Queen marks Pooh centenary by playing poohsticks
PA MediaQueen Camilla has celebrated 100 years since the first Winnie-the-Pooh books were published by playing poohsticks at the site which inspired Hundred Acre Wood.
This year marks the centenary of AA Milne's books, first published in 1926 and later brought to the screen by Walt Disney.
In her first visit as Royal Literary Fund patron, the Queen spent time in Ashdown Forest, East Sussex, earlier.
Arriving in a black Range Rover and sporting a green leaf-patterned dress, she met children's authors and unveiled a trail named Queen's Walk.
Dubbing Pooh a "universal hero" she said it was "very nice to be back in Sussex" and revealed she spent "a lot of time as a child" playing poohsticks.
"Winnie-the-Pooh is a universal hero, people love him and his friends all over the world," she said.
"They'll come pouring in to see this new trail. A lovely experience for all, and especially children."
PA MediaThe woodland is near the former home of Milne, who was inspired by the forest, after walks through it with son Christopher Robin.
The Queen visited "Poohsticks Bridge" where the pair played poohsticks - in which two or more people drop twigs into the water below from one side of the bridge, before racing to the other to see which twig has won.
The Queen played with children's authors, including the creator of The Gruffalo, Dame Julia Donaldson, its illustrator Axel Scheffler, and official Winnie-the-Pooh sequels writer Jane Riordan.
As they peered over the bridge's edge, the Queen said: "Mine's still going strong."
She did not win.
PAEsme Coulter, 17, who came joint third playing poohsticks with the Queen after winning a poetry competition, said: "It's been amazing, definitely not something I ever would have expected from winning a poetry competition."
Dame Julia said she had been to Ashdown Forest before but could not play poohsticks then because the waterway was blocked.
She added it was "great" the Queen was a fan of reading.
The Queen also met local children and Ashdown Forest staff and volunteers as she opened the walking trail at a memorial site dedicated to Milne and Winnie-the-Pooh original illustrator EH Shepard.
The site is located at The Enchanted Place where Christopher Robin says goodbye to the animals in the books.
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