Hurst ReThink

Hurst ReThink Community - The Big Hurst Jumble Trail

What better way to spend a spring Sunday than by enjoying Hurst village camaraderie as you stroll around the Big Hurst Jumble Trail? Echoing the success of similar events across the UK, this is our own first ‘go’ and with numbers of stallholders approaching 100, it is proving very popular.

How does it work? Jumblers are Hurst residents who are setting up a stall outside their homes with items they no longer need. Jumblers can decide to give things away, sell them (at Jumble sale prices in line with the spirit of the event) or both. Providing cakes is optional!

Jumblees are villagers who fancy a stroll around the village, taking in as many stalls as they can whilst looking for bargains… because there will definitely be bargains!

If you are hosting a stall, please email hurstjumbletrail@gmail.com with your address by 28th March to ensure you are on the trail list.

Jumblers and Jumblees a trail map will be available from 2nd April on our Facebook Group – The Big Hurst Jumble Trail; on village noticeboards; FB Groups Hurstpierpoint Hub and Hassocks & Hurst Reality.

Encouraging garden wildlife with Hurst ReThink

By Laurie Jackson

In May 2021, Hurstpierpoint fell silent, as gardeners took on the No Mow May challenge. Shunning the mower, we instead swapped for sightings of wildflowers and insects. Lots of you have since been in touch, to ask how else to help wildlife in your gardens, so we are sharing some ideas of simple actions that can have a big impact.

Flowers are your foundation, providing food for hoverflies, bees and butterflies. You can help by ensuring there are plants flowering from early spring into autumn. The rose, pea, mint, daisy and carrot families, with their varied flower shapes and sizes, are a great place to start, with double headed varieties and annual bedding plants best avoided, as they have little pollen and nectar.

A varied structure, where short areas flow into long grass, tall herbs and shrubs, provides layers of habitat including undisturbed areas, needed by everything from bumblebees to voles. Uncut seed heads fuel up hungry autumn birds, and hollow stems are a safe haven for insects to while away the winter.

Leaf litter and compost piles also offer refuge, as well as keeping organic material out of landfill, and recycling nutrients. ‘No-dig’ vegetable patches help repair soil structure and lock in carbon.

Chemicals disrupt the balance of a garden: giving an edge to competitive plants and indiscriminately stripping a space of insects, including pollinators. By giving up chemicals, our gardens can detoxify, and minimising light spill at night is another disturbance to try and limit.

Ponds are a valuable addition, quickly colonised by aquatic-life, and you may also want to provide further refuges for wildlife, such as hoverfly lagoons or bat boxes. Your patch is part of a network of gardens that can be linked together, and you could join forces with neighbours to provide a cluster of ponds for toads, or a hedgehog highway.

Whatever you do, we hope you enjoy spending time getting to know the species that visit. We want to find ways we can work as a community to tackle the biodiversity crisis: perhaps you would like Hurst to make a pesticide free pledge, you need advice on bee hotels, or you want to know more about identifying wildflowers. Tell us what action you would like to see and the questions you have at hurstrethink@gmail.com.