| CHESAPEAKEBAY | The largest inlet of the Atlantic on the US coast, which gives its name to a variety of retriever (10,3) |
| EAST | New York side of the US, ... Coast |
| LABRADOR | A powerfully built variety of retriever with a short, dense, usually black or golden coat (8) |
| SEABOARD | Geographical term often used to refer to the US coasts (8) |
| FAVERSHAM | Market town on the Kent coast, which until the 1930s was England's gunpowder centre (9) |
| STRANGFORDLOUGH | The largest inlet in the British Isles (10,5) |
| SEALOCH | Any long waterway on Scotland's west coast which connects to the ocean (3,4) |
| FIFE | County on Scotland's east coast which has 50 golf courses (4) |
| PARASOL | Form of sunshade which gives its name to a variety of mushroom |
| LUNDY | Island of North Devon which gives its name to a variety of cabbage (5) |
| SITKA | Alaskan city which gives its name to a variety of spruce |
| LENT | Religious observance in the Christian calendar that begins on Ash Wednesday, and which gives its name to a type of hellebore (4) |
| YELVERTON | Small town in Devon on the SW edge of Dartmoor which gives its name to a poem by Charles Causley |
| CHEDDAR | Somerset village which gave its name to a variety of cheese |
| TABASCO | Southeast Mexican state that gives its name to a variety of capsicum (7) |
| SUMATRA | Indonesian island which gives its name to one of the five species of extant rhinoceros (7) |
| CHABLIS | Town in the Burgundy region of France which gives its name to a dry white wine (7) |
| RHODE | Island in Narragansett Bay which gives its name to the smallest state in the US (5) |
| GALLOWAY | Region of southwest Scotland which gives its name to a breed of black hornless cattle (8) |
| AMPHORA | Ancient jar/jug with handles "borne on both sides", which gives its name to a breathy sound like blowing in a bottle (7) |