Tuesday 17th March 2026

(Photo courtesy Philip Ayers/Cuckmere Buses)
2026 is a very special year for Cuckmere Buses. The long standing East Sussex community bus operator, based in the village of Berwick, is celebrating its 50th Anniversary. That’s an incredible achievement which is undoubtedly down to the commitment and dedication of an amazing band of volunteer drivers and ‘back office’ staff and particularly the enduring and effective professional leadership, for the last 37 years, of Managing Director, Philip Ayers.
Indeed, Philip was closely involved in the setting up of Cuckmere Community Bus when it began life in 1976, having moved south from the Crosville bus company on Merseyside to work at Southdown, the bus company based in Brighton which, as part of the National Bus Company, ran a significant bus network stretching from East Hampshire across West and East Sussex. As a young, keen, newly appointed Operations Manager, Philip was given the job of talking to people all over East Sussex keen to re-instate bus routes withdrawn in a major retrenchment by Southdown five years earlier in 1971 when a raft of unprofitable services in deep rural areas had been withdrawn.

One of these was service 98, an eight-times-a-day route from Seaford via the Cuckmere Valley to Berwick with half the journeys continuing to Hailsham. This had left many residents of affected villages isolated from any form of public transport at a time (in those days) when 40% of households had no access to a car. Campaigning by the local branch of the Women’s Institute led the county council, Sussex Rural Community Council and Southdown to investigate the practicalities, and then initiate the introduction of, a volunteer-operated bus service.

It was quite a novel form of operation back in 1976. A similar scheme had begun under the banner of National Norfolk in conjunction with the Eastern Counties bus company in Fakenham providing scheduled bus routes in rural north Norfolk with other schemes, some with paid staff, in Bedfordshire, Essex and Lancashire in conjunction with United Counties, Eastern National and Ribble respectively.
Many of these schemes disappeared after a few years but Cuckmere Buses (as the not-for-profit company/charity has become known) has not only stayed the course but now operates a network of 20 different bus routes carrying 88,000 passengers a year in this part of East Sussex with a roll call of around 50 trained volunteer drivers and other non-driving volunteers, a fleet of nine modern 16-seat low floor minibuses (with regular investment in new vehicles), and recently recording a surplus of nearly £10,000 which is being ploughed back into the fleet and bus services.

Even more impressive, Philip was telling me during one of our regular meet ups last week, following funding discussions with a local District Council he hopes to soon be in a position to place an order for a battery-electric minibus with delivery anticipated in the autumn.

I blogged about my journeys on the splendid summer weekend route 47 – the Cuckmere Valley Ramblerbus – in September 2022 (as seen in the above photo) but I’ve been meaning to catch up with another initiative Cuckmere Buses introduced in September 2023 which links three art venues in East Sussex through a bespoke Friday to Sunday, four-return-journeys-a-day bus route between Eastbourne and Lewes.

Route 39 is funded by Eastbourne’s Towner Gallery and Charleston which has premises at both Charleston Farm and, more recently, in Lewes town centre as well as support from the South Downs National Park.
A minibus has received a bespoke livery promoting the service which only stops at the three arts venues together with the villages of Alfriston, Litlington and East Dean as well as Seven Sisters Country Park aimed at attracting visitors and tourists as well as art and culture lovers.

The route began as a three month pilot initiated by Sussex Modern (a business led tourism consortium) to connect cultural and other East Sussex iconic venues during the 2023 Turner Prize season at the Towner.
Following positive reaction it returned in Spring 2024 and again in Spring 2025 after which the partners were so encouraged with the response, further funding was committed last year enabling the service to continue through the most recent 2025/26 winter months,

It was against that positive background I wasn’t unduly surprised last Friday to find six passengers already forming a queue well before the first departure of the day at 11:00 outside the Charleston venue in Lewes.

This venue occupies former municipal offices – both the County Council and District Council at different times – but since September 2023 it’s become host to art and culture exhibitions and associated retail, as well as acting as a community space.

