Pooh Country

The Home of A. A. Milne

By Darkwing, published Mar 14, 2007
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A. A. Milne, who wrote Winnie the Pooh, set his stories in and around a village, named Hartfield, which is in East Sussex, southern England.

Winnie the Pooh was first conceived when a soldier, Harry Colebourn, adopted and brought a black bear cub to England from Winnipeg, Canada, after its mother had been killed by hunters He bought the bear from the hunter which killed its mother, and took it to London Zoo for a long loan. Christopher Robin favoured this bear and spent many an hour in the cage, playing with it. The bear was named Winnie, as a shortened version of the place whence he came. So, the bear became Christopher Robin's inspiration for calling his own teddy bear Winnie.

I live in West Sussex and Hartfield is not too far away, about forty-five minutes drive, so my grandchildren often ask to go over to Pooh Country. When you arrive in the village, there is a shop called Pooh Corner, which sells all sorts of Pooh souvenirs, ornaments, colouring and notebooks, pencils, pens, trinkets, soft Pooh toys; just about everything you can think of to do with Winnie the Pooh and Friends. Down a few stairs, there is a small cafeteria where you can buy a cup of tea and a light snack, as well as ice cream in cones with teddy bears on them. You can also sit out in the garden, at picnic tables to drink your tea and eat your ice cream.

In the shop, you can buy Pooh Sticks, little sticks for racing under the bridge as the Pooh characters did in the books. Then, taking your sticks with you, walk a little way down the street and you come to some woods. You can walk right through the woods, to a little lane beside a farm, which leads way down into the valley, and Pooh Bridge. This is truly a magical place in May, when all the bluebells are out in the woodland beside the track, and bluebells and wood anemones on the banks of the stream. Adults and kids alike crowd the bridge, Pooh Sticks in hand, toss them into the water, then run to the other side, to see whose comes through first. This is a game that Christopher Robin, Pooh, Tigger, Piglet and co. used to play!

Takeaways
  • Winnie The Pooh
  • Pooh Bridge
  • A. A. Milne
Did You Know?
This is a magical place where children and adults alike, love to go and play Pooh Sticks all year round.
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