| CABLECAR | Suspended carriage used as a form of transport up mountains or across valleys (5,3) |
| SALOON | A luxurious railway carriage used as a lounge or restaurant or as private accommodation (6) |
| CARNIVAL | Fair type of transport up north for most of the glen (8) |
| CONVALESCE | Rest recovering from cold, once across valleys (10) |
| VIADUCT | Road/rail bridge across valley |
| LEARJET | Mode of transport up to Nova Scotia in #96-Across: |
| CAUSEWAY | A raised path or road through a marsh or across water (8) |
| SEACABIN | A form of transport for hire in the Seine mostly with room on board (3,5) |
| QUATRAIN | Queen needs a form of transport, something poetic |
| SKILIFTS | If put in second gear in Highlands, they'll take people up mountains (3,5) |
| DIAMETER | The measure through or across (8) |
| CAISSONS | Carriages used at presidential funerals |
| BROCK | British name for a badger used as a form of address in stories (5) |
| BOTHY | Originally for itinerant farm workers, a cottage or hut in the Scottish Highlands, mountains or remote parts of Britain as a refuge or temporary dwelling (5) |
| RANGE | Series of mountains or hills; or, a type of stove such as an Aga (5) |
| GROWL | Vocalisation used as a form of communication by canines and felines (5) |
| STOCKS | Devices once used as a form of punishment by public humiliation (6) |
| FORMICACID | Chemical used as a form of defence by many ants |
| BELTS | Strips or leather or other materials worn around the waist or across the chest to retain or support clothes or to carry a weapon |
| NYMPHS | Mythical nature deities such as the anthousai of the flowers, dryads of the trees, oreads of the mountains or nereids of the sea (6) |