| HORTUS | - siccus; Latin name for a type of annotated album of dried plants, also called a herbarium (6) |
| HERBARIUM | From Latin for "grass, green crops", a word for a systematically arranged hortus siccus, or "dried garden", of classified mounted preserved plants; or, the building, receptacle or room in which such a |
| PIECES | With "hortus", a "dry garden" of exsiccated plants, aka a herbarium (6) |
| PRESS | Juice-extracting device; or, one for flattening flowers for a herbarium (5) |
| POURRI | Pot-__, French term for a mixture of dried plants chosen for their scents (6) |
| ANKLET | A bracelet-like chain for the talus area of the leg; or, in the US, a name for a type of bobbysock (6) |
| CALTHA | A genus of plants, also called marsh marigolds, kept by local thatchers (6) |
| DATURA | Genus of poisonous flowering plants, also called thorn apple (6) |
| PROTEA | Genus of South African flowering plants, also called sugarbushes (6) |
| ACTAEA | Genus of plants also called baneberry - represented AAA, etc (6) |
| HOSTAS | Shade-tolerant plants also called plantain lilies, often thwarted by slugs (6) |
| ERICAS | Low-growing, acid-loving plants also called heaths (6) |
| PEPPER | Tropical plant also called a capsicum (6) |
| LOOFAH | Dried plant husk used for sloughing off dead skin (6) |
| ASIMOV | Author of 1980's "The Annotated Gulliver's Travels" |
| AGAVES | What are century plants also known as (6) |
| IRISES | Plants also known as flags (6) |
| ABBEYS | Monastic buildings with gardens or garths whose medieval examples often included bakehouses, beehives, breweries, herbariums, stew ponds, vineyards and warming rooms (6) |
| EDITED | Annotated |
| LYRICS | They're annotated on Genius |