| HEDGE | A row of shrubs, bushes or trees forming a boundary to a field or garden (5) |
| DRESS | Apply manure, fertiliser etc, to a field or garden (5) |
| FENCE | Barrier enclosing a field or garden (5) |
| REALM | A kingdom/royal domain; or, a field or sphere of study or action (5) |
| CLOSE | Word meaning near or humid that also refers to a small residential road, a field or a cathedral's precinct (5) |
| COPSE | Dense growth of bushes or trees (5) |
| TAMAR | River forming a boundary between Devon and Cornwall (5) |
| BLADE | Green part of a field, or what cuts it (as also shown in the circled squares) |
| SCRUB | Countryside that is covered with stunted bushes or trees (5) |
| SIGHT | ___ screen, it is placed near the boundary to help batter see the ball (5) |
| RIGHT | Opener finally hit out over leg boundary to show authority (5) |
| FLOUR | Batter's boundary to cross half-century (5) |
| GATE | Door to a field or garden (4) |
| GRAZE | Feed on grass in a field or pasture |
| LIMIT | Boundary / to restrict |
| RAVE | From "show signs of madness", a word for wildly enthusiastic praise; a fad, fashion or passionate infatuation; a lively dance party in a field or warehouse; or, the techno, trance or other electronic |
| BRANCH | Any one of a railway's minor or heritage lines; or, section of a tree forming part of a forest's canopy (6) |
| NOVICE | Person who is new to a field or activity (6) |
| HEDGELAYING | Method of training a closely planted row of shrubs to form an effective barrier (5,6) |
| ELM | English -; a once common species of tree forming part of the landscape of the British countryside, Ulmus procera (3) |