| BLANDA | Anemone - - - - - - or wood anemone often naturalised under trees (6) |
| VIOLET | Growing in Cornish quillets or wildly among wood anemone and lily of the valley, February's birth flower and one of the earliest native plants to bloom (6) |
| BLOWER | Phone left in shady place under trees (6) |
| CROCUS | From the Latin meaning "saffron yellow", a flowering corm forming a drift in a naturalised lawn, woodland, alpine meadow or under a deciduous tree (6) |
| SPURGE | Plant with yellow/green flowers, thriving under trees - does grow up oddly (4,6) |
| SEDGES | Grass-like plants... in naturalised gesneriads (6) |
| MEADOW | Naturalised area that might contain cowslip, yellow rattle etc. (10,6) |
| PLANET | Earth perhaps beginning to tremble under tree (6) |
| PALMER | Golfer showing hesitation under tree (6) |
| ASHRAM | Retreat as sheep hiding under tree (6) |
| YOUBET | Stake put under tree reportedly? Certainly (3,3) |
| TERROR | Monkey's mistake, sheltering under tree top |
| LUPINE | Originally living under tree, like a wolf |
| KOALAS | Down Under tree climbers |
| WILDFLOWERS | Plants growing naturally and forming an intrinsic part of the ecosystem of woodlands, meadows and country lanes such as bluebells, cowslips, ramsons, wood anemones or violets (4,7) |
| BOWER | An anchor at the front of a ship; a shady recess under trees in a garden or woodland; a picturesque country cottage or summerhouse; or, from "farmer", a jack in euchre or 500 (5) |
| MUSCARI | Latin or botanical name of the grape hyacinth, a spring flower related to bluebells, often planted in garden borders, vintage pots or under trees (7) |
| DRIFT | Set of fishing nets; or, a blanket of daffodils or snowdrops growing together, often under trees (5) |
| CELANDINE | A wood anemone-like plant that was William Wordsworth's favourite flower (9) |
| POLYP | An individual sea anemone or coral (5) |