
We are on the hunt for budding actors and actresses for this years’ Poynings Panto. We are holding a meeting at The Royal Oak on Thursday 8th September at 8:00pm so if you are interested taking part or helping out please come along. We are also inviting children and teenagers to join the dance troupe. Please contact Sandra Slinger on 01273 857146 (sandraslinger@gmail.com) or Nigs Digby (nigsdigby@aol.com) to put your name down and we will be in touch.
Latest News of Local Interest
Born between Sept 2012 and Oct 2013?
If you were born between September 2012 and the end of August 2013, congratulations on being able to read this! West Sussex County Council would like you to alert your parents of the application process for children due to start school in September 2017 which begins on Monday 3 October 2016. WSCC no longer sends individual letters to parents and has asking local organsations to spread the word.
- Apply online at www.westsussex.gov.uk/admissions
- Applications can be made between 3 October 2016 and 15 January 2017
- Special rules apply for house movers until 23 March 2017
- The Information for Parents booklet is available on WSCC’s website
- Further information is available by ringing 03330 142 903
Click the images below to find out more:
Planning Meeting – Wednesday 31st August 2016 6:30pm – Village Hall

Fulking Parish Council will hold a planning meeting at 6:30pm on Wednesday August 31st 2016 in the Village Hall.
SDNP/16/04029/FUL
Location: Oldwood, Clappers Lane, Fulking Henfield West Sussex BN5 9NJ
Proposal: Demolition of existing dwelling and erection of a replacement 4 bed house & garage.
Members of the Press and Public are welcome to attend.
Wide Load

A mobile home is to be driven up Clappers Lane from the village end to the Conifers site tomorrow, Tuesday 23rd August. Residents will need to remove any parked cars in order to allow access. Timing unknown.
The People of Beeding and Bramber in the Great War

Just published and available at £12 from local bookstores (including Steyning Bookshop, Henfield Museum, Steyning Museum and Beeding Newsagents). Diligent students of local government in Sussex will know that the Parish of Upper Beeding includes Edburton. This book thus covers all those listed on the Edburton & Fulking WWI memorial at St. Andrew’s and includes interesting biographical material on James Baker, Samuel Baker, William Baker, Charles Baldey, Arthur W. Brown, James E. Lucas, Elias Luff, Charles E. Sheppard and Richard Wearn.
Poynings bins seek asylum

Free to a good home (actually any home): two metal bins and one plastic bin. Contact Peter or Justine on 01273 857840 or email justine@hyp8ia.org.
[Although the art director and picture editor at fulking.net have made every effort to select an appropriate illustration for this post, they have not seen the bins in question and have no idea what they actually look like. As with all our posts, we thus disclaim any liability to any party for loss, damage, or disruption caused by mispresentation, errors or omission, whether such misrepresentation, error or omission results from negligence, accident, malign intent, or any other cause.]
On the market
In the 1930s, this site was where the village blacksmith’s shop stood. It was here that the farm and dray horses were shod and all the hardware (gates, hinges and wrought iron railings) for the Shepherd and Dog and the village houses were forged. It was originally part of the Bungalow Farm, known today as ‘Four Acres’ and it was later partitioned off from the farm as a separate property. The buildings comprised a wooden house with a corrugated iron roof and the oldest walls were constructed of horsehair, dried leaves and daub. Some of the original beams still form a feature of the interior of the house. An adjoining lean-to was fitted with a large, sliding door where carts were stored and behind this was a yard and stable.
Mr. Ernest (Ernie) Wingham, who kept cows off Holmbush Lane, occupied the house for many years. Ernie operated a milk round at the north end of Fulking. He also kept a stock of shotgun cartridges at the house and some of the older residents of the village can recall being sent to purchase these for their fathers’ guns. When Ernie later moved to Littledown Farm, he sold the property to the local builders, Ridge & Franks, who used the building to store their materials. They later rebuilt the property, converting it into a single dwelling and sold it. In the 1980s the site was enlarged to include an additional area of land to the east, which provided a garden and parking area. Parts of the old farm walls still survive as testament to the origins of this small cottage with its wonderful views south to the Downs.
Passages quoted from Anthony R. Brooks (2008) The Changing Times of Fulking & Edburton. Chichester: RPM Print & Design, pages 142-143.
Local Babysitter Available





