Hailsham and the Pevensey Levels

The
accommodation is situated at the foot of the Pevensey Levels, just one mile
from the centre of the market town of Hailsham, which has a full range of shops
including the supermarket Waitrose. There is also a modern leisure centre offering
a full range of facilities including a fitness centre, and a swimming pool complete
with flume.
Hailsham also boasts its own restored Art Deco cinema which screens all the
latest films.
The
Pevensey Levels are 3500 hectares in size, and although some of the land is
given over to sheep and cattle farming, they are a designated SSSI (Site of
Special Scientific Interest), and have been declared the 134 th wetland of international
importance in the UK. Part of the Levels is a designated a Nature Reserve.
In
keeping with the conservation approach, landowners on the Pevensey Levels are
paid by English Nature to build gates, sluices, scrapes and fencing to protect
wildlife; they are also paid not to use fertilisers and chemicals.
This
careful management results in the Levels being home to 21 out of the UKs
28 species of dragonfly, and home to various rare beetles and molluscs. They
are one of only two sites in Britain where the Fen Raft Spider can be found,
and they support more than 70% of all the indigenous species of flowering water
plants.
There
are a considerable number of birds which can be seen or heard in or around the
Levels including Reed Warblers, Heron, Skylarks, Cormorants, Shags, Mute Swans,
Grebe, various species of geese, ducks, Moorhens, Coots, Lapwings, Snipe, the
Cuckoo, Owls, Kingfishers, Swallows, Swifts, Green and Great Spotted Woodpeckers,
Thrushes, Tits, Sparrows, Finches, and Buntings.
Obviously the Levels offer tremendous opportunities for walkers and bird watchers. In addition there are a number of lanes and tracks which cross the Levels which offer safe and quiet cycling.
The
village of Pevensey with its Norman castle and church is just five miles distant,
and Herstmonceux village and castle are four miles.
Other attractions within easy reach include the towns of Eastbourne (9 miles), Brighton (20 miles), Hastings (15 miles), Battle (7 miles), Lewes (16 miles), and Tunbridge Wells (20 miles).
For
cyclists the villages and lanes of East Sussex offer tremendous opportunities
for rides of any distance and level of difficulty. There are numerous tearooms
and pubs which offer excellent fare.
The
South Downs Way starts at Eastbourne, and there are also amazing views along
the coast, inland and across the Channel from walks along the Seven Sisters.
The
port of Newhaven is fifteen miles distant and from here in the summer months
a high speed catamaran offers a two hour trip to Dieppe.
For those who would like a guided cycle tour or walk this can be arranged at a reasonable cost.