The minibus arrived into Lewes on its first journey of the day from Eastbourne on time at 10:54 and volunteer driver, Mark, soon had all seven of us on board and we set off at 11:00.

It’s a straightforward run out of Lewes and along the A27 through Firle to reach the first venue, Charleston Farmhouse which is accessed along a narrow road-come-track south of the A27.

The property dates from the 16th century and has long been associated with the arts and culture scene with the Bloomsbury Group taking it on as a retreat in 1916 when artists Venessa Belo and Duncan Grant moved there.

As an indication of its popularity, when we pulled up in the car park at 11:15, five of the six passengers on board alighted leaving just one other and myself on board.

The next stop was in Alfriston coach park. This picturesque village is hugely popular with tourists as well as acting as a base for walkers enjoying the scenic delights of this part of the National Park and indeed our passenger alighted here to commence a walk.

After a few minutes break to wait time Mark set off again and crossed over the Cuckmere River to head south down the east side of the valley through the delightful village of Litlington to arrive at the entrance to the Seven Sisters Country Park on the A259 coast road where buses on Brighton & Hove’s frequent Coaster branded route 12A/12X connect Eastbourne with Seaford, Newhaven and Brighton.

After another short pause at our final stop in East Dean on the A259. we climbed up to the top of the Downs where we turned off the coast road and made our way down the long twisty incline into Eastbourne via the town’s southern approach which makes for convenient access to reach the Towner gallery, where we arrived on time at 11:51.

There was already one passenger waiting for the return journey back to Lewes at 12:00 but I left Mark to enjoy his short break before he set off again back to Lewes.

It’s great to see cultural venues, the National Park and tourism interests coming together to promote and fund initiatives like this and encourage travel by bus accompanied by some excellent publicity and promotion produced by Cuckmere Buses.

Copies of the winter timetable book were available on board the bus (complete with clearly stated dates of validity)…

… together with details of route 39 inside including an advert for the Charleston exhibition.

That’s how you do it. Perhaps some of our large Groups could learn a lesson or two from this exemplar.
The actual 50th Anniversary of Cuckmere Buses is on Monday 26th October, a date etched on the minds of many a long standing bus manager as also heralding the start of the deregulated era which began in 1986, ten years after Cuckmere Buses hit the road on the same date in 1976.
That it has survived through the ensuing turmoils and challenges the bus industry and local authorities have faced during the last 50 years is truly inspiring and indicates why Cuckmere Buses was so well deserving of its Queen’s Award for Voluntary Service bestowed in 2006.

Philip Ayers has done a truly amazing job which can be traced back over all those 50 years, and the Sussex Arts Shuttle is just the latest example of an excellent initiative.

