| STROLLED | Took a walk of a sort, to the valley and back (8) |
| VANISH | Leading group of a sort to disappear (6) |
| IPSOFACTO | Topics, of a sort to be proved (4,5) |
| LOPE | The strange walk of a Pole (4) |
| PLOD | The weary walk of a policeman? |
| SWAGGER | Walk of a very confident or arrogant person (7) |
| REEDUS | Norman _, Walking Dead actor with a Walk of Fame star (6) |
| RODEODRIVE | California street with a Walk of Style |
| LASSIE | Dog with a Walk of Fame star |
| ATHLETIC | Name applied to the football teams who play at The Valley and The DW Stadium (8) |
| OSTRACOD | Crustacean, a sort to swim alongside fish (8) |
| ALLEYWAY | Why double-take? We all took a walk (8) |
| DORDOGNE | French department between the Loire Valley and the Pyrenees (8) |
| COROT | French painter of Italian landscapes including The Bridge at Narni, Peasants Under the Trees at Dawn, The Oak in the Valley and Evening on the Lake (5) |
| ALLUVIUM | Sediment deposited by flowing water, especially in the form of fertile soil in river valleys and deltas (8) |
| NUNEATON | Midlands town that had Trent Valley and Abbey Street stations (8) |
| BELLS | Shapes of campanulas, fritillaries, lilies of the valley and other flowers (5) |
| BLUEBELLS | English -; fragrant flowers of ancient woodlands forming violet carpets under shady canopies in spring, often with ferns, lilies of the valley and ramsons (9) |
| VIADUCTS | Bridges over valleys and ravines |
| WHITE | Patrick -; Nobel Prize-winning author of novels including The Eye of the Storm, A Fringe of Leaves, Happy Valley and The Tree of Man (5) |