| BASKETS | Wicker or willow |
| CANES | Female weasels; stems of blackberry, raspberry or loganberry plants; or, strips of wicker or rattan that are woven in basketry (5) |
| CANE | Stem of a raspberry plant or bamboo, wicker or rattan when used for furniture/baskets (4) |
| SKEP | Round farm basket of wicker or wood. |
| TOMTITS | Birds such as the milk-bottle-top-pecking cerulean "billy biters", nuns or pick-cheeses forming "banditries"; or, their bearded, coal, crested, great, long-tailed, marsh or willow cousins (7) |
| BASSINET | French for a baby's carrycot-like cradle of woven wicker or straw (8) |
| BEEHIVE | Made of wicker or twisted straw, what is a skep? (7) |
| CHARCOAL | Burnt vine or willow twig used as a medium for drawing, often with a blending stump or tortillon (8) |
| CARR | In Britain, an area of marshland or copse, especially of alder or willow (4) |
| TEEN | Buffy or Willow |
| TREE | Maple or willow, for example |
| CATKIN | Flowering shoot of hazel or willow (6) |
| PATTERN | Paisley or willow, say (7) |
| TIT | Lead-in for mouse or willow |
| HURDLES | Galvanised, wooden or willow moveable barriers used to make temporary pens for livestock (7) |
| PUTCHERS | Conical basketwork traps of hazel or willow, traditionally used for catching salmon (8) |
| SGOOSE | A black, dusky, hazel, red, ruffled, sage, spruce or willow game bird that is small and plump, yet its name derives from the Latin word for the tall slender long-legged bird, the crane (6) |
| MUSK | Salix aegyptiaca - Persian or - - - willow with purplish-red shoots (4) |
| TREES | Plants such as pines or willows |
| SPODE | English potter credited with perfecting bone china and underglaze transfer printing for fine tableware, including his own range, patterned with animals and birds of the British woodlands, blue Italian |