Roger French
Blogging timetable: 06:00 TThS

A timely reminder that all was not sweetness and light 55 years ago, and certainly not confined to the shock of Southdown abandoning huge chunks of their territory without replacement, but many other similar areas in the UK.
All this under a strictly regulated network now so many with shorter memories clamour for.
Terence Uden
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What a strange comment.
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For those of us who remember the pre-deregulated era with clarity, that comment makes complete sense. NBC made massive cuts in some rural areas, my own then areas of south and west Wiltshire were some of them.
Many are seeing a return to regulation, albeit through “franchising”, as a way of reversing cutbacks. The vast sums of money involved are likely to be unsustainable long term though and rural areas especially will still be challenging bus territory. Need I remind us about Cornwall?! Even GoAhead recently selling their eastern operation shows that margins are clearly very tight.
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I personally see a lot of potential in franchising (though I fear that potential often won’t be realised), but whatever we may think, it ain’t going to change the basic economics of bus operation. It’s pie in the sky to think it’s the answer to service cuts and reductions. Nor will it automatically improve reliability: that will be down to brave decisions by councillors about reallocation of road space which may well cost them their seats if they’e brave enough to go through with them.
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Deregulation has been a disaster. The timetable at the top of this excellent article was in the regulated era and showed a strong seven day a week service. It’s not like that now despite Cuckmere’s best efforts. The problem inherent in the 1980’s was lack of integration in fares and services not regulation.
MikeC
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Did you not read the article properly, Mike C?
That timetable refers to a service withdrawn in 1971…. in the regulated era and operated by a nationalised operator in Southdown. It was because of such cuts that Cuckmere Buses was formed.
The fact was that bus patronage was falling through the floor through the 1960s and 1970s. Something HAD to change.
BW2
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In 1971, when the NBC instructed its subsidiaries to ditch unprofitable srvices unless local authorities paid up, the idea that LAs should pay for buses was new (a product of the 1968 Act). The cuts were deepest where counties just refused to take on the burden- sometimes the same counties who regularly opposed opertors’ fare increase aplications to the Commissioners. I don’t think that regulation, or the lack of it, was really the point here.
Phil Drake
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While I understand and agree to a point with this comment, my question would be what do we do where the unregulated world is broken?
Living in both Manchester and Brighton I have seem the absolute worst and best of the unregulated world. When it’s bad it’s really bad! So what’s the answer if franchising is too expensive, as many keep saying? Is it just tough, or can we find a better solution that improves the service without impacting great operations like CCB?
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Exactly. In a county with multiple centres like Hertfordshire for example, deregulation has been a disaster and a proper mess (It’s no Norfolk with Norwich being the main draw). Some places, especially with more complex travel patterns (that never match administrative boundaries) need a deep level of coordination that deregulation can never provide. All the so called ‘competition’ does is push passengers away and have the various bus companies knacker each other out until 1 mediocre company stands on top of the husks of the rest. Investment that could’ve gone to cross-subsidised marginal rural day or suburban evening and night journeys was instead squandered on defending the patch. I think the problem here as well is London dominates many potential journeys, sever that link by fragmenting the network and potential passengers are lost for a long time as what should be simple journeys are now a real hassle by public transport.
We need to learn from both the NBC era and everything since then to create something better, as the status quo is not good enough.
Aaron
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The issue then was the same as it is now: funding, not regulation.
What became known as the NBC’s Market Analysis Project [MAP] was started by Midland Red as the Viable Network Project and that’s exactly what it was: an attempt to return the company to financial viability and stave off the otherwise inevitable bankruptcy by cutting out the huge amount of unprofitable deep-rural work.
It would have been exactly the same problem in a deregulated environment with no funding available to support unprofitable services; it’s not regulation or the lack thereof which is the issue but the funding or lack thereof.
My only hope with reregulation and franchising is that it’ll make local politicians a little more aware of the real costs of bus service provision; at the moment, regardless of party, local politicians can very much give the impression that they believe bus services are something that exist free of cost. I’m not holding my breath, though.
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Sir,
Delighted to read this about Cuckmere.
You might consider looking at the Soar Valley Community Bus near Loughborough; it began in 1979.
John Bennett.
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Fairly detailed revenues information in the accounts
