| PARKS | Pleasure grounds surrounding country houses and constituting private estates; zoos; or, gardens or green spaces for public recreation (5) |
| LUTYENS | Edwin -; architect who designed the Cenotaph in Whitehall, a number of country houses and much of New Delhi (7) |
| SPARKS | Electrician originally serving private estates |
| KRILL | From Norwegian for "small fish fry", a micro crustacean forming one of Earth's largest biomasses and constituting the principal food of the largest living animal, the blue whale (5) |
| CHIMERICAL | Country without energy surrounding country without leader? That's fanciful (10) |
| FUN | The ruffian disrupted a function on the pleasure grounds (3,4) |
| FAIR | The ruffian disrupted a function on the pleasure grounds (3,4) |
| FRAGRANCE | Scent in tune with surrounding country (9) |
| GARDENS | Pleasure grounds (7) |
| POLICIES | Scottish word for the enclosed grounds surrounding a mansion (8) |
| LEWES | Grounds surrounding West Sussex market town (5) |
| CACTUSES | Plants grounds surrounding court (8) |
| PARK | Large public garden; a pleasure ground or private estate surrounding a large country house; or, a piece of land kept in its natural condition as a nature reserve (4) |
| PLACE | Word for an English country house and its grounds; a market square; or, a top race position (5) |
| SEAT | Country house and estate of an aristocratic or distinguished family; or, one's posture on a horse (4) |
| SENSORY | These types of plants and/or gardens are the subjects of this week's Miscellany! (7) |
| PRODUCE | Crops or natural goods harvested from farms or gardens collectively (7) |
| TIERS | Layers or levels of a cake, buildings or gardens etc. (5) |
| EDGINGS | Fringes, herbaceous strips, trimmings or other ornamental borders outlining garments or gardens (7) |
| ORANGERY | Glasshouse for citrus trees, bromeliads, orchids, azaleas and other exotic plants, such as that in Kew Gardens or the gardens of the Palace of Versailles (8) |