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  • Major new ITV drama being filmed on location in Normans Bay: All star cast includes Imelda Staunton and Russell Tovey

  • BUSINESS BRIEFINGS: Vines Flowers: Space to hold craft classes

  • BUSINESS BRIEFING: The Smugglers Inn, Pevensey: £88 raised through our prize raffle for You Raise Me Up

  • WEEKEND FEATURE: Westham Evening Womens Institute

  • Pevensey Scarecrow Festival 2019: Please note change of email address

  • the Aqua Bar Ethos: Pevensey Bay: Event programme 2019: Latest updates

  • Pevensey Scarecrow Festival: 6 July to Saturday 20 July 2019

  • BUSINESS BRIEFING: Now We are Four: Ocean Bakery and Restaurant, Pevensey Bay

  • Pevfeast takes a step forwards with commission of logo

  • BUSINESS BRIEFINGS: Local business, Activity Days Mobility, celebrates success: The days just disappear

  • BUSINESS BRIEFINGS: Royal Oak and Castle Inn, Pevensey: Tenants respond to rumours about their departure

  • Ambitious exhibition of David Nash’s work opens this Autumn at Towner Eastbourne

  • Charity event in aid of Mind: Langney Sports Club: 2 August 2019

  • Weather snapshot 8:00am: Pevensey Bay: Wednesday 3 July

  • Keeping us posted: Pevensey Parish Council: Village in Bloom 2019

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THIS WEEK Tuesday July 9: BBC Antiques Roadshow comes to Battle Abbey


COMMUNITY New glass reycling contract for Wealden


BUSINESS New single release from local Pevensey Bay based musician, Peter Barron

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ACCESS to the beach at the foot of an East Sussex beauty spot has been restored after fire-hit steps were replaced.—East Sussex County Council, 13 June 2017

The wooden steps at Cow Gap, near Beachy Head, were destroyed in a suspected arson attack in December, cutting off access to beaches at the foot of the famous cliffs.

Now, East Sussex County Council’s rights of way team has replaced the steps with a new metal structure, reconnecting the beaches with the clifftop footpaths.

Cllr Nick Bennett, East Sussex County Council lead member for transport and environment, said: “The steps provide a vital link to some of the county’s most picturesque beaches and a spot popular with walkers and fossil-hunters.

“The fire damage to the previous steps was so severe that it had to be completely replaced, meaning we had to order an entirely new, bespoke staircase.

“The new structure is more durable than the old one and means visitors can once again enjoy access to one of the hidden gems of our natural landscape.”

The shoreline below Beachy Head features a mixture of shingle and sandy beaches, including Falling Sands, which offers a stunning vista of the iconic cliffs and Beachy Head Lighthouse.

Visitors are urged to make sure they check tide times before venturing on to the beaches, large sections of which get cut off by the sea at high to medium tide.

More information about countryside sites and rights of way in East Sussex is available online at www.eastsussex.gov.uk/rightsofway