Concessionary Fares £129K
Ticket Fares £42K5
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could you please put in a reply to this post explaining what £42K5 is in real money. Thanks
Stuart S
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If you dont understand basics you have a big problem
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Poor form parking on the foot way. Professional or volunteer or otherwise.
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It’s a really badly sighted bus stop,
https://www.google.com/maps/@50.8714322,0.0096611,3a,75y,68.99h,75.31t/data=!3m7!1e1!3m5!1srZRZxHw7czTWeWRYV96owQ!2e0!6shttps:%2F%2Fstreetviewpixels-pa.googleapis.com%2Fv1%2Fthumbnail%3Fcb_client%3Dmaps_sv.tactile%26w%3D900%26h%3D600%26pitch%3D14.688440385623466%26panoid%3DrZRZxHw7czTWeWRYV96owQ%26yaw%3D68.99057856807298!7i16384!8i8192!5m1!1e1?entry=ttu&g_ep=EgoyMDI2MDMxMS4wIKXMDSoASAFQAw%3D%3D
but as ever with these things to sort things out properly would cost a few car parking spaces (on the other side of the road) so no doubt are a complete non starter.
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In my part of the world the police park half on the footpaths as a matter of course “to avoid blocking the road”. If the enforcement authorities consider it acceptable, what hope for the rest of us?
Pedantic moment: badly sited. As in positioned, not viewed. 🙂
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Wow, Roger, That is SO kind of you! An operation like ours works because we all want to do it, not because we have to and we have built a momentum over the years so are very lucky. I think I mentioned our extra days on 25 (Tuesdays and Thursdays) as ESCC funding for the Compass operated services has been withdrawn. Today, I will be registering additional new services 21 and 23 to run on Sundays only when services to Sheffield Park and Newhaven also lose their funding. We have taken a very deep breath and taken them on from 26th April. Route learning will start this week and the services will appear in our summer timetable booklet which goes to press late today, delayed to include them. We only realised they were being withdrawn through a casual conversation last week so it has been a very busy time. Opportunities have to be grasped when they arise, not when it suits you…we all hope it works out! Thanks again. Very best wishes. Philip
Sent from Outlook for iOShttps://aka.ms/o0ukef ________________________________
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It sounds like a brilliant piece of community work. Well done everyone! As I get out and about in the countryside I love to take advantage of individualistic bus services like yours.
I have one question.The service relies on volunteers. Many of us doing voluntary work worry about bringing in new talent to replace the brilliant, but ever-ageing ones we have relied on to date. What ongoing system do you have to ensure that there is a stream of new volunteers to back up and replace those who, inevitably, are not immortal!
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Good morning Roger,
It is always good to read of a success story.
In contrast l can advise, in case you are not aware, that the Lichfield LinkUp on-demand service ceases on 28/03/2026. Another one bites the dust !
Best regards,
Andrew Sutherland
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Thanks for that (not unexpected) news, Andrew.
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what a wonderful example of a community bus network ! Well done to all concerned, and I must pay a visit before the anniversary in October next !
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My wife and I had a short break in Eastbourne at the end of November last year (yes, we’ve reached that age!), largely driven by a desire to visit the Towner Gallery and use the ‘Art Shuttle’ from there to Lewes. It was a great trip, using Thameslink seamlessly from Cambridge to Brighton and B&H’s wonderful 12 route from Brighton to Eastbourne, which was an absolute treat.
We were very impressed by Cuckmere Community Bus. It was on time, a very comfortable accessible Mercedes minibus and a very helpful, polite and friendly driver (though I wouldn’t have driven it that fast myself! Bit of a white knuckle ride!). We were worried that not every intending passenger would get on by the time we got to Alfriston – this was a Friday at the end of November, not quite peak season! – but they did, just.
And as for the big groups learning from CCB: just look at that wonderful printed timetable, which was easily obtainable. Funnily enough in Cambridge we’ve been known to get the odd tourist: but try finding any information about bus services! Stagecoach and other big operators: look and learn…
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You talk of a fast “white-knuckle ride”. A couple of years ago, having “come” on the Welsh Highland Railway, we “returned” on the Snowdon Sherpa bus. It certainly got a move on – yet only just kept to time. Amazing.
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Nice to read a story of successful achievement, considering the many challenges that Philip & his teams must have faced over the past 50 years.
Given our current risk adverse environment I’m particularly interested how volunteers meet & cope with H&S, personal liability & insurance. The introduction of an electric vehicle is interesting too. Hopefully there was a grant covering the charging facilities required, given the costs involved for a small enterprise.
Well done to all concerned & good luck for the future!
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What a wonderful community enterprise. All involved should be very proud of their achievements.
Peter Brown
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