Cuckoo Trail

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The Cuckoo Trail

The Cuckoo Trail is a 14-mile footpath and cycleway in Sussex: it runs through the Weald, from Hampden Park to Heathfield, and on the way it passes through the towns of Polegate and Hailsham, as well as such villages as Hellingly and Horam.

The trailheads are:

History

The Trail largely follows the route of a disused railway line, the Cuckoo Line, which opened in 1880 and ran between Eridge and Polegate railway stations, creating a direct route between Eastbourne and London. It obtained its name from the tradition that the first cuckoo in Spring was heard at the Heathfield Fair.[1] The line closed in 1968 under the Beeching Axe, a drastic, national programme of railway closures put forward by the British Transport Commission Chairman Richard Beeching (who was himself a local man, from Forest Row).

In 1981 the route of the old railway line to the south of Heathfield was purchased by two local councils.[2] From 1990 Sustrans developed the route along with District Council and the County Council into a shared track for walkers and cyclists, with horses also allowed on some sections. An extension was constructed to the south into Eastbourne and the trail became part of National Cycle Network Route 21. The Trail is currently used by around 200,000 people a year and serves as a traffic-free route between several local schools.

Along the route of the Trail are six original sculptures which act as mileposts. In May 1993 a dozen wooden benches were installed which had been hand-carved by a local artist out of trees felled during the Great Storm of 1987.[2] In 2003 a five-year £65,000 package of grants for improvements to the Cuckoo Trail was awarded as part of the Woodland Grant Scheme. Part of these funds went towards the resurfacing of the Trail as far as Heathfield in October 2006.[3]

Extension north

As of 2008, the Cuckoo Trail remains incomplete. The remaining section of the disused railway line north of Heathfield is largely inaccessible and in the ownership of 12 different individuals who have resisted attempts to establish a path/cycleway over their land.[4] Until 1986, the highways authority owned eleven miles of the Cuckoo Trail to the south of Mayfield but, seeking to reduce expenditure, it abandoned the idea of reopening it as a public footpath, and parcels of land were sold off in a piecemeal fashion.[5]

The trail has therefore been re-routed from Heathfield over nearby roads, diverging from the railway alignment to join the A265 at Mutton Hall Hill before heading north on Newick Lane through Mayfield town centre. That route caused controversy amongst local residents.[4]

The inability to extend the trail north means that it cannot reach Groombridge and link with the Forest Way, another footpath and bridleway following the route of a disused railway line. Numerous reports have been prepared which identified various routes which would connect with the Forest Way, from a Sustrans report in 1995, to three Owen Williams reports in 1998 and 1999, and finally an Atkins feasibility study in 2006, which confirmed that reusing the old railway line would be the best way forward, with the alternative on-road route as a short-term means of access to Groombridge.[6]

As part of the extension north, the 265-yard Heathfield Tunnel was repaired and restored in 1997,[7] Gates were fitted to the tunnel in 1999 at a cost of £22,000 which allowed access to be restricted to daylight hours. Access became unrestricted from 2002 but certain unsavoury incidents over the following years eventually led to the apparently permanent closure of the tunnel.

Location

Outside links

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about Cuckoo Trail)

References

  1. Wealden District Council, "The Cuckoo Trail".
  2. 2.0 2.1 "The Cuckoo Trail" Template:Webarchive
  3. Kent and Sussex Courier, "Smooth finish to work on cycle trail", 14 October 2006.
  4. 4.0 4.1 Kent and East Sussex Courier, "New plans to extend Cuckoo Trail", 4 July 2007.
  5. White, H.P. (1987). Forgotten Railways: South-East England (Forgotten Railways Series). Newton Abbot, Devon: David & Charles. p. 178. ISBN 0-946537-37-2. 
  6. Atkins National Cycle Network Route 21: Northern Extension Feasibility Study, 2006. Template:Webarchive
  7. Heathfield Tunnel forgottenrelics.co.uk