Located just over an hour's drive from London, Ashdown Forest is the largest free public access space in the south east of England. The forest is an area of outstanding natural beauty and as such, has protection status for its wildlife - deer, sheep and birds
Over two thirds of the land is heathland and there is varied landscape including some spectacular views over the Sussex countryside.
There's a Forest Centre, which acts as an information centre for visitors as well as being a venue for exhibitions of paintings and drawings of the local area as well as special events.
However, Ashdown Forest is perhaps most famous for being the setting for A.A. Milne's stories about Winnie the Pooh. In Christopher Milne's autobiography, he wrote that "Pooh's Forest and Ashdown Forest are identical"
Fans of the little bear of small brain and his friends come to visit the forest to wander round and find the site of the North Pole and 100 Acre Wood. There's a link to a map detailing the special places in the books though they're not signposted within the forest.
Of course no visit to Ashdown Forest would be complete for Pooh friends without a visit to Poohsticks Bridge where you can play Poohsticks just as they did in the book
Incidentally, Christopher Milne's original toys on whom the characters in the books were based went on tour and ended up in the New York Public Library, where they now live (except for Roo who mysteriously disappeared).
A must for any Winnie the Pooh fan! read more