Harvest in Derbyshire, apparently (4)
I believe the answer is:
reap
'harvest' is the definition.
(I know that harvest can be written as reap)
'in derbyshire apparently' is the wordplay.
'in' indicates a hidden word.
'REAP' is hidden within 'derbyshire apparently'.
(Other definitions for reap that I've seen before include "'As you sow, so shall you . . . .'" , "Cut or gather (a harvest)" , "Use a scythe" , "Save harvest, glean" , "Cut and gather (crop)" .)