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Jun 23, 2026
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Poppet: The Purple Shapeshifter Bringing New Magic to Winnie-the-Pooh's Forest

AI Summary
A purple, psychedelic shapeshifter named Poppet has been introduced to Ashdown Forest for the Winnie-the-Pooh centenary celebrations. The puppet, created by designer Jack Irving and operated by 10 award-winning puppeteers, aims to reconnect children with nature while celebrating the 100th anniversary of A.A. Milne's beloved stories.

The Lead: A New Resident in the Hundred Acre Wood

The rolling idyll of heath and forest that inspired Winnie-the-Pooh now welcomes a fantastical new resident: Poppet, a purple, psychedelic shapeshifting creature with a tubular nose and adder-inspired eyes. This remarkable puppet is performing for schoolchildren in Ashdown Forest, East Sussex, as part of the Big One Hundred celebrations commemorating a century of A.A. Milne's beloved stories that helped preserve this vital natural landscape.

The Event Details: A Century of Celebration

Poppet, brought to life by a team of 10 award-winning puppeteers, transforms itself from caterpillar to bird to munching monster in sinuous moves that delight and intrigue young audiences. The primary school class squeals with delighted fear as the purple apparition moves through the bracken, making strange cooing and purring noises while shimmering with iridescent patches.

This spectacular puppet is the centerpiece of the forest's Big One Hundred celebrations, a free festival marking 100 years of Winnie-the-Pooh. Created by Trigger, an outdoor arts charity known for epic performance puppets like The Hatchling (a human-operated dragon the size of a double-decker bus that led Queen Elizabeth II's Platinum Jubilee in 2022), the performance has a clear purpose: to encourage children and families to connect with the wonders of wild, free nature.

The Creative Process: Designing a Mystical Creature

"I love these deep mystical ideas that come to you in childhood and you can't shake and you're magnetised to visit these places. Putting a narrative on to a natural landscape gives it a mystical edge," says Angie Bual, creative director of Trigger, who collaborated with local school children to devise Poppet.

The puppet represents a deliberate departure from traditional portrayals of Winnie-the-Pooh characters. Rather than simply recreating nostalgic elements from the 1920s, the creative team wanted to spark new stories and connections. "Young people are ready for a different story and if you really want that to happen, doing a Beatrix Potter style event won't really captivate these people and get a diverse audience," explains Bual.

Poppet's performances see it shift "through a carousel of natural creatures" from caterpillar to crab to bird and then plant. "Creating a completely different creature is quite hard to do – to not simply have the head of a bird and the tail of an adder," Bual notes, adding that the creative process led to "somewhat trippy dreams." The team designed an open-ended character upon which children can project their own fantasies: "The improvisation of the mind can take over."

The Conservation Connection: Forest Preservation Through Play

Ashdown Forest has changed significantly since Christopher Robin's childhood. Many more trees have grown up on the heathland, transforming it from 90% open heath to 60% with a decline in traditional livestock grazing. This change threatens the lowland heath, an increasingly rare habitat upon which species such as nightjar and Dartford warbler depend.

"We often get the question, 'Where are all the trees? Why are you taking the trees out or the gorse out?' When you explain to people, they usually understand. That ongoing engagement with visitors so they know why we are doing what we're doing is so important," says Beth Morgan, head of engagement and development at Ashdown Forest.

Poppet's performances include a gentle educational element: the monster eats gorse and bracken, and the audience will be able to "feed" it. The puppet aims to imbue what is a fairly mundane conservation message with "a sense of excitement." "When you have a playful creature embodying that need to control gorse and bracken, you've got the message," Bual explains.

The Future of Forest Engagement: Connecting New Audiences

Ashdown Forest attracts 1.5 million visitors each year, but it is widely recognized that visitors from deprived inner cities and communities of color are less likely to frequent the British countryside. Alongside Poppet, the Big One Hundred celebrations include badges for children to collect by participating in nature-based activities, alongside crafting, storytelling and yoga. Transport is being provided to bring global majority groups and disabled-led groups to the forest.

"Nature has to compete with bowling, swimming, climbing. It's quiet, it's difficult, it's subtle. We know it does so much for our wellbeing and restoring our batteries but it's so polite about it, it's easy to forget it when you're away from it," Bual reflects. "We're just giving it a bit of a boost."

As a British Asian, Bual is particularly aware of the barriers that prevent diverse communities from accessing natural spaces. "The improvisation of the mind can take over" when children encounter Poppet in the forest, creating new connections and potentially inspiring future conservationists who might otherwise never have experienced the magic of Ashdown Forest.