larkspur |
| NIGELLA | Genus of the devil-in-a-bush or love-in-a-mist that shares its family with the buttercup, granny's bonnet, larkspur and queen of poisons (7) |
| HYACINTH | From an old word for a blue gem thought to be an aquamarine or a sapphire, a larkspur that sprang from the blood of a lover of Apollo; a pink, purple, violet or white liliaceous spring flower; or, cin |
| JULY | With symbols including delphinium/larkspur, Leo, oak, ruby and water lily, a month originally called Quintilis, during which its eponymous calendar-devising Roman general, Caesar, was born (4) |
| CONSOLIDA | Genus of delphinium-like larkspur - I put in cool sand, perhaps (9) |
| ANGELICA | Tall plant whose crystallized young stems are used as cake decoration (8) |
| BABYSBREATH | Tall plant with tiny white or pink flowers |
| PALMTREE | Tall plant that produces coconuts: 2 wds. |
| MEADOWSWEET | Tall plant of the rose family |
| FOXGLOVE | Tall plant with bell-shaped (usually purple) flowers (8) |