Sunday 22nd June 2014, 11:00am–5:00pm: produce market, birds of prey, sheep shearing, heavy horses, bar and food court. Parking £5. More information here.
Category Archives: Sport and Recreation
Poynings Garden Fete
Please join us at the traditional village fete in the Rectory garden between 2:00pm — 5:00pm on Saturday 14th June, in aid of the fund that supports the general upkeep of our beautiful Norman Church. There will be games and stalls for all ages, Sally’s cream teas and cakes as well as maypole dancing, a puppet show and a raffle.
Ealthy Eating Evening
As part of Children’s Hospice Week, the Steyning Friends of Chestnut Tree House are holding a pizza and pop event on Sunday, June 22nd, at Steyning Cricket Club from 5:00pm until 10:00pm. There will be home-made, wood-fired pizzas served up with live music, games, pottery painting, face painting and a raffle. Tickets are £3 and under 16s go free. They are available from The Steyning Bookshop, or on 01903 812062.
Update 9th July: the Shoreham Herald reports that the event raised £800.
Tree Walk on Newtimber Hill
Newtimber Hill is an ancient woodland with more than ten native species of tree to hunt for and identify with the help of a National Trust Ranger. There are trees in this wood that are over one thousand years old alongside new growth.
Saturday, 5th July 2014, 10:30am–1:00pm, £3.00, booking essential. Details here.
South Downs Society walk
Thursday June 12th, 2014, led by Brenda Mann and Shirley Murrell. Six miles, some steep hills but taken at an easy pace. Meet at 10:30am at Newtimber Church, for coffee or tea. Walk up Wolstonbury Hill and then on to The Plough at Pyecombe for lunch, or bring a picnic lunch. Afterwards walk to Saddlescombe and return to Newtimber by 3:00pm.
The cattle upon a thousand hills
In view of a recent serious incident at the Dyke, local walkers may wish to bear the following NFU-approved Rambler guidelines in mind:
Do
- Try to avoid getting between cows and their calves.
- Be prepared for cattle to react to your presence, especially if you have a dog with you.
- Move quickly and quietly, and if possible walk around the herd.
- Keep your dog close and under effective control on a lead around cows and sheep.
- Remember to close gates behind you when walking through fields containing livestock.
Don’t
- Don’t hang onto your dog – if you are threatened by cattle, let it go as the cattle will chase the dog.
- Don’t put yourself at risk – find another way round the cattle and rejoin the footpath as soon as possible.
- Don’t panic or run – most cattle will stop before they reach you, if they follow just walk on quietly.
Memories of Devil’s Dyke
[The memoir that follows was written by Ken Browne (1923-2009), the eldest son of Albert Browne. Ken was born at the Dyke Hotel and later lived at Yew Tree Cottage.]
At the time, the hotel was regarded as a grand place, although it was lit with oil lamps and as children we had to take one of these or a candle to light our way to bed – something we found quite scary! There was a public bar, a saloon bar, a smoking room, a ladies room and my mother ran a tearoom at the western end of the hotel. It was very popular and people arrived in charabancs (forerunners of today’s coaches). These were quite a sight: they had solid tyres, every row of seats had its own door, the roof could be opened by the driver turning a handle (an exercise that took some five minutes to complete) and they had carbide headlamps. One event I remember well was a visit by the Duke of York [later King George VI] who, to mark his visit, ceremoniously unveiled a seat at the top of the steep, north slope of Devil’s Dyke.

There were three different ways to Poynings school from the Dyke and we nicknamed them Bridle, Chalky, and Grassy. Bridle path was a very gentle descent around the south side of the hotel. The Chalky and Grassy paths went down from the north side and when it was wet they were very slippery. It took us about half an hour to make our way to the foot of the Downs and then walk through Poynings village to the school. After school, the climb back up the hill took three quarters of an hour and was far more difficult (as you can imagine) and in winter it was dark by the time we got home. A few years later when my brother Vernon turned five there were three of us making the trip.

Saturday was always shopping day. We would walk to the Dyke Railway Station at about 8.30am — which was much easier than walking to school and more exciting. Mother’s return fare was eight pence and a return ticket for each child was four pence. The journey to Brighton took thirty minutes and as we got nearer to Brighton it became more exciting as we had each been promised a toy of some description. I wasn’t Mother’s pet but she knew that I wanted an aeroplane, that Irene wanted a doll, and that Vernon was happy to take ‘pot luck’.
My father was very strict, being a retired Army man who had served years in India, but we were a very happy family. I feel we were very fortunate to have lived at the hotel, with the fresh air and sunshine in summer and the snow in the winter.
When the Dyke Hotel was taken over by another brewery (I cannot remember the date this happened), we were obliged to move. My father found Yew Tree Cottage in Fulking, which had no electricity (there was no electricity anywhere in Fulking at the time). There were two hand pumps on The Street and we got our water from the one outside Fulking Farmhouse. The other pump was where the telephone kiosk now is and there was a drinking fountain opposite Laurel House.

War broke out in 1939 and my father rejoined the army almost immediately. I volunteered for the RAF at the age of 17, my sister joined the Army Training Services (ATS) and later, my brother Vernon was called up for the navy. Meanwhile, mother was then living at home with the newest and youngest member of the family — Gordon, who was born in Fulking.
Following my discharge from the RAF, I returned to France as a representative for British Petroleum (BP) and there I married a French girl I had met during my war service there. I was given a privileged residence Identity Card and stayed there for a few years. Later I obtained my pilots license and purchased my own plane, a Druine Turbulent, single seater, with a top speed of 85 knots. For some 26 years, I flew this regularly between France and a small private airstrip at Golden Cross in East Sussex.
Ken Browne, 2007
[Copyright © 2014, the estate of Ken Browne. This memoir first appeared in Anthony R. Brooks (2008) The Changing Times of Fulking & Edburton. Chichester: RPM Print & Design, pages 417-421.]
Corrected April 2016: date of Ken Browne’s death, with one other amendment.
Some other material relevant to the C19 and C20 history of the Dyke:
Events for children
- Saturday 24th May Children’s Parade
- Sunday 25th May Gillian McClure – author and illustrator
- Monday 26th May Family Fun Day – for children and adults
- Tuesday 27th May Making Stories: Children’s Creative Writing W/shop
- Wednesday 28th May Messy MAC
- Thursday 29th May Family Fun Afternoon at Croft Meadow
- Thursday 29th May Drop-in Craft Event at the Library
- Friday 30th May The Story of Little Red – puppet theatre
- Tuesday 3rd June Eleanor Hawken – author
- Thursday 5th June Jo Simmons – author
- Friday 6th June Adam Stower – author
- Saturday 7th June Julia Donaldson – author