| COCA | It's cultivated in the Andes |
| THISTLE | Prickly plant? It's cultivated in fancy hotel nothing less (7) |
| POTATO | Solanaceous plant first cultivated in the Andes for its edible tubers about 1,800 years ago (6) |
| OCA | Tuber cultivated in the Andes |
| EDDO | Plant of the arum family, also called taro, widely cultivated in the islands of the Pacific for its edible rootstock |
| ACKEE | Tree of the soapberry family native to West Africa cultivated in the Caribbean for its fruit (5) |
| NUTMEG | East Indian tree widely cultivated in the tropics for its aromatic seed (6) |
| TARO | Plant, also called eddo, cultivated in the tropics for its large edible rootstock |
| LIMA | --- bean, plant cultivated in the US for its flat pods containing pale green, edible seeds (4) |
| BYANDLARGE | Garden ably cultivated, in the main (2,3,5) |
| BASTILLEDAY | French holiday as cultivated in the gulf (8,3) |
| LAWN | Type of linen cultivated in the garden? (4) |
| ABELE | A poplar that is widely cultivated in the United States. |
| GRAPES | Fruits such as those cultivated in the appellation d'origine controlee wine regions of Provence (6) |
| TULIP | Line I found in upstanding place? It's cultivated among the Dutch (5) |
| OLIVETREE | It's cultivated for its oil-producing fruit |
| WHEAT | It's cultivated |
| SATISFACTORY | As it's cultivated, plant is suitable (12) |
| EYEWITNESSES | European tree? Sense it's cultivated for observers (12) |
| SESAME | Tropical plant of the East Indies cultivated in India for its small oval seeds (6) |