Greener Cuckfield

Greener Cuckfield and the Weald to Waves project

By Nicky Holbrook (Greener Lindfield), Amy Hurn (Gardens & Greenspaces Coordinator, Knepp Wildland Foundation), and Will Faas (Greener Cuckfield)

Our local nature needs your help to survive and thrive! Do you have a green space that you look after - your garden, balcony, school field, allotment etc? Could you pledge some of this to nature recovery? Without swift action, we will continue to see a fall in the diversity and abundance of nature across the UK and the loss of all the ecosystem services they provide.

The good news is that we can reverse this trend and we can ALL make a difference. Beneath our patios and goalposts and all our gardens are part of ancient ecosystems which can provide crucial stepping stones for pollinators, small mammals, amphibians and birds.

Here in Sussex Weald to Waves is a great project coordinated through the Knepp Wildland Foundation to create an initial 100-mile nature friendly corridor from the High Weald and Ashdown Forest, through the Low Weald and over the South Downs National Park, along the river catchments of the Arun, Adur and Ouse to the coast at Climping, Shoreham and Newhaven and out to the kelp forests of Sussex Bay (see map). Its ambition is to tie together a wide community of land managers and owners, farmers, conservation organisations, councils, schools, businesses, local community groups and individuals working for nature recovery across Sussex.

The Weald to Waves project is mapping and supporting efforts of all sizes and is a leading national example of how nature’s recovery can coexist and support sustainable food production alongside our cultural and social lives. The nature recovery corridor will enhance habitats and support species, allowing our wildlife to survive and thrive across our local areas. Key to this success is engaging and connecting people and communities across Sussex by creating new opportunities to understand enjoy and protect nature.

We can all be part of this great project as last year Weald to Waves launched their Gardens & Greenspaces project. Everyone in Sussex can register and pledge their green space and you can contribute to extending this nature friendly corridor right now! This doesn’t mean abandoning your gardens but rather working with nature. The ambition is to create something truly remarkable; a community-led nature corridor extending across Sussex which will demonstrate landscape-scale recovery in action.

Our gardens are important because they make up the largest block of land in the Weald to Waves corridor. When we add in our parks, playgrounds, allotments, balconies and verges, this amounts to more land than Ashdown Forest!

When you register and pledge your green space, with your agreement, it will appear as a dot on a digital map. Wouldn’t it be fantastic to start linking up dots all over West Sussex? Could you leave a hole under a fence, plant some climbing plants or a native tree so nature can fly, jump and scurry between nature friendly spaces?

Signing up to the Gardens and Greenspaces project will offer you ideas and practical guidance for nature recovery, as well as opportunities to connect with others, share knowledge and experience. You will learn about species and habitats and can take part in monitoring and recording what we have outside our back doors.

So are you involved with a school playground, a scout hut, community orchard or an allotment group? Are you part of a community group managing green space such as a churchyard, burial ground or a community garden? Are you a gardener trying to make changes in your garden or window box? The Weald to Waves Garden & Greenspaces project urges you to SIGN UP and PLEDGE your space. Let’s link up with different communities across Sussex.

To read more and sign up, go to the ‘Get Involved’ page on the Weald to Waves website www.wealdtowaves.co.uk Information on Greener Cuckfield can be found at www.greenercuckfield.org or email greenercuckfield@ gmail.com.

Greener Cuckfield's Small Steps, Big Changes this November 2022

Greener Cuckfield

Earlier this year our local sustainability group Greener Cuckfield had their first annual general meeting. In retrospect, it was a good event and the results of the election saw the committee retain their seats for another year. There was a lot of positivity in all of the annual reports. Highlights included news of our first grant award and an expansion for our recycling hub at The Queen’s Hall. The hub is now collecting four different plastic waste streams.

Since our annual general meeting, our recycling team has created posters to display all of the sorts of plastic waste that they will now collect from the bins at The Queen’s Hall. They have also launched an information page on our website that can be accessed here: www.greenercuckfield.org/recycling One item that will no longer be accepted is milk bottle tops from 1st December. This might sound like bad news but actually it is happening because you can now put milk top bottles in your blue recycling bins at home as long as they are screwed onto the empty bottle.

We also want to share our most exciting news. Greener Cuckfield are hosting a great event this month called Small Steps, Big Changes. This will be held on 17th November at the Village Hall on London Lane (aka Cuckfield pre-School). Doors will open at 7.15pm and will run from 7.30pm to 9pm. The talks will be short but informative and there will be something for everyone. Speakers include an expert in the field of culinary medicine and a Cuckfield-based sustainable energy specialist. Although entry is completely free, we would ask that you reserve your seats so we can get a good idea of how many people are coming. If this interests you, please go to www.bit.ly/3FLtRI2 to save your seat.

Recycle crisp packets at the Queen's Hall thanks to Greener Cuckfield

Cuckfield-recycle-crisp-packets.jpg

In late 2019, a few like-minded people in the village decided to get together to provide a place for local ‘green’ initiatives to unite under one umbrella to help Cuckfield become a more sustainable community. Now nearly 20 people strong and growing, Greener Cuckfield has just launched its first programme: a scheme to give more recycling options to the village. The group conducted a poll a few months ago to find out what materials people most wanted to recycle and the top vote was for: crisp packets! Over 6 billion packets of crisps are consumed in the U.K. each year, most of which ends up in landfill sites or blowing in the wind.

Working in co-operation with Terracycle, a global leader in recycling hard-to-recycle materials, the first bins have been placed in the Queen’s Hall (for public use, in the entrance hall next to the food bank bins) and another in the Village Hall entrance hall (for hirers’ use only). People can collect up their crisp packets and drop them in whether on their daily dog walk, on their school run, or while making use of the post office counter.

Over the next couple of months, more bins will be rolled out in some of our pubs and other public places. Not only will the bins help in cutting waste and keeping our streets tidy, but they will also raise bit by bit funds for us to do more to make Cuckfield a more sustainable place.

The group would love to hear from anyone who would like to help make Cuckfield a more sustainable, environmentally friendly place to live and should contact Vicky Koch at vicky@iamkoch